A mother-of-two who falsely accused her estranged husband of rape because she wanted him out of her life was jailed for four months today.
Judge Rodger Hayward Smith said Michaela Lodge's behaviour was 'calculated' and said that she had done a great disservice to genuine rape victims.
Lodge, 45, wrote her husband Martin a letter in February - three months after he was arrested and held in a police cell for 12 hours - confessing that she had lied.
Essex Police had spent 62 hours investigating her allegation that he had raped her in the house they continued to share, when in fact she had instigated sex, Chelmsford Crown Court heard.
Lodge pleaded guilty to perverting the course of justice and Judge Rodger Hayward Smith QC told her it was 'a wicked allegation that was pre-planned to hasten his departure from your life'.
He added: 'Every false allegation of rape increases the plight of women who have been genuine victims of rape in that it makes a genuine allegation harder to prove because juries know that false allegations are made from time to time.'
Prosecutor Andrew Jackson said Lodge, of Black Notley, Braintree, went to a police station on November 26 last year and said her husband had raped her.
Mr Lodge was arrested at midday and held in custody for almost 13 hours before being released on bail.
He told officers they had gone to bed together and at her invitation had sex.
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On January 21, Lodge made a witness statement in which she said she didn't want him prosecuted but still maintained he had raped her.
The Crown said Mr Lodge had to stay away from the family home for three months as a condition of his bail. He was never charged with rape.
But on February 19, she gave her son Daniel a letter to pass on to her husband 'with a kiss underneath' and his name on the envelope.
In it she said: 'I am so sorry about what I have done to you. My head was and still is all over the place.
'I cannot deal with this anymore, I need to put it right. When we went to bed we both wanted to make love and the fact I lied to police about you raping me.
'My head was a mess with you pulling me one way and Pete the other. I just didn't know what to do. I will say goodbye and hope one day you will be able to forgive me. I am so sorry.'
Mr Jackson said: 'It seemed there had been another man involved with this defendant.'
When arrested for making the false allegation, Lodge admitted she had lied.
Marc Brown, defending, said Lodge had not acted out of malice or revenge.
'It was born more out of a confused desire to remove him from the picture,' she said.
'She accepts it was an outright lie. The following morning she began to have regrets about what had gone on and she wanted to make her situation easier by removing Mr Lodge from the picture.
'She did what she did without thinking of the consequences to him, or her children or herself.
'It was an irrational reaction to a difficult emotional position she found herself in.'
The judge read a letter from Mr Lodge, which he described as 'a magnanimous appeal for mercy', not to send her immediately to prison.
Mr Lodge was in court with her children to see his wife led from the dock.
Lodge's son Daniel burst into tears as sentence was passed and was held back from giving his mother a hug by the dock officer.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...nted-life.html
Judge Rodger Hayward Smith said Michaela Lodge's behaviour was 'calculated' and said that she had done a great disservice to genuine rape victims.
Lodge, 45, wrote her husband Martin a letter in February - three months after he was arrested and held in a police cell for 12 hours - confessing that she had lied.
Essex Police had spent 62 hours investigating her allegation that he had raped her in the house they continued to share, when in fact she had instigated sex, Chelmsford Crown Court heard.
Lodge pleaded guilty to perverting the course of justice and Judge Rodger Hayward Smith QC told her it was 'a wicked allegation that was pre-planned to hasten his departure from your life'.
He added: 'Every false allegation of rape increases the plight of women who have been genuine victims of rape in that it makes a genuine allegation harder to prove because juries know that false allegations are made from time to time.'
Prosecutor Andrew Jackson said Lodge, of Black Notley, Braintree, went to a police station on November 26 last year and said her husband had raped her.
Mr Lodge was arrested at midday and held in custody for almost 13 hours before being released on bail.
He told officers they had gone to bed together and at her invitation had sex.
More...
On January 21, Lodge made a witness statement in which she said she didn't want him prosecuted but still maintained he had raped her.
The Crown said Mr Lodge had to stay away from the family home for three months as a condition of his bail. He was never charged with rape.
But on February 19, she gave her son Daniel a letter to pass on to her husband 'with a kiss underneath' and his name on the envelope.
In it she said: 'I am so sorry about what I have done to you. My head was and still is all over the place.
'I cannot deal with this anymore, I need to put it right. When we went to bed we both wanted to make love and the fact I lied to police about you raping me.
'My head was a mess with you pulling me one way and Pete the other. I just didn't know what to do. I will say goodbye and hope one day you will be able to forgive me. I am so sorry.'
Mr Jackson said: 'It seemed there had been another man involved with this defendant.'
When arrested for making the false allegation, Lodge admitted she had lied.
Marc Brown, defending, said Lodge had not acted out of malice or revenge.
'It was born more out of a confused desire to remove him from the picture,' she said.
'She accepts it was an outright lie. The following morning she began to have regrets about what had gone on and she wanted to make her situation easier by removing Mr Lodge from the picture.
'She did what she did without thinking of the consequences to him, or her children or herself.
'It was an irrational reaction to a difficult emotional position she found herself in.'
The judge read a letter from Mr Lodge, which he described as 'a magnanimous appeal for mercy', not to send her immediately to prison.
Mr Lodge was in court with her children to see his wife led from the dock.
Lodge's son Daniel burst into tears as sentence was passed and was held back from giving his mother a hug by the dock officer.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...nted-life.html
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