at
being put in a position of nearly wrecking a life simply because bad
training and lazy procedure meant the police ignored, or never looked
at, clear evidence that the accuser lied.
Every
detail is dismaying. The accused had asked for the woman’s phone to be
checked because he had lost his own;
police archived it or ignored what
was staring them in the face. A report this year by HM Inspectorate of
Constabulary and the Crown Prosecution Service indicates that the
“scheduling” of evidence is
“routinely poor, while revelation by the
police to the prosecutor of material that may undermine the prosecution
case or assist the defence case is rare”.
Liam Allan, vindicated
and angry, suspects that
in sex-offence cases convictions have become
“like sales targets”. We know about the psychology of confirmation bias,
in which the mind selects evidence that reinforces its prejudices. But
to find it in the criminal justice system is horrifying.
The director of
public prosecutions, Alison Saunders, driven by missionary zeal over
real unpunished sexual abuses, has caused unease by referring to
complainants — once even after the acquittal — as “victims”. The message
from police, in a backlash against decades of disgraceful nonchalance,
is a soupy “You will be believed”, which has led in some cases to
believing
fantasists and liars.
It is hard not to see
confirmation-bias culture in this case. …
Confirmation bias in this alarmed age says
that because some teachers have been abusers, some men have raped, and
many victims weren’t believed, it follows that assuming guilt is the
safe bet. Yet just because it has long been a dangerous world for women,
that is no reason to make it so dangerous for men. It’s happening,
though. And the risk is that proper rage at the system’s abuse of Liam
Allan will be smothered by fashionable truisms about sexual assault:
“OK, he is innocent but lots of men do get away with it.” Exposure of
real sexual misconducts lately has aggravated this feverish anxiety, and
a dismaying willingness to punish and smear without investigation. Aled
Jones, of all people, is now off the BBC while it pokes suspiciously at
a decade-old allegation reported as “inappropriate contact and
messages”. This he has strongly denied.
The new wisdom says that we
women are perpetual victims: abused, coerced or freezing in dumb terror.
Take
The New Yorker’s short story
Cat Person currently
overexciting the western world, in which a flirtatious woman enjoying
her power suddenly cools off, but proceeds with coupling through a
mixture of politeness and vanity (“Look at this beautiful girl, she
imagined him thinking. She’s so perfect, her body is perfect . . . The
more she imagined his arousal, the more turned-on she got”). Some seize
on even that soft-porn fiction as evidence that we are always victims of
male domination because, after brushing the poor mutt off with an
abrupt text, the heroine gets in return one which irritably ends in the
word “whore!”.
Well,
that’s rude of him. Very rude. On the other
hand, it is not nearly as bad a response to rejection as crying rape and
trying to get your former intimate jailed for a decade, reckoning that
officialdom will believe you and not him.
It should be emphasised
that false accusations of sexual assault are very rare. Home Office
figures suggest 4 per cent. But they do happen, and
the present
atmosphere of suspicion, and neurotic magnification of minor male
clumsinesses may encourage more.
Women are not all angels, and a sense
of our historical powerlessness may make this particular weapon horribly
tempting.
It mustn’t be.
There have to be consequences, because
sexual crime is too serious, lying about it too wicked, to be used as a
weapon of the petulant. In the Allan case we know nothing of the
vulnerabilities or mental problems of the woman who lied, but
it will be
dismaying if she is not promptly charged with perverting the course of
justice. Or, at least, wasting police time. Certainly she should lose
anonymity. That privilege of real victims is far too precious to be
brought into disrepute.
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