A BRAVE woman has revealed how she was told she “didn’t look like someone who’d been raped” as she tried to get justice.
Katherine Araniello said she felt like ending her own life because of the “treatment” she received going through the criminal justice system.
Katherine Araniello told her story of dealing with the criminal justice systemShe told how she met a man at an event who, after the pair had been dating for a few weeks, turned violent and assaulted her.
Despite reporting the attack to the police, the Crown Prosecution Service later dropped her case.
She claims they told her the fact she had exchanged text messages with her attacker after the ordeal meant they wouldn’t take it further.
She told the BBC: “Even the attack on me didn’t make me feel like I wanted to end my own life.
“It was the treatment of being put through all of that with the criminal justice system.
“I met this man at an event. I didn’t know him previously, I met him there. And from then on we just started dating.
“It was about three weeks into seeing him that we’d gone from kind of this very intense dating to one evening he just flipped.
“And it just turned into this really violent out of nowhere situation and before I knew it, it had escalated into him sexually assaulting me.”
She added: “I went to the CPS office the following day and I do know that the CPS didn’t want to see me.
“Their actual initial response would be they were going to write me a letter. Can you imagine receiving a letter like that?
“I discovered that they weren’t just thinking of dropping my case – they had.
“There had already been a hearing where the prosecution offered no evidence, and he would be free to go.
“There were a series of messages between us after the attack that in their eyes didn’t indicate that it’s somebody who had been attacked.
“Because in their rape myth view, victim blaming view, you would never have contact with somebody that’s just sexually assaulted you.
“They made references to well you didn’t look like somebody who had just been raped.
“Well could you point out to me somebody who does in your eye look like they’ve been raped?”
She said she was left feeling “enraged” at how the system had treated her, and fell into a depressed and anxious state.
She said: “On the way home I just remember thinking I don’t want to be here anymore and I seriously, seriously considered taking my own life.
“I’ve never felt like that in my life.”
Justice Secretary Robert Buckland has apologised to survivors
She told her story after the Government issued a grovelling apology to rape victims and admitted woeful prosecution rates “are not good enough”.
Justice Secretary Robert Buckland announced new plans to name and shame bungling barristers who fail to get a conviction in prosecutor league tables.
Justice Secretary Robert Buckland has issued a grovelling apology to rape victims admitting woeful prosecution rates “are not good enough”.
While lawyers will be warned against prying into the sex lives of victims unless absolutely necessary amid growing alarm intrusive questions are stopping people coming forward.
There were some 128,000 rape allegations lodged in England and Wales last year, with 52,210 of these reported to cops.
But just 843 of these reports led to a charge.
Over the past five years, prosecution rates have plummeted by a staggering 71 per cent, official figures show.
Launching a string of reforms to increase rape prosecutions, Mr Buckland said there was a “failure” at every stage of the legal system.