I recently read the article published by The Daily Wire: "Five Teenage 'Mean Girls' Falsely Accused A Boy Of Sexual Assault. They Weren't Punished."
This article covers a story about "several high school girls-- dubbed 'mean girls'--" who "claimed a male student sexually assaulted them because they 'just don't like them.'" Even after these words literally came out of one of these girls' mouths, they weren't punished.
Basically, one of these girls randomly decided she's just accuse this boy of sexually assaulting her in July of 2017 while he was working as a lifeguard. He reasoning, again, was: "I just don't like him."
Michael J. and Alicia Ford, the boys parents, are now suing the parents of the five girls involved, along with Seneca Valley School District for the treatment of their son post accusation.
Their 26-page lawsuits entails slews of information and provided perspective on the son's treatment after he was accused of sexually assaulting the girl only identified as "K.S." The lawsuit claims that this girl told her classmates back in October of 2017 that "she would do anything to get [the boy] expelled."
A girl who worked with K.S., Megan Villegas, said that she was there for the assault. Through this, the accusations went forward, and the boy was charged with two counts of harassment solely based off the girls' word. He signed a consent decree without admitting guilt that required six months probation.
According to the law suit, this boy is currently being homeschooled as result of the bullying he received after these accusations, including having signs taped to his back that read "predator."
"[The boy} was basically being tortured in school by other students and investigators, but the administration only focused on the girls who were lying. Once the allegations were proven false, they didn't care one bit and there has been absolutely no repercussions against the girls." -- Craig Fishman, the Floods' attorney.
Along with this case, are many others. Of course, more than any leftist would like for you to realize.
For example, we have "mattress girl," and if you haven't heard of her, it's not due to lack of liberal activists sharing her story.
In 2014, Emma Sulkowicz drug her blue mattress all around Columbia University to emphasize her misfortune of being a rape victim. New York Times and other publication sympathized with her courageous actions. Columbia awarded her mattress toting with course credit as an art project. Artnet claimed that the stunt was "one of the most important art works of the year." She was honored and recognized by many feminist groups, including the Feminist Majority Foundation.
Her story was that a consensual sexual encounter turned violent. She filed charges with the university and the New York police, whom she later claimed "mistreated her." Both investigated the situation before both deciding to not take any further action against Paul Nungesser, the accused.
This is when Sulkowicz launched her mattress lugging campaign, which further induced the slew of shunning and ostracizing directed to Nungesser, the freshly branded "rapist." The university found him four years later "not responsible."
In 2014, the Rolling Stone Magazine published a article "A Rape on Campus," that told the story of a sexual assault occurrence at the University of Virginia. A UVA student, Jackie Coakley, claimed she'd been taken to a frat party hosted by the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity, where she was gang raped by several of the fraternity members as part of their initiation.
Well, after some actual investigation, the Rolling Stone scrambled to redact the article in it's entirety, issuing several apologies for the publication of the story to begin with. The article was withdrawn after the story had gained significant media attention, and UVA's suspension of the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity all together, in 2015.
Later, Coakley claimed that "she believed her story at the time."
Catherine Reddington, a Long Island woman, posted on social media stating that Alex Goldman raped her in a bedroom of Syracuse Delta Kappa Epsilon's fraternity house.
She took her accusations to the police claiming "I woke up in Delta Kappa Epsilon Fraternity in Alex Goldman's bed confused, bloody, bruised, with ripped clothes."
After months long investigation into her claims that "Alex Goldman was a rapist," post medical exam, rape kit, and bloodwork that was don't within 26 hours of the alleged incident, there is no found evidence that corroborates Reddington's story. There was no proof she was assaulted, drugged, or even had any sort of sexual encounter with Goldman at all.
The investigators claimed the case "impossible to determine what, if anything, occurred that evening between Ms. Reddington and Mr. Goldman. There is no credible proof of any sexual conduct in this case, consensual or non-consensual."
Reddington responded that the DA's letter was "disgusting," before proceeding to harass Goldman, resulting in his expulsion from Syracuse and the loss of his job with Bohler Engineering, who she thanked for "taking a stand against this disgusting excuse of a man."
At least in the words of Catherine Comins:
'"Men who are unjustly accused of rape can sometimes gain from the experience."
Despite popular belief of the contrary, these facts of false allegations in no way justify sexual assault, but women also do not run the gambit on sexual assault. Women are capable of being liars, clearly.
I know this is shocking, in a women say-all/be-all/end-all society.
By all means, please continue to believe women to the point of mass hysteria of morality and common decency.
But I don't know, I mean, if I only had a nickel for every time I accused a guy of rape just because I just "don't like him."
Am I right, ladies?