This story discusses sexual assault.
This week's judgement in the defamation case instigated by Bruce Lehrmann is being touted as a win for women. And it was. Yet, my reaction was to curl up in bed and cry uncontrollably over it.
In 2019 our family spent a week in a courtroom, taking the witness stand to prove that an ex-family friend had sexually assaulted our then eight-year-old daughter and attempted to abuse her a second time when she was nine.
My daughter was 18 by the time we had our day in court yet was offered the opportunity to testify via CCTV from a secure room, because of the case being about a childhood assault. She bravely chose to do it in person.
In the weeks leading up to the trial, she'd been given a chance to watch the video recording of her statement given to the police a few years earlier. Afterwards she said, "I looked really young in that video, Mum. My whole body was shaking. But I’m not that person anymore. I don’t want to be scared of him. I want the jury to see my face and know what he did to me."
She didn't need to be scared of her attacker anymore. He was a weak, pathetic man who preyed on tiny children. However, she should have been scared of the courtroom. And we all should have feared his defence lawyer.
That week was the most traumatic of all our lives, causing potentially more damage than the assault that instigated it. My daughter spent two days on the stand being yelled at, baited, tormented, accused of ruining her family's lives, and ridiculed when she cried. Notes from her private counselling sessions were read out in court. Notes obtained by the defence lawyer just weeks before laws were passed that could have allowed us to protect her privacy. My husband and I sat outside the doors, banned from the room because we were witnesses, hearing her sobs, feeling futile and frustrated. When the judge called for a break to allow our child time to calm down, I hugged her briefly. The defence lawyer immediately intervened, and I was cautioned that if I touched my daughter again, I’d be held in contempt of court, as she was still his witness.
Top Comments