Hi all,
This is my first post and I need your help please.
In 2011 I was accused of the rape of a girl I had been seeing for six months... arrested, flat raided, computers/phones confiscated, interviewed and bailed. Fairly standard procedure from people I've spoken to. A full year later (after several re-bails) and having been through my laptops and phones with a fine tooth comb they NFA'd me of the rape, and hadn't uncovered any indecent images either.
Like everyone I had the lows, the paranoia, the sleepless nights, the nightmares, the shame of having to tell family and friends, the awkwardness of going into work with everyone thinking the worst of me... and I took a good beating by a gang of lads to boot (quite literally).
You get NFA'd and at that moment life feels incredible, you race to ring everyone that's supported you, you thank the detective who's put you through absolute hell (Stockholme syndrome if you ask me) and you think everything's back to normal.
For me it wasn't. Some while after I was NFA'd, I was slandered by someone in my local area, specifically about the rape... and to cut a long story short, I responded badly. I now find myself defending an assault charge, which I understand and admit that I didn't manage my emotions correctly.
I'm in my 30's and had never been involved in a fight until I was slandered as a rapist by this person... not one drunken fight in my 20's, not even a teenage punch up on the school fields... I am convinced that I am suffering mentally from the trauma of the allegation and then combined with the specific provocation of this person led to me losing control.
Can someone please please please provide details or links to a dissertation or medical journal on the psychological effects of being falsely accused, ideally over a sexual offence? I want to help the jury to understand my psychology in that period, and documented journals or dissertations to quote from would be ideal.
Sorry for rabbiting on, and good luck to anyone that is going through what I went through- but when it's over, please don't think it's over.
This is my first post and I need your help please.
In 2011 I was accused of the rape of a girl I had been seeing for six months... arrested, flat raided, computers/phones confiscated, interviewed and bailed. Fairly standard procedure from people I've spoken to. A full year later (after several re-bails) and having been through my laptops and phones with a fine tooth comb they NFA'd me of the rape, and hadn't uncovered any indecent images either.
Like everyone I had the lows, the paranoia, the sleepless nights, the nightmares, the shame of having to tell family and friends, the awkwardness of going into work with everyone thinking the worst of me... and I took a good beating by a gang of lads to boot (quite literally).
You get NFA'd and at that moment life feels incredible, you race to ring everyone that's supported you, you thank the detective who's put you through absolute hell (Stockholme syndrome if you ask me) and you think everything's back to normal.
For me it wasn't. Some while after I was NFA'd, I was slandered by someone in my local area, specifically about the rape... and to cut a long story short, I responded badly. I now find myself defending an assault charge, which I understand and admit that I didn't manage my emotions correctly.
I'm in my 30's and had never been involved in a fight until I was slandered as a rapist by this person... not one drunken fight in my 20's, not even a teenage punch up on the school fields... I am convinced that I am suffering mentally from the trauma of the allegation and then combined with the specific provocation of this person led to me losing control.
Can someone please please please provide details or links to a dissertation or medical journal on the psychological effects of being falsely accused, ideally over a sexual offence? I want to help the jury to understand my psychology in that period, and documented journals or dissertations to quote from would be ideal.
Sorry for rabbiting on, and good luck to anyone that is going through what I went through- but when it's over, please don't think it's over.
Comment