It often takes a Turner-level outcry for any state to bring its sex crime statutes into the 21st century. Oklahoma, for example, once said "forcible sodomy" could only happen to victims who are threatened or mentally ill. That allowed an appeals court this year to acquit a 17-year-old boy for allegedly forcing a girl into oral sex — because she drunk at the time. After that ruling drew unprecedented scrutiny to the law, the legislature finally changed it — two months ago.