I would think any half way decent lawyer would be able to get their client off in these type of situations. And Kane can obviously afford good lawyers so he probably doesn't have anything to worry about. It's why so many rapists end up walking. Basically unless the victim is left a battered, shattered wreck from violent sex, it's ridiculously easy to convince a jury that it was "consensual enough." No. It's ridiculously easy to create "reasonable doubt". Which right now can be sold right now simply via the idea he used a condom or didn't bust his nut inside of her or on her. Look at how many comments here and on articles about there where people act like this completely exonerates him. THAT'S the uphill battle with prosecuting rape and sexual assault cases; unlike so many other criminal cases, the expectation of ironclad evidence vs. circumstantial evidence is skewed hugely to the former. Too many people are looking for any and every reason to dismiss it. So what happens when the rest of this investigation is released and it almost certainly shows that the rape kit showed that she had sex that evening. Then basically the difference before and after the info leak is that people assumed that he must have jizzed his mind out all over her? How does that exonerate him? I'm late to this ball game, but... This is a really good point. Harping on "circumstantial evidence" is a defense counsel trope (or trope for those that want to make a conviction/guilt seem less likely) that has very little meaning, in actuality, and is really an obfuscation of real-world/life practicalities. It's used, incorrectly, to sound like "bad" evidence; when it is no such thing. Almost everything is circumstantial evidence and circumstantial evidence can be very,very persuasive (and often times more convincing than "direct" testimony -- we all know about the issues with eye-witness testimony). "Circumstantial" should not be equated with "lesser" evidence; it merely means evidence that requires an inference to make the broader conclusion ("direct" requires no such inference). So: fingerprints at the scene are "circumstantial." DNA evidence is "circumstantial." As the saying goes, the infamous "smoking gun" is actually "circumstantial" evidence. The common example lawyers often give to jurors is that if you see rabbit tracks in the snow, that's "circumstantial" evidence that a rabbit ran through the snow. But guess what? If you see rabbit tracks in the snow, a rabbit ran through the [expletive] snow, you dunce, even if there's no "direct" evidence. This ties into a point made in the politics thread regarding the Richard Glossip murder (which I really want to comment on many, many things wrong with that post but not sure I have the energy -- I worked on that case, though not at the guilt phase, only the Eighth Amendment phase). Most murders are going to be based on "circumstantial" evidence considering the main witness has been killed (duh) and most murders, shockingly, aren't caught on tape.