Author Topic: England toughening: now take pedo-kinapper-pimps to trial before doing nothing  (Read 692 times)

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Offline Israel Chai

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Girl, 17, tried to kill herself after ordeal at Muslim sex trafficking trial
These tween and teen girls went to law enforcement repeatedly but police were afraid of offending Muslims so the raping, child sex trafficking and unspeakable abuses against non-Muslim children went on. Child abuse failings must lead to new law, MPs say

"Catastrophic blunders at two scandal-hit councils mean that ministers must consider changing the law, MPs say"

95% of child rape and molestation convictions in the UK were committed by Muslims.

    Girl, 17, tried to kill herself after ordeal at sex trial By Andrew Norfolk, The Times, August 6, 2013

    A teenager tried to kill herself during the trial of ten men accused of grooming her for sex from the age of 11, it can be revealed today.

    The 17-year-old took an overdose of pills after her first day in the witness box. Proceedings were halted for several days in May while she was treated in hospital before resuming her evidence.

    The girl gave evidence for 11 days at Oxford Crown Court, during which she was cross-examined by ten defence barristers representing the men from High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, who faced multiple counts of rape and other child-sex offences.

Seven of the men, aged from 19 to 29, were acquitted after the nine-week trial. The jury deliberated for six days but failed to reach a verdict on 15 charges against three defendants. Those alleged offences were abandoned on Friday when the Crown announced that it would not seek a retrial.

The teenager’s failed suicide attempt — of which the jury was not told — will heighten concerns about the pressure placed on vulnerable witnesses who give evidence in sex-abuse cases, particularly those featuring multiple defendants.

One girl in a sex-grooming trial held at Stafford Crown Court in 2012 spent 15 days in the witness box. She suffered panic attacks and flashbacks after hours of cross-examination during which she was accused of lying.

The mother of another victim of multiple child-sex crimes who gave evidence this year in the trial of nine Oxford men at the Old Bailey said that being cross-examined made her feel “doubly abused”. She described her treatment in court as “nasty, cruel, vindictive and sarcastic”.

A source close to the High Wycombe case said that the girl’s overdose was triggered by “the overall stress and pressure she was feeling” during the early days of the trial.
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