So this I agree with. It needs to be taken seriously. Somewhere between the two extremes of automatically believed and automatically discounted. Unfortunately, it seems many of us here - men and women both - have experience with one of the two extremes more than we do with a more level, helpful approach in the middle.
Yes.
Women just being dismissed out of hand is unacceptable. But so is the woman claiming rape who voluntarily (by her own admission) had sex with a guy, then months later claims rape - and the rape advocates say she is correct. There is no justice in either of the extremes.
Do you have any stats on numbers of initial reports vs numbers of convictions?
Also, I had heard that there is a huge backup of rape kit analysis. As in, a high number of rape kits that have never been processed. Have you heard about this? What's your take on it?
A) Rates of conviction - I don't have any. But this question also presupposes that ALL claims of rape are real. What is an acceptable conviction rate? 99%? 90%? 75? 50? We shouldn't be looking at crimes believing that every crime should result in a conviction, ie, guilty until proven innocent - that just leads to a lot of innocent people being convicted - in the name of getting 100%.
B) Rape kits - more $ should be devoted to getting this backlog cleared up. DNA is an amazing forensic tool. Probably the only one beyond fingerprints that is scientifically valid.
Also, if I may ask (and I understand if this is something you choose not to talk about), what would have been a healthy way of dealing with it, in your opinion? What was the aftermath of the date rape? Do you know if she told, didn't tell? Did she say how others reacted? Was the person ever charged or prosecuted? When did she tell you, and how did you respond? Did she ever show or talk about the aftereffects of what happened? And again, I understand if you don't feel comfortable talking about it, or if you feel it's her story to share and no one else's. I suppose I'm wondering what kinds of experiences she had as a survivor, and if her experiences shaped your perspectives at all, and if so, then how. And also, if you have known other assault survivors? As I mentioned before, I'm not as good at stats - I connect better with people's personal experiences.
She was drunk at a party and passed out; a "friend" assaulted her. She had no memory of it, just woke up in the am and figured out what happened. She told her parents a week or so later, but no charges were filed (she didn't want to). She actually started dating him a little while later (yes, that's fucked up, and not all that uncommon; its a way to minimize what happened - if they are boyfriend/girlfriend, it couldn't have been that bad, right?).
I learned about it about a year after it happened, when I started dating her. I never met the guy, I've always wanted to pulverize him. And, yes, I emphasized to her that it wasn't her fault.
She did go to therapy for a while, but what she did was compartmentalize it (see: dating the guy). That was her coping mechanism. That has shown up later in life and is, IMO, what leads her to do bad things (cheat, DUIs, driving without a license, steal DD's identity). By compartmentalizing, she puts that issue in a box, puts it up on a shelf, and, in her mind, denies it exists. She also has said she really gets depressed/out of it from shame (in general); which exacerbates the need to compartmentalize.
When she fucks up, she just puts that issue in a box and pretends it didn't happen, or just ignores it - her shame doesn't let her face the consequences. So, when she gets a DUI - she keeps driving, and gets charged with driving without a license, and then fails to show up for court. Run up huge credit card bills? Don't pay it, because it doesn't exist. Cheating on me, with me showing her proof of her emails? Destroys/deletes the emails - never happened.
I have had a few friends who were molested as kids or saw their mom basically getting passed around (he wasn't molested, but his sister was). In some cases, they grew up to be fairly well adjusted (as anyone can be), a few went through a lot of tough years in their 20s/30s (I presume from dealing with a fucked up childhood), but all had scars.
My ex had other FOO issues (her stepmom told her often she wasn't good enough, family has a history of addiction, mental issues). She's been diagnosed BPII, and ADHD. I believe she has a personality disorder - she ticks off lots of boxes in the borderline, narcissistic, and histrionic categories. One therapist told her she thought she was borderline; the ex dropped that therapist about a month later. So, maybe she was already doomed to be a mess, but I think that the sexual trauma she suffered played a VERY large role in how she turned out as an adult.
Infidelity is one of the worst things I think can happen to a person. But sexual trauma is in a whole other realm; that's why I'll be there with the rope for rapists. I do however, believe that with a lot of therapy, and us - as a society - removing the stigma associated with rape/assault, that could go a long way to helping people recover.
[The ex has told her story, in public no less, but at that point (20 years later) I think it was more about her getting attention (which she craves) and less about healing.]