In the autumn of 1996, Oliver Jovanovic, a Columbia graduate student, and Jamie Rzucek, a Barnard undergraduate, struck up an online correspondence centring around sadomasochism. He referred her to books and movies (Kenneth Anger, Richard Kern, Tokyo Bondage, Ghost in the Shell).

She called herself a "pushy bottom" and "slave" to her bisexual, heroin addict, sadomasochist boyfriend.

In November, Jovanovic and Rzucek went on a date which ended up back at his apartment for sadomasochistic sex. What exactly happened during the session remains a mystery.

In email to Jovanovic and conversations with friends in the days after the date, Rzucek described the session as physically and emotionally intense, "kinky" and "weird," but said nothing to indicate lack of consent. Two weeks later, however, she charged Jovanovic with sexual assault


Defendant in Internet Torture Case Gets 15 Years

By John Sullivan

New York Times
May 30, 1998

NEW YORK -- Ending a trial that gained attention because the victim met the defendant on the Internet, a state Supreme Court judge sentenced Oliver Jovanovic to a minimum of 15 years in prison for kidnapping and sexually abusing a young woman he met in a computer chat room.

After a three-week trial that ended in April, a Manhattan jury found that Jovanovic, 31, had imprisoned the young woman and tortured her over two days in November 1996. The defense had claimed that the encounter between the two was consensual. Friday, Justice William Wetzel of state Supreme Court in Manhattan said that Jovanovic, a Columbia University graduate student, had a sense of superiority and believed that "nothing in the world could stand in the way of his intellect and its promise."

"The defendant now must live a life in which his intellect is not a particularly prized commodity, his academic achievements of no great value, and his relationships will be face to face, not mediated by the Internet," Wetzel said. "He will have to look people in the eye and let them know who and what he is, day to day. His exploration of the nature of good and evil will be practical, not philosophical."

Wetzel sentenced Jovanovic to 15 years to life in prison for kidnapping, along with concurrent sentences for lesser charges including assault and sexual abuse. Jovanovic had faced a maximum sentence of 25 years to life in prison.

Jovanovic, extremely pale and dressed in a blue suit, made a brief statement before the sentencing.

"I am innocent," Jovanovic said. "I could not plead guilty to something I did not do."

The young woman, who was 20 at the time and attended Barnard College, testified that she agreed to go to dinner with Jovanovic after she had met him over the Internet and after extended correspondence by e-mail.

The woman, whose identity has been withheld because of the nature of the crime, testified that after bringing her to his Washington Heights apartment, Jovanovic tied her to a futon frame and tortured her for more than 20 hours. During several days of testimony and cross examination, the young woman said Jovanovic bit her, burned her with wax and struck her with a baton.

At the sentencing Friday, Gail Heatherly, the prosecutor, praised the woman's courage and said she agreed to testify because she knew that "Oliver Jovanovic was going to do this to someone else."

"This is a very dangerous person," Ms. Heatherly told Wetzel before the sentencing.

Ms. Heatherly said prosecutors were not allowed to introduce e-mail from Jovanovic's computer during the trial. She said the e-mail, and other evidence, showed that Jovanovic was a "controlling, manipulative sexual sadist."

Jack Litman, the defense lawyer, told Wetzel that the defense was also prevented from introducing evidence during the trial and said he would appeal the case.

"What occurred on that night was a consensual activity between two consenting adults," Litman said.


5 Years Later - Case Dismissed
By Jane Fritsch with Katherine E. Finkelstein

New York Times
November 2, 2001,

A Manhattan judge dismissed all charges yesterday against Oliver Jovanovic, a Columbia University doctoral student accused five years ago of the sexual torture of a woman he met on the Internet. The dismissal was requested "in the interest of justice" by the office of the Manhattan district attorney

Mr. Callan, the defense lawyer, said, "I read it as a prosecutor who doesn't have any faith in the credibility of her complaining witness."

He said he had planned to present evidence showing that the woman was not the naive innocent she said she was, but instead was a "committed sadomasochist" with a history of lying about encounters with men. "Our position was that her injuries were, in fact, inflicted by her sadomasochistic boyfriend,"


Jamie Rzucek


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