"I think this sentence is a joke, a travesty," the mother, Auliea Hanlon, told CNN on Tuesday night, a day after the sentencing.
"People will lose faith in our justice system. I have," she said.
Hanlon said she was
particularly upset that the sentencing judge, G. Todd Baugh, said her
daughter "seemed older than her chronological age" and was "as much in
control of the situation" as the teacher.
Baugh later acknowledged to CNN that "that was not the best choice of words."
The case began in 2008
when the teen was a student at Billings Senior High School and Stacey
Dean Rambold was a teacher. She was 14 at the time; he was 49.
Hanlon claims Rambold's "pre-sexual grooming" of her daughter led to the pair having sex.
School officials learned of the relationship, and Rambold resigned.
Later that year, authorities charged Rambold with three counts of sexual intercourse without consent.
"It's not probably the
kind of rape most people think about," Baugh said. "It was not a
violent, forcible, beat-the-victim rape, like you see in the movies. But
it was nonetheless a rape. It was a troubled young girl, and he was a
teacher. And this should not have occurred."
As the case wound its way through the legal system, the girl committed suicide. She was a few weeks shy of her 17th birthday.
"As a result of the
sexual assault and its aftermath, (the teen) experienced severe
emotional distress, humiliation and embarrassment and fell into
irreversible depression that tragically led to her taking her own life
on February 6, 2010," Hanlon said in a complaint filed against Rambold.
Hanlon told CNN the relationship was to blame for her daughter's death.
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