His sister concentrated on effect being charged had on him - and did not express any

Stanford rapist Brock Turner, repeatedly lied to his probation officer in a bid to secure more lenient treatment, court documents reveal - but has already had two months cut from his sentence.

The 20-year-old claimed to have been 'kissing' the victim and speaking with her in the lead-up to the attack – at odds with the statement he made to police on the night of the attack.

He also refused to admit that the victim was unconscious at the time – saying instead, he had asked if 'she wanted sexual interaction' and was told 'yeah' in response.

The probation report discloses that the Santa Clara district attorney intervened to point out that the 'defendant was untruthful in his testimony' to the officer - which was made after his conviction.

The documents also reveal that Turner hopes to serve his three-year probation in his home state of Ohio and has already requested a transfer.

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Rapist: Brock Turner was convicted of raping a woman he met at a frat party at Stanford when she was too drunk to even remember the attack

Release date: Brock is scheduled for release two months early because it was assessed that he was unlikely to misbehave behind bars. He has his own cell with television

Own cell: Unlike other inmates at Elmwood county jail, Milpitas, CA, Brock has his own cell. He is applying to serve his probation in Ohio instead of in California

Turner hopes to serve his three-year probation in his home state of Ohio and has already requested a transfer. Pictured above the Elmwood county jail, Milpitas, CA, where he is being held

The lies: The probation report reveals how despite being a convicted rapist, Turner continued to refuse to admit to what he did - and gave an account different to the one he had told police when he was arrested

Intervention: The report reveals how the Santa Clara district attorney warned that he was not telling the truth

Turner is currently incarcerated in the low-security 3,500-bed Elmwood jail in Milpitas, California, where sources say he is being kept away from the general prison population due to the nature of his crimes.

And, despite the ongoing outcry over the 'lenient' six month sentence he received, Daily Mail Online can reveal that he is due to be released after just four months – on September 2.

In his statement, which was made to his probation officer and filed with sentencing documents, Turner claims to have been 'very drunk' and says he 'got close' with the victim at the party.

He continued: 'We danced and kissed. Then I asked her if she wanted to go back to my room with me.

'She agreed and we were walking back to my room and she slipped on a slope beside a wooden shed and I got down on the ground with her and we started kissing.'

However, in the statement he made to police immediately after the attack, Turner claimed to have met the victim outside and later told officers that he 'would not recognize her if he saw her again'.

Nevertheless, in his statement, Turner claimed the victim had 'made a positive response' when he brought up the idea of 'sexual interaction' – adding:

'I idiotically rationalized that since we had been making out when each of us fell to the ground, that it would be a good idea to take things a step further since we were just in the heat of the moment at that location.

'I pull away from kissing her and whisper in her ear if she wanted me to finger her. She responds to me and acknowledges what I said with saying 'Yeah'.

Family support: Turner (far right) enlisted his father and his sister Caroline (far left) to write letters of support to the judge pleading for him not to be jailed. His mother Carleen (center) was with him in court

Family support: Turner, right, makes his way into the Santa Clara Superior Courthouse on June 2, 2016 - the same day he was sentenced - with his mother Carleen

'Having heard her response, I decided to take her underwear off.'

He added: 'I thought she was satisfied with the sexual interaction that had taken place based on her moaning and the way in which she held on to me with her arms on my back.'

Witness statements, however, flatly contracted his account with Swedish graduate students Peter Jonsson and Carl-Frederik Arndt both telling the police and court that the victim had been motionless at the time.

Speaking about the police interview that followed the incident, Turner said he spent most of it thinking that he 'could never rape somebody'.

'All I could think during that interview was that I never raped someone and would never even think of doing that,' he said in a statement later read out in court.

'I wish I would have forced myself at the time to remember every single minute detail that happened that night and express that.

'I wish I would have said that I know I didn't run from [the victim] but did run from the guy [Jonsson] that I was fearful of even if it was a flight or fight reaction.

'I didn't know what I didn't say would be such a huge deal because I know I never raped anybody that night and that's all that would matter.'

Turner, who is described in the court file as suffering from depression, also claimed to be haunted by what happened on the night of the rape – and says he shakes uncontrollably 'from the amount I torture myself' over the incident.

Hoping to elicit some sympathy, he added: 'My shell and core as a person is forever broken from this. I am a changed person.

'I've lost two jobs solely based on the reporting of this case. I wish I was never good at swimming or had the opportunity to attend Stanford, so maybe newspapers wouldn't want to write stories about me.'

Scene of the crime: The victim was attacked by Brock behind these dumpsters after coming out of the frat house (on the left). The two Swedes were cycling along the path which goes between them when they saw her

Party venue: The victim had been at a party at the Kappa Alpha fraternity house when she went outside and was attacked by Brock

Turner spent the past year working at a branch of sports store Speedy Feet in his hometown of Dayton, Ohio, from which he earned $5,000.

Prior to that, he worked at the Five Seasons Sports Club in Oakwood, Ohio where he was paid $1,000 over three months for seasonal work as a lifeguard.

Begging to be put on probation rather than be sent to jail, Turner added: 'If I were to be placed on probation, I can positively say, without a single shred of doubt in my mind, that I would never have any problem with law enforcement.

'Before this happened, I never had any trouble with law enforcement and I plan on maintaining that.

'I've been shattered by the party culture and the risk-taking behavior that I briefly experienced in my four months at school.

'I've lost my ability to swim in the Olympics. I've lost my ability to obtain a Stanford degree. I've lost employment opportunities, my reputation and most of all, my life.

'These things force me to never want to put myself in a position where I have to sacrifice everything. I would make it my life's mission to show everyone that I can contribute and be a positive influence on society away from these events that have transpired.'

Despite Turner's pleas, he was handed six months in jail by Judge Aaron Persky last week – a sentence that has caused an outcry thanks to its apparent leniency.

Enlisted: Brock Turner's sister Caroline was among those writing a letter of support. She wrote about the impact it had had on him - and expressed no sympathy for his victim

But as the Daily Mail Online can reveal, the 20-year-old will be out in just four months, thanks to automatically applied 'credits' that have shaved eight weeks off his jail term.

Unlike the general prison population, who sleep in tents or military barracks in rooms of up to 20 people, Turner is being held separately and has a cell to himself.

'He's in protected custody because of his charge, his offense,' said Sgt Joe Jephson of Santa Clara County Sheriff's Office.

'He's kept away from our general population inmates. There are other protected inmates that he is around but he's kept away from our general population inmates.'

Although Sgt Jephson said Turner is 'definitely' getting no special treatment, he did tell say that the rapist would have the opportunity to take part in classes, as well as three meals, cooked by other inmates, each day.

'It's the same throughout our jail facility,' he added. 'They get a hot breakfast, a cold lunch and a hot dinner.

'There are dietary standards that we follow and it's based upon 2000 calories a day but you can get low salt, low fat diet and religious diets so it can vary.'

Turner's attorney, Redwood City based Michael Armstrong, has already requested that a transfer to Ohio be put in place for when he is released on September 2.

Armstrong has repeatedly been approached for comment by Daily Mail Online but has declined to do so.

In a bid to get a more lenient sentence, 20-year-old Brock Allen Turner enlisted a cast of friends and family members to provide him with character references – and write supportive letters to Judge Aaron Persky.

Along with his father Dan Turner, and Good English drummer Leslie Rasmussen, letters were also dispatched by - among others - Turner's older sister Caroline, his high school English teacher and a former federal prosecutor.

Family friend and retired federal prosecutor Margaret Quinn, who said that sending him to jail would serve 'no useful purpose'.

'Brock failed to recognize a series of signifiers': How Turner's sister defended his actions as she asked for him not to be sent to prison

Describing how she has known the Turner family for more than 15 years, Quinn said she met the family through the Holy Angels parish organization and through school.

But despite being 'a mom-of-five and foster to many more', she went on to call the rape 'an unfortunate chain of events' and said 'sexual misconduct on campuses is a very real problem'.

She added: 'There is no doubt Brock made a mistake that night – he made a mistake in drinking excessively to the point where he could not fully appreciate his female acquaintance was so intoxicated.

'I know Brock did not go to that party intending to hurt, or entice, or overpower anyone. That is not his nature. It never has been.

'This unfortunate series of events has left Brock in despair.'

Turner's 22-year-old sister Caroline chose to make similar points, painting a picture of him as 'a kind, quiet, talented, hard-working, deeply caring, peculiar, inquisitive and, most importantly, vulnerable young man.'

She goes on to say that being his older sister is 'my most prized title, my proudest identification: that will never change'.

But rather than addressing the rape of which Turner has been convicted, Caroline instead chose to focus on the 'immense' suffering he endured following the incident.

'I have witnessed his struggle to even get out of bed,' she added. 'This is in stark contrast to the young man my brother used to be, always energetically pursuing his goals.'

The letter from family friend and former federal prosecutor Margaret Quinn

The attack itself is dismissed as 'a series of alcohol fuelled decisions'. But she concludes: 'It is also clear that Brock, having the good character that he does, was never out to take advantage of anyone, traumatize anyone and especially rape anyone.

'He put himself in a situation and willingly participated in it, making decisions that lead him to grapple with what his life is now.'

Jeff Coudron, his boss at the Speedy Feet sports store in Dayton, Ohio, also wrote a letter in support of Turner, in which he called him 'a fantastic young man' and described the thought of him going to jail as 'saddening'.

He added: 'I think that in many ways, Brock has already paid for what happened in January. Brock's life – his promising swimming career, his education at Stanford and his reputation have been destroyed.

'He has had to endure through the last 18 months waiting to see what his future would hold. I cannot imagine how he must feel.

'I don't know if probation is an option for his sentence but, in my estimation, he has already paid enough.'

Other letters were also written by Turner's high school guidance counselor Kelly Owens, school friends Patrick Ireland and Leah Beyer and his former swim coach Bryan Martin.

However, sources close to the court say some of the character referees, most notably Leslie Rasmussen, have been left furious that their letters have been made public.