Mit 12 Jahren wurde sie vom Vater einer Freundin misshandelt. Die Polizei teilte ihren Eltern mit, dass sie schliefe, es sei also nicht nötig, es ihr mitzuteilen. Das Problem? Sie lagen falsch …

https://www.theguardian.com/society/2024/oct/05/woman-an-unknowing-victim-of-assault-at-12-speaks-out

Von ILikeNeurons

3 Comments

  1. Direct-Discussion-54 on

    This article is good but in Franky’s case it’s massively over complicating what would have been a simple (not easy) conversation to have.

    The parents sit her down, explain what kind of inappropriate behaviour shouldn’t be happening, and ask if she remembered that happening. Then the police aren’t “leading” her but they have a good gauge on whether to tell her or not.

  2. dannydrama on

    >Once, when Jo was at their house, Greg arrived to collect his daughter. Anne was horrified; she couldn’t believe it. She ran inside to get Andrew. “He’s here,” she said.

    >The man who had molested their daughter was metres away from them, outside their house, but the Deans felt they had to act breezy. “We didn’t want to make a fuss in front of the girls” or “stir anything up that might make Franky think anything about it,” Anne says.

    Her dad’s a hero for not being in prison.

    >Alisdair Gillespie, professor of law at Lancaster University, there is no explicit guidance in England and Wales on how police officers should deal with unknowing victims. “If you look at the Victims’ Code, for instance, there is nowhere in it that says: ‘victims have a right to know’,” Ost tells me.

    What the fuck

  3. socratic-meth on

    > he was sentenced to a three-year community order but no jail time – despite admitting to all 22 charges.

    Absolutely pathetic. Why must this country put children in danger by allowing known child molesters to be free.

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