Daisy Coleman rape case: Maryville teenager's case that divided town to be reviewed

A 16-year-old American girl who attempted suicide after she was bullied for accusing two high school seniors of rape will have her case reviewed by a special prosecutor.
Daisy Coleman was a straight-A student and a cheerleader.
On a winter's night two years ago, Daisy and best friend Paige Parkhurst sneaked out to meet some boys - friends of her brothers and high school athletes - in her home town of Maryville, northern Missouri.
She was plied with alcohol and passed out.
Daisy's mother, Melinda Coleman, found her the next morning dumped on the frozen ground in her front yard.
"She was just pretty much not moving. [She] couldn't really speak," she told 7.30.
"She had frostbite on her feet, [which] were starting to turn grey.
"It wasn't until we went to the hospital and the doctor examined her and said she'd been assaulted that we really started to figure things out."
A 17-year-old boy was charged with sexually assaulting Daisy.
A 15-year-old boy was charged with sexually assaulting Paige and was later sentenced in juvenile court.
A third boy confessed to videotaping the incident on his iPhone. There are reports the video was passed around at Daisy's school.
Despite the weight of evidence, local police refused to prosecute the 17-year-old and the boy who filmed the incident.
The events of the past two years have polarised the local community, but Daisy has been applauded for going public in her fight for justice.
"I wasn't really conscious of it in the beginning but as time passed I started receiving a lot of Facebook messages, emails, messages on Twitter, people adding me on Instagram, any way they could get a hold of me," she told 7.30.
"People were writing me letters constantly. I think I've received almost 20 letters now and it's just really amazing that I've impacted that many people's lives."
Daisy's mother says it was obvious her daughter would not have been able to give consent.
"They only had her for 55 minutes. I have copies of the police report and [all of the boys] admit she was unconscious. She couldn't speak, she couldn't move," Melinda Coleman told 7.30.
"They carried her to the car and they carried her to the yard."