I'm very aware (!) of WS rules on victim-blaming, so I'll be careful how I phrase this post. I'll stick to the facts. Here, the victim is generally taken to be Jemmott. But who is he the victim of? Virtually all, or actually all, of the culpability lies with Jemmott and the Belizean Police Department. That's how compensation should be played out, and likely will I think. Jemmot was drunk and possibly high, and, according to what appear to be undisputed reports, gave his weapon to a drunk and high person to muck about with. I am not sure if we know about toxicology reports, but if he had cocaine in this blood, and, even worse, if it turns out he supplied it (we don't know either yet), then he committed astonishingly grave crimes which, for serving police officer, would have led to potentially life imprisonment in most jurisdictions. He put a member of the public, regardless of her status as a friend, at enormous risk. The police department, meanwhile, was aware that he was off work for, reportedly, the psychological effects of his break-up with his wife, and that he had been stopped by cops for being very drunk in charge of a vehicle earlier that day. They were also aware of the extremely dubious company kept in the form of the friend who'd shared his suite (reportedly). He was rather obviously a crisis waiting to explode into a meta-crisis. Yet they felt it appropriate that he should remain armed. This, too, seems extraordinarily dysfunctional and certainly makes them culpable too. Meanwhile, Hartin may (again, we don't know yet) have been too drunk or high to consent to anything. In which case, the corollary is that of a drunk/high US cop handing his weapon to a woman unable to consent and encouraging her to muck about with it. The scale of his and the PD's culpability is so enormous, and a woman's ability to consent such an important legal principle, that it is quite possible she has committed no offence at all. In which case, Hartin is the victim. She's certainly the victim of the post-match coverage; it all looks misogynistic in the extreme. Hartin is either the innocent victim, or at the very most is the unfortunate foil who happened to be there when the bomb exploded.