A year ago, Franky Dean, a 24-year-old documentary film-making master’s student, decided to make a phone call she’d been avoiding nearly half her life. She was sitting in a dark computer room in New York University’s journalism institute in Manhattan when she FaceTimed her parents. They were in the living room at her home in the UK, where she grew up. Franky told them she’d just filed a police report about something that had happened more than a decade earlier. When Franky was 12, she had been sexually abused by a close friend’s dad.

And then her mum said two words that would change her life, again, for ever: “We know.”

It was meant to be a climactic moment – a revelation that Franky had been building up to for years. Instead, it was the beginning of another story – the unravelling of a shadow narrative that spanned half of Franky’s life. It’s a story about what happens when police assume survivors of sexual abuse to be “unknowing victims” – a series of misinterpretations and missteps that amounted to Franky spending 12 years hiding her abuse from her parents while they spent 12 years hiding it from her.

  • mox@lemmy.sdf.org
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    38
    arrow-down
    1
    ·
    24 hours ago

    I hope we as a society will start teaching new parents that they shouldn’t rely on child development advice from a single person, especially one with limited knowledge and experience in that area. Raising humans is complicated, and as with many things, the pitfalls are often invisible unless you’ve run into them before.

    I assume the detective constable meant well when offering guidance, but it’s important to consider the source when evaluating guidance, and be a little skeptical when it comes from someone whose qualifications and incentives don’t directly apply.

      • mox@lemmy.sdf.org
        link
        fedilink
        English
        arrow-up
        20
        arrow-down
        6
        ·
        edit-2
        2 hours ago

        Orbituary@lemmy.world wrote:

        Why are you certain they meant well? You have even less evidence of that than was needed to determine if someone slept through sexual abuse.

        I’m not certain of what they meant, because I haven’t met them and can’t read minds. Obviously, I’m being charitable with my assumptions about details that are both unknowable and irrelevant to my point.

        Stop blocking for cops.

        You sound just like an aggressive cop’s catchphrase: “Stop resisting.”

        Maybe you should stop willfully misinterpreting people’s words and slinging accusations.

          • NιƙƙιDιɱҽʂ@lemmy.world
            link
            fedilink
            English
            arrow-up
            16
            arrow-down
            4
            ·
            18 hours ago

            They…literally prefaced it with “I assume” to express that they were making an assumption. They didn’t state they knew the cops’ intention. Like, the whole nuance is “I don’t know, but I’d like to believe they meant well”. Meanwhile a little girl was raped and you’re going off on a random ass irrelevant nitpick ass tangent. Like just stfu.

      • DacoTaco@lemmy.world
        link
        fedilink
        English
        arrow-up
        5
        arrow-down
        5
        ·
        edit-2
        11 hours ago

        Not all cops, and not everywhere in the world, are pigs. The world isn’t that black and white

        • HeyThisIsntTheYMCA@lemmy.world
          link
          fedilink
          English
          arrow-up
          3
          arrow-down
          1
          ·
          4 hours ago

          I am getting sick of saying this. Silence does not protect the oppressed, it protects the oppressors. Police do a hell of a lot of oppressing. Guess who is silent during it? The rest of the police. That’s why ACAB.