Monday, 23 April 2012

URGENT: Here is the News...

 There's an entry on this blog which details useful links and information. If I had to name one single resource that helped me, one resource I would always recommend, it would be Victim Support. Without them, I would probably not be writing this blog today. Right now, this is a service to be found across the nation. It is free. Government proposals could change funding, so that finances are decided by local police commissioners.

This might be fine if the police commissioner of your area thinks that Victim Support is paramount. But if they decide that other costs must be prioritised, you could lose access to this service. And one day you, or someone you love may desperately need it.

Here is the news:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-17780636

 There has been a response in the Guardian.  Check out the signatures on this letter:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/law/2012/apr/20/help-victims-crime

This is not a political blog, I am not here to party-bash. Please consider the petition below, set up by Victim Support: http://epetitions.direct.gov.uk/petitions/33040

Thank you for reading this.

Thursday, 19 April 2012

A Visitor

Journal Entry: 3rd April 2012

God help me, I am about to scream or shout or something terrible, so scared. Less than 10 minutes ago something happened. I just spoke to [partner] I should be calm but I'm not, I'm not.

There was a knock on my door. I called out down the stairs and a male voice told me he just wanted to talk to me. I went to the door but didn't open it. He really wanted me to.

He told me he wanted to talk to me about the recent incident at the house. Christ, my stomach is churning. He explained to me that he had been arrested the night it happened, 'But it weren't me,' he said, 'They didn't oughter 'rest me, I don't do that sort of thing, not like that little...'

I explained I was sorry he had been arrested on my account. 'I wanted to tell you,' He said, 'I don't do that sort of thing. Anyways, I ran into the bloke who did it in jail, him claiming he was off his head on pills and such like. And I can tell you, he's had such a kicking in there!'

Oh God.

I explained that though the guy is a bad man, I don't want him to get a kicking.
'Well, it ain't much of a kicking,' the gentleman told me, 'Nothing for you to worry about. But he has had a kicking, I tell you! We don't do that sort of thing.'

We? Who is this we? How many of you know where I live, and can just pop round in the middle of the day for a chat? The police won't have told this visitor my address...the only way he can have known is if the man told him, or if he was nearby and spotted the police cars that night. He says he bumped into the man in prison, having been arrested for the same crime? Really? It's just insane. And there's a way, an easy spyable way around the back of this house. If I had the back door open, anyone could come in. The security is sh*te, the man knows this and anyone he tells will know it too.

Oh end, end, end, why won't this stupid thing end?

I try to be calm, try to think of our wonderful weekend in Stroud with friends, I run around this house like a whippet on a wheel. But all I can think is of being known, this house not being safe, and of the man being beaten in prison. Kicked. Holy Christ, this life! Do I go out, do I stay in, do I tell the police? My visitor may have been innocent, just giving me a well-meaning message from the criminal fraternity. He might have been  the prisoner's best mate. He might have been casing the house. He might be mad or drunk or on something. I don't know.

I sweet-talked the man away. Now I sit here, too confused to cry.

Edited to add So after talking to Victim Support, I emailed the detective in charge of the case. He says he thinks he knows who it is and will go have a word. This makes me feel bad in case the visitor's intentions were unicorn pure; in my paranoid moments, I am afraid he will hold a grudge and hang around till I go out, then come in and do something horrible.

Sunday, 8 April 2012

Of The Man

People have asked me why, on my list of links, I have included one for prisoners' families and another for advice for prisoners. The general consensus seems to be that I should detest the man, and doubtless that would be the case if he had succeeded in his attempt. As it is, I don't. 

Journal Entry February 23rd 2012

One of the policemen who burst through the door on the morning of the 26th came round last night just to see how I was getting along. He was one of the two who took me to the hospital to get my hand stitched up, and he was also pretty much the first to take a lead and run with it.

The defendant is to be sentenced on 23rd March. The CID detective had already mentioned that we could all go, and the young policeman has said that if he's on duty that day, he'll give us a lift to court as he would like to attend. It has the air of an ever so slighty ghoulish picnic but I can't help looking forward to it. He told me a few things about the perpetrator.

I already knew he was a burglar with some 20 years of crime and a few stints in prison behind him. I knew also that he has a brother who is a criminal. The new information is that his father was a burglar. 'He'll have been taken on jobs by his dad when he was small,' offered the policeman, 'Get him through a window, he'd come round to the door and let them in.' So he grew up as an apprentice in his father's profession, got himself a habit and also got himself a son, now 12 years old.

The young copper has had recent dealings with said boy, who he describes as 'A tiny thing, honestly he's so small he looks about 10 at most, he looks harmless...' but he's not harmless. The child's recent brushes with the law include beating up girls on a bus, and stealing a bike. It seems inevitable that one day the boy will follow his father's footsteps straight to the dock. Where is his mother? Who is trying to change things for him?

His father, described to me as 'scum' and 'a nasty piece of work,' has spent the last three months in Belmarsh on 23 hour lockdown, in the special wing they keep for bent coppers and sex offenders, prisoners who don't stand much chance if the general jail populace get to them. 'It's one thing to be in prison with all your burglar mates around you,' said our visitor, 'Another to be in a place like that...he's not having a good time.'

I am not sentimental. That man stole from me and would have raped me if he could. But I wonder about the man, the boy he was and the person he could have been, of his son and what he will become.

I wonder, and find no answers.

Thursday, 5 April 2012

Useful links and advice

The bravest man I know, an ex-soldier, advised me that if I didn’t get counselling, what had happened would poison me. He was right.

So this is written for anybody out there who has been through an attack. Bear in mind, my advice is limited to UK practice, because that’s all I know.

I’m going to say something unpopular right now; the Metropolitan Police were superb. They were respectful, professional and very caring – and of course, in the end, they got the perpetrator! They were the first to point me at decent counselling options.

I list the following two links because I have used the services and can personally vouch for them.  Irrespective of gender, religion, ethnic background, age, or sexual orientation, they offer excellent confidential help, and they are free.

Seriously extraordinary counselling, Victim Support is there for anybody who has been the victim of a crime. They have a direct helpline, but you can also make appointments for local one-to-ones. The police strongly recommended these guys, and I avoided them for ages because it seemed like such a hassle. Talk about an idiot! Best counselling I have ever had!

You do not need to be the victim of a crime specifically to go to the Havens, though they can help with some really difficult issues, from talking to the police anonymously to testing for STDs and gathering forensic evidence.  Again, they offer respectful and gentle counselling. They are not about pursuing a case. They are all about you, what you want and need. 

The Havens are based in London, and are one of the support organisations listed at  http://www.rapecrisis.org.uk/centres.php. This link can help you find help wherever you live in the UK. Don’t let the name put you off, they offer help dealing with all kinds of sexual violence/abuse, and their services extend to men as well as women and children.

If you want specifically male-orientated guidance, both the Havens and Victim Support offer it, but Survivors UK has an excellent reputation too: http://www.survivorsuk.org/

Then there's the other side of the wall, where help can be needed most and given least:



With regard to my case, the police did everything they could to make the situation easier. There are new ways of delivering evidence that lessen the trauma of it.

Video statements can make up the body of your evidence, so you may not have to spend time in court, or keep retelling what happened. These video statements are not played to the suspect; they aren’t going to see you or hear you speak.. Video line-ups can also be used for ID parades.

If you are called to testify in court, arrangements can be made, screens can be used, so that you will not see the defendant and they will not see you.

It is never easy, but attitudes towards sexual assault are changing. For more info on how the Metropolitan Police of London are currently approaching the issues of sex crime, check out this link: 

 http://www.met.police.uk/sapphire/  

Again, heartfelt thanks to Detective Kevin J Seed, Officers Sam Bird and Ben "Briefcase" Smith,  Liz, Matt and all those at Lewisham Police Station who worked so hard to bring this case to conclusion and gave me so much help.

 It's taken a lot of people a long time to get this far. Much more needs to be done. If you don’t have facilities to these services where you live, campaign to get them. They should be your right.

Here’s to respect for all of us.

One Fine Day: The End

*Triggers present*   
Journal Entry March 23rd 2012

They had come out in support of their boy; a bunch of demi-carnies who hadn't seen a fresh vegetable in generations. Pockmarked and a bit huge, they lumbered into the public gallery. It was hard to think he might be the good looking one of the family. They looked at me. Their expressions were blank, but it's fair to say I could not be their favourite person.

'If they try anything,' said one police officer encouragingly, 'I'll arrest the lot, the whole blimmin' family, for witness intimidation, and they can spend the night in the cells and think about it.' But they didn't. They may not even have thought bad things about me. One man with short white hair watched me a long time, blue eyes blinking now and then.

Counsel for the prosecution was a beautiful woman, vivacious black eyes, silver earings and high heels to die for. I took one look at her face, so smart and glowing, and knew we would be all right.

'Before we start,' she said, 'I want to tell you how much I admire you...' and she went on to say lovely things that no-one needs to hear except me. Then came the words I dreaded.

'I must warn you,' she said, 'Though this is not a trial, I will be graphic, to give a clear indication of what has happened.' I told her it would be all right, if I needed to cry I would cry. Haven't I written the story many times, to get over it, to make it just a thing I tell? But it is not the same. It is not just a thing I tell.

Oh, but when they brought him into the dock! I felt faint and sick the moment I recognised his face. He is bigger in real life than in my head's retelling. There he stood, not the junkie ratman I had fought, skin and bone and covered in my blood. Three months of prison fare, as opposed to his preferred intake of heroin, crack cocaine and methadone, have done him good. Filled out a little, his face broadened, he looked stronger, clean cut and respectful, in a pale shirt and dark trousers. How the hell did I wrestle a knife off this man? He never looked towards us, and after a while, I had to pay close attention to all that was being said.

[Details of perpetrator, cut for privacy] He had not committed burglary in a domicile since the mid '90s. He had no past record of violence, and no past record of sexual offending. Like the lucky girl I am, I was his first stab at that.

Months ago, when told about his lack of prior sexual offences. I had burst into tears in front of the detective. 'What's wrong with me then?' I blubbered, envisaging a jury eyeballing me and wondering the same. 'There's nothing wrong with you,' He said. 'You were naked and he took a chance.'

But it seemed strange to me that the defendant had done this, knowing the law so much better than I did. 'I've been inside for certain...offences...before,' he had told me that night, 'But never for anything sexual, never for anything like this.' As though he was confiding to a friend over a pint in a pub, 'I've got to have that knife, it's covered with my DNA. I'm looking at 10 years without it. So I've nothing to lose...'

How could one so lucid suddenly lose the plot, blow his lifetime modus operandi of nick-and-bolt, break into a house for the first time in over a decade and attack a woman with a knife, trying to make her perform sexual acts for him? No wonder his family looked at me.

It was mentioned that this case was unusual in many ways, the most being my readiness to fight, but also, the strange periods of conversation between attacks, his seemingly fulsome remorse and the validations of character that had been written for him by a series of women who knew him and described him as a calm man. These references had gone to the court, and the judge had read them. The defendant had wanted to write a letter to me! To get that in the post! It would have been like peeking through the letterbox and seeing his eyes staring back at me. He had been told it was not to be, and thus his own letter had gone to the court.

His defence counsel did not attempt to deny the charges. They were respectful towards me, and ready to accept all I had said in my statements. He apparently could not remember much of that night; he had been recovering from heroin addiction for years, and together with his brother, had been nursing his dying father for 18 months. His father died in the summer at which point he turned to alcohol. He had never been a drinker before. (Defence didn't quite say 'It wuz the boooooze wot did it, yer 'onner!' But it was close...) The night he broke in, he had taken nearly an entire packet of temazepan plus a wellie's worth of brew. This, argued the Defence, transformed him into the maniac who did all this damage and couldn't remember any of it.

I had been very close to this guy, and my sense of smell is good, almost acute. I didn't get a whiff of alcohol off him that night. He smelled of nothing at all. And for a man so puzzled, he had been very swift to plead guilty to crimes contrary to his nature and his memory; possibly because he and his counsel must have recognised that nothing good could come of having my 999 call being played out to a jury.

I wanted to get all those women who knew him so well, and were confident enough of his character to write to the judge, yes and his daughter and his stepdaughter and his mother, and his sister, and let them hear that tape, me screaming for my life down the phone, him kicking the door in as he yelled obscenities, and see them write then. 'Women!' He had spat at me. They might think him a decent man, that night he thought nothing of them. And neither do I.

The Defence agreed that he should do a substantial amount of time for his crimes; what they wanted to argue against was the IPP(1) that the police wanted as part of his sentence, and the conclusions arrived at by the pre-sentencing report. In that report, the recorder felt that the defendant blamed me for being naked in my bed, inflaming him. The Defence insisted that this was not at all what the defendant intended to say; he was searching for reasons in his own mind as to why he might have done it, and could arrive at none. This had clearly come across badly in the videolink interview.

The judge felt that there was not enough proof of ongoing danger to the public for an IPP; but he also felt that current prescribed sentence lengths for what had happened were insufficient. The defendant had not raped me, nor had he even reached my erogenous zones, but he tried repeatedly, and he also tried to arm himself three times, once with a carving knife, once with a steak knife and once with a Live Action Role-Playing sword(2). The sentence for both aggravated burglary and sexual assault was 18 years, knocked down to 12 for an early guilty plea, saving us all the trauma of a trial. He will serve half of that, and then be let out. If he is arrested after that, he goes back in and serves the rest.

This was accounted steep; Prosecution told me that he might appeal, but that even if he did, it would not go down by more than a year. 'He will go on the sex offenders list for life,' she said, 'And he will not have a pleasant time. He knows how other prisoners treat sex offenders.' She also had one final message for me from the Defence; in the estimation of her learned colleague, the defendant's remorse was genuine. Again it was said that the depth and sincerity of his contrition seemed unusual. 'Make of that what you will,' said the Prosecution.

For the first time, I wanted to go over to the Defence Counsel and crack her head out of her wig.

Stop it! I wanted to scream at her, What, is this bloke some ladykiller, haha, that every woman around him wants to tell me what a nice guy he is? Sometimes I wake in the middle of the night and I believe there is no-one who hears me in the whole world. I thought I was going to die that night. I practice with carving knives, and I cry for no reason. Sorry? Of course he's sorry. He's sorry he's in the dock, he's sorry his life is in this mess, he'll say anything and of course you want to believe him cos that's your job! Well, all right, do your job and be paid well, but don't come to me trying to feel good about it!


There, that's the shrill truth of me. I felt faint at the sentencing, and even now am dizzy when I think about it. For a man who broke in, threatened me with a knife, stole stuff and tried to rape me, this sentence seems just and fair. For a man who has never harmed a woman before, went off on the biggest bender of his life, is genuinely disgusted at himself and sorry for the pain he has caused, this seems like hell, deserved according to his actions if not his motives, but still hell. And I feel it.

I feel for him.

I don't know the truth of what or who this man really is. It is good that no other person faces what I have faced, for 5 or 6 years at least. After all this, I am going to be all right, I know it. But I am so sorry we ever met, and not just because it hurt me.

Oh Mr. Try to be well.





(1)  IPP means imprisonment for public protection. This link is the clearest explanation I have found; http://www.offendersfamilieshelpline.org/index.php/life-and-indeterminate-sentences-ipp/ 
These sentences have to be served in full, but that doesn’t mean automatic release afterwards; the prisoner must prove that he is not a public danger and this can take years to ascertain. There's a lot of controversy about this current piece of UK legislation.

(2)A replica of a weapon usually made from latex based around a fibre-glass tube. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Live_action_role-playing_game  below are some nicely unrealistic examples. Good craftsmen can make them very convincing.



One Fine Day: The Beginning

*Triggers present*

Journal Entry November 27th 2011   

Friday night I came home after seeing some chums in North London. I left [partner] with them, and came home early because I was due in the office on Saturday morning. After some faffing about, I went to bed.


I woke when the bedroom light was switched on. The man was a stranger; I kept expecting him to somehow become my brother or my partner, as if my eyes had to be deceiving me. They weren't, not about him, not about the carving knife in his hand.

I started to scream, begging my neighbours to hear me, crying out for help and he came towards me telling me to stop it. 'I JUST WANT MONEY!' He yelled and threatened to cut me if I shouted. So I stopped. I pointed him at the money box. He tipped it out, found no money, started shouting and came at me with the knife, moving the blade towards my face.

As the knife came I tried to grab it. I aimed for the handle and got the bottom end of the blade, and he pressed that into my thumb to get my hand off. My thumb bled a lot and I got faint. Big picture still in my head: the palm of my hand and all the little creases filling up with blood. But I didn't let go. I didn't let go for the rest of the night.

We wrestled and pulled, sometimes he let go in a kind of wild remorseful mood swing, then he would tell me that he had to have the knife as it was evidence, he would attack me for the knife and try to touch me, he would push my hand down and try to prize my fingers apart for the knife, but from the moment I grabbed it, I never ever let it go. I was covered in blood, all out of my thumb.

He pulled his pants a bit down, took out his penis and told me that I was going to suck his cock or he would cut my throat. I told him NO, I screamed at him not to touch me, and I knew there were a few things that would never happen, not while I had the knife and I would never give up the knife. He went for the knife again, trying to pin me down on the bed, trying to get himself between my thighs, I lifted my knees, planted my feet in his chest and kicked him back onto the dresser. He howled and claimed I cut him, as if he, and I and the bedsheets weren't covered in what he called my 'claret' already!

He sat on the bed, tried to make me sit by him. I coaxed him to talk and I listened, tried to build a bond. I explained to him that while my head wanted to believe he didn't mean me harm, my body was terrified and I was going to vomit. I stood there, naked, covered in blood in front of him, and I puked straight onto the floor. I told him, that I needed the toilet, and at the time I truly believed I was going to defecate. He walked onto the landing, and my guts just stopped, I slammed the door behind him, pushed a suitcase in front of it, grabbed my phone from off the laundry basket and phoned 999. He roared outside the door, crashing around, threats and fury. Upstairs, downstairs rummaging through the house, the kitchen, my fear he would find a bigger, better knife. The WPC at the other end of the phone warned me not to tell him I was talking to her; too late, he was shouting and screaming at the door again. 'Crowbar!' He yelled. It went quiet.

Suddenly it started again, solid heavy blows/kicks against the door, the whole thing feeling as if it was going to come off on its hinges, I felt it crack behind me horizontally across the centre, just as the WPC told me that the police had arrived at the wrong address. The bottom of the door burst open, he pushed it forward, the case and I followed and he came into the room.

'Now you're fucked!' He said, pulling one of [partner’s]’ LARP swords out of a scabbard. He couldn't quite believe it didn't hurt me. I could finally get out the bedroom door and I did, he ran down the stairs behind me, I tried the front door, fumbled, ran into the front room, ran out into the hall, got the door right this time, out into the streets, they were empty. I don't know what I was expecting, a swat team in the bushes perhaps or a man with a megaphone? He followed me too, and ran off. I ran back inside and bolted the door. The police were there in less than 2 minutes. I heard them at the door and knew it had to be them, but I was afraid it was him. I opened the door, and stood there naked, covered in blood, crying, knife in hands. They told me to drop the knife, and I did, the knife and the phone on the floor. They came in and covered me up.

The police were fantastic. They took me to hospital, where my thumb got stitched up. [Partner] was so supportive in every way. Our neighbours let us sleep in their brand new bedroom; we couldn't come back in, even to collect my phone because it was part of the crime scene. Seeing the house next day with that tape they use across the entrance, cats very confused.

We thought he had taken a lot of money, but he hadn't. I had been telling him the truth about the jewellery box; there was £600 cash there. He had missed it because it was in white envelopes; clearly he expected it to be marked 'SWAG' or something.

Me, I am OK. I know, I know I was very lucky, but I feel light headed. I keep waking up. I smell a bit more intense...I have had two baths, but it's just slightly more sweat than I am used to, don't know what that is.

This is garbled, but I can't write much more for now.

When these stitches heal, I will have a tiny tattoo on this thumb to always remember; I may not have the valour of a soldier, I may be too silly for a hero. But when nightmares come - and they do come and they are not movies - I must always remember that I have it in me to grab the knife and keep hold.