From all available
information I have been able to gather on the case, this piece of shit is guilty and hell and in my mind deserves a 40 year sentence in a Filipino prison. She had all the physical signs of rape, and she never denied she was drunk, but witnesses all corroborate her story. I hope he does spend 40 in prison over there. All too often Americans, servicemen especially, feel they can get away with breaking laws in foreign countries and they should and will be protected by our government and it's bullshit. They think that because they feel that another country's laws are too stiff or penalties too harsh that our government should rescue them, and in the case of servicemen all too often Uncle Sam does just that.
Bottom line is, if you don't want to deal with justice as another sovereign nation deems fit, don't be a fucking moron, don't commit crimes (no matter how silly the law seems to you), and when you get caught breaking their laws, you damn well deserve what's coming to you. The military has a long history of our servicemen disgracing their uniform and committing crimes and being protected from due process of law.
This is just one article about the subject.
I agree with SnP, that the protesters are protesting the wrong way in the wrong place, but I think accountability is pretty piss poor for military personnel committing criminal acts especially in Asian countries. This is a part why the Philippine government has refused to renew leases of some American bases.
I am not one who is under the misconception that the whole world hates Americans, because a lot of the world does and a lot doesn't depending on their personal experience, but I do think it's hilarious when Americans wonder why some people in foreign nations hate us. It's just this kind of arrogance shown by Americans in their country that gives some of them legitimate reason to hate us. I am sure a lot of the people of the world hate us for other petty reasons such as jealousy and the like, but for Christ's sake these bastards refused to even answer the charges and his buddies who cheered him on were all acquitted in a Filipino court. The fact that those guys were acquitted alone is plenty reason for anger. What if it was a Filipino soldier and it was an American woman you knew? How would you feel?
I personally will applaud the US government if they allow him to serve 40 years in a Filipino prison, and wouldn't shed a tear if he didn't live through the experience, but I don't see it happening, and I sympathize with the protesters, no matter how misguided their efforts are.