Trigger warning: This post deals with child sexual abuse and may be distressing for some readers.
For the past two mornings I’ve been glued to the radio.
Not the TV.
The radio.
Because what I’ve been listening to – the story that was being told – left me sitting in my car in my garage, two mornings in a row, long after I’d turned the engine off.
Yesterday morning on 97.3FM in Brisbane a 40-something year old woman called Rachel* rang the breakfast show’s private investigator. (The breakfast show has its own P.I who looks into cases for listeners. Usually it’s tracking down exes who aren’t paying appropriate child support).
Anyway.
This time was different.
Rachel rang in asking for help to track down the man who sexually abused her as an eight-year-old girl. That’s right. Rachel wants to know if her abuser is still alive. And if he is? She’s finally going to press charges.
For years, Rachel has struggled feeling like she couldn’t come forward. Then when she finally felt ready, the laws at the time wouldn’t allow her to press charges. But now, as we have all seen thanks to the cases against Robert Hughes and Rolf Harris, the laws have caught up – and Rachel is finally in a position where she can charge the man who sexually abused her more than thirty years ago.
Top Comments
Did we ever hear an update on this??
Good for you. I wish I'd had taken the abuser on but he died before I got the courage. Lots of luck.