Convicted Stanford Rapist Will Reportedly Get Out of Jail 3 Months Early

Stanford rapist Brock Turner will reportedly be leaving jail three months early for his six-month sentence.

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The convicted Stanford rapist whose lenient six-month sentence has inspired controversy just caught another break. Brock Turner, who sexually assaulted an unconscious woman, will reportedly be released from the Santa Clara County jail on Sept. 2, according to the Associated Press. That's a full three months before his previously scheduled release date.

"We are charge with the care and custody of inmates and are told by the courts when an inmate should be released," a jail spokesperson told Complex.

County jail inmates serve half of their sentences if they have a clean disciplinary record, AP reported.

Turner, who was booked June 2, blamed his actions on so-called "party culture," writing in a Guardian-obtained letter to judge Aaron Persky that he wanted to be a "voice of reason" on "excessive" drinking:

In her own letter to Turner, the rape survivor, who has chosen to remain anonymous, talked of being "pummeled with narrowed, pointed questions" about her personal life following the assault. BuzzFeedpublished the letter in full last week, excerpted below:

Prosecutors had requested six years in prison for Brock's January 2015 sexual assault, though he was ultimately given six months in jail and three years' probation. That sentence, which many have argued is unfairly lenient given the crime, quickly inspired a petition calling for Persky to resign. At time of publication, the petition has garnered nearly 900,000 signatures.

The ongoing controversy has centered on what many have called an obvious example of privilege. One such critic is Brian Banks, an ex-football star who was wrongfully convicted of rape and served five years in prison:

Banks spoke with the New York Daily News Monday, arguing that the judge didn't take general fairness into account when handing down Turner's sentence. "What about the kid who has nothing, he struggles to eat, struggles to get a fair education?" Banks asked. "What about the kid who has no choice who he is born to and has drug-addicted parents or a non-parent household? Where is the consideration for them when they commit a crime?"

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