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Emotions raw in Ohio hometown of man in Stanford assault case

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OAKWOOD, Ohio: Sadness over a hometown boy’s fall. Anger at a perceived light sentence for a brutal crime. Disgust with an international spotlight.

Emotions are running high in this wealthy suburban town following intense scrutiny of a six-month sentence handed down to a former star student-athlete convicted of sexually assaulting an unconscious woman in California.

The case against Brock Turner — a student athlete at Stanford University at the time of the assault — has gripped people where he grew up and observers across the country, with letters to a judge from his family and friends drawing outrage from critics who say they are shifting blame from a 20-year-old who won’t take responsibility.

Now the unwanted attention is highlighting what some say are cracks in the idyllic image of Oakwood, which some locals dubbed “The Dome.” The suburb of Dayton is known for a high standard of living with good schools and low crime rates. But some say that’s a veneer for underlying social problems, now exposed by the wrongdoing of a once-favored son.

Many people who went to high school with Turner have supported him online, posting that he was a good kid and lamenting the fact that he wouldn’t make it to the Olympics. Backlash against those comments and others have made some people here nervous to speak publicly about Turner, his family or the town’s reputation. A childhood friend and a school guidance counselor later apologized for writing letters of support urging leniency.

Mark Otto, 19, was a grade behind Turner at Oakwood High School. While the two weren’t friends, they shared some classes together.

“My school and my town are known for being quintessential and perfect and nothing bad ever happens and there is no crime,” said Otto, who now lives in New York. But troubles with alcohol and drugs were just beneath the surface, he said.

California prosecutors cited several examples of Turner using hard drugs and alcohol in high school and during his four months at Stanford. Text messages recovered from his cellphone showed Turner discussing using LSD and ecstasy and smoking marijuana and dabs of butane hash oil, known as “wax,” according to court document.

Kate Skardon also was in several of Turner’s high school classes. She said she was shocked.

“I never saw a side of him that wasn’t sweet and kind and funny,” she said.

The median household income in the city of about 9,000 is $100,724, more than double the average in Ohio. Per capita income in the overwhelmingly white suburb is also far higher than the state rate, and fewer than 4 in every 100 people here live in poverty.

Many of the older, well-kept homes of brick, stucco and wood run above $250,000.

“The Dome” nickname is a nod to the student newspaper of the same name, and to Oakwood’s nature as an enclave.

“There’s kind of this emphasis on achievement and popularity — and sort of external measures of happiness and success that I think can be really damaging to people,” said Heather Neal, 38, a resident who teaches at a nearby community college.

Mindy Balster recently moved to Oakwood from a nearby town with her two children because of Oakwood’s schools. Taking a break from a jog, she stood by her decision, calling Oakwood a good place to live and raise a family.

“I’m not deterred by it,” she said of the controversy. “It could happen anywhere.”


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