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CA: Acclaimed geneticist sentenced for molesting colleague's daughter (14 years in prison)
AP on Bakersfield Californian ^ | 2/2/07 | Robert Jablon - ap

Posted on 02/02/2007 1:28:37 PM PST by NormsRevenge

Acclaimed geneticist William French Anderson was sentenced Friday to 14 years in prison for molesting an employee's daughter who took martial arts classes at his home.

Before sentencing, Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Michael E. Pastor noted an extraordinary number of letters supporting Anderson, including one from a Nobel Prize winner.

But the judge said Anderson had caused "incalculable" emotional damage to a victim he described as an insecure and trusting immigrant.

"Because of intellectual arrogance, he persisted and he got away with as much as he could," the judge said.

Anderson, 70, was convicted last July of one count of continuous sexual abuse of a child under age 14 and three counts of committing a lewd act upon a child. He had faced a maximum sentence of 22 years in prison.

Prosecutors said Anderson molested the girl from 1997 to 2001, starting when she was 10 years old.

Anderson watched intently as his victim, now 19, read a statement before he was sentenced.

"Roughly three years ago, I wanted to kill myself," she said. "I couldn't live with all the pain ... He maliciously destroyed my world to fulfill his own sick pleasures."

Anderson was Time magazine's runner-up for Man of the Year in 1995. He has been called the "father of gene therapy" for his work on a promising but controversial experimental medical treatment that involves injecting healthy genes into sick patients.

He claimed to be the first person to successfully treat a patient with the therapy in 1990, launching the field, although the claim has been disputed.

Defense attorneys argued during Anderson's three-week trial that he was a friendly mentor to the girl and was being smeared by her mother, who wanted to assume Anderson's position as director of the Gene Therapies Laboratories at the University of Southern California's Keck School of Medicine.

Anderson, a resident of wealthy San Marino, resigned last September and is no longer on its faculty, then university said.

The judge ordered Anderson, who has been in custody since hi conviction, to undergo a 90-day diagnostic evaluation before sentencing.

In e-mails and a tape-recorded conversation played for jurors during the trial, the girl angrily confronted Anderson about the sexual abuse.

Anderson told the girl, "I just did it, just something in me was just evil," according to the tape recording made by authorities who attached a wire to the girl.

Defense attorney Barry Tarlow said during the trial that Anderson was guilty only of pressuring the child to do well in school.

In court, Anderson said he thought the confrontation was about the emotional abuse he'd inflicted on her.

"If you cause somebody to crash, flunk out, that's just evil," he said. "When I realized she was falsely accusing me of sexual abuse, then I said whatever I had to say to get out of there."


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; US: California
KEYWORDS: acclaimed; california; geneticist; molesting; sentenced

1 posted on 02/02/2007 1:28:40 PM PST by NormsRevenge
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To: NormsRevenge
Anderson was Time magazine's runner-up for Man of the Year in 1995. He has been called the "father of gene therapy" for his work on a promising but controversial experimental medical treatment that involves injecting healthy genes into sick patients.
2 posted on 02/02/2007 1:29:36 PM PST by NormsRevenge (Semper Fi ......)
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To: NormsRevenge

Ouch!


3 posted on 02/02/2007 1:32:45 PM PST by lilylangtree (Veni, Vidi, Vici)
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To: NormsRevenge

California's upper crust Liberals at work.


4 posted on 02/02/2007 1:36:10 PM PST by gunnedah
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To: NormsRevenge

One Liberal off the streets.


5 posted on 02/02/2007 1:39:21 PM PST by pabianice
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To: NormsRevenge
If she had been an insecure and trusting native would it have been different?
6 posted on 02/02/2007 2:14:26 PM PST by Savage Beast ("Just when the caterpillar thought the world was over, it became a butterfly.")
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To: NormsRevenge

Didn't Michael J. Fox support this gene treatment theory before he got onto stem cells?


7 posted on 02/02/2007 2:17:41 PM PST by Eva
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To: NormsRevenge

Actually, gene therapy has never really panned out very well as a cure for much of anything. It was really hyped at the time. There are a few (very few) short term improvements with it for single gene diseases, but nothing much that seems to last very long. The hype reminds of the embryonic stem cell hype today.


8 posted on 02/02/2007 2:27:01 PM PST by fschmieg
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To: NormsRevenge

He shouldda stuck with the genes and stayed outta the jeans.


9 posted on 02/02/2007 2:40:54 PM PST by Jack Wilson
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To: pabianice

I'm not sure how one would tell he is a liberal -- was there something in the article?


10 posted on 02/02/2007 2:41:30 PM PST by texten
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To: NormsRevenge
So What?

Kiddie diddler gets 14 years, which in this case sounds about right. The fact that the guy is also a world-famous geneticist has precisely zilch, zip, nada to do with this, except that maybe prison officials have to contend with above-average amount of mail and requests for books that usually aren't stocked in prison library.

The coincidence is mildly interesting, but otherwise of no great significance.
11 posted on 02/02/2007 5:22:31 PM PST by MirrorField (Just an opinion from atheist, minarchist and small-l libertarian.)
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To: NormsRevenge

"I just did it, just something in me was just evil,"

His genes made him do it. He can blame that prison time on his genes.


12 posted on 02/02/2007 5:40:10 PM PST by Pete from Shawnee Mission
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