I am just on my way out to Christchurch prison to visit an innocent father convicted to 4 years imprisonment on false allegations of sexual violation. I give him hope and keep his spirit positive. Sadly he was shafted by a corrupt justice system and a vicious man hating lesbian detective. Shame on our disgusting justice system.His trial was sickening to witness but who cares eh!
A woman drove a man to suicide by crying rape and forced a second innocent man to consider taking his life after falsely accusing him of a similar sex attack.
By Chris Brook
25th May 2010
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/
Despite being exposed in court as a serial liar, legal restrictions mean the 21-year-old woman can never be identified.
A jury took only 45 minutes to clear medical student Olumide Fadayomi, 27, of rape.
But several jurors at Sheffield Crown Court broke down in tears when the judge revealed the "victim" had a history of crying rape.
Judge Patrick Robertshaw launched a stinging attack on the Crown Prosecution Service for making Fadayomi stand trial.
He said: "The evidence did not, and was never going to, prove rape. The prime overriding consideration in the CPS's decision had been merely that the complainant wished the case to go ahead.
"It was little short of a craven abdication of responsibility for making an independent and fair-minded assessment of the case.
"It is quite astonishing these decisions are made by those who simply do not have experience of what happens in Crown Court because they never come into Crown Court.
"They sit behind desks and make decisions that result in this sort of trial taking place."
The judge revealed how 18 months earlier the same woman had made an allegation of rape.
He said the case never reached court because it was "lacking in credibility", but the accused man committed suicide "when facing that allegation".
After failing to have this first rape accused brought to court, the woman set about framing Fadayomi, a stranger she met in a nightclub.
The woman claimed Fadayomi attacked her in a house he shared in Walkley, Sheffield.
But a friend, who was with her that evening, told the court the woman danced and kissed Fadayomi, boasting: "I'm going to have his body tonight."
The woman later told her friend she planned to accuse the student of rape, saying: "He is not going to get away with it, I've got evidence this time."
Fadayomi told the jury the woman had agreed to sex. He said: "She never told me to stop and neither did she resist."
The student, from Nigeria, was doing a biomedical sciences course at the University of East London, but the incident happened in October when he went to Sheffield to do a 10-week music production course during a study break.
After the case Fadayomi recalled how the woman propositioned him by telling him she liked his "perfume" and that "she wouldn't mind having me that night".
They later returned to his house, where they had sex. Fadayomi then gave her £8 for a taxi and she left. He said he went out to buy food at 6am and police were waiting for him on his return.
Fadayomi said of his ordeal: "My life has been hell for the last seven months.
I thought about taking my own life.
"I've not been able to sleep properly since all this happened. Some of my friends shunned me and my parents in Nigeria were heartbroken and scared of what might happen to me."
Naheed Hussain, Chief Crown Prosecutor for CPS South Yorkshire, on Monday night defended the decision to bring the case but said he would conduct a review following the judge's comments "to see if any lessons can be learned".
He said: "The decision to prosecute was taken by a senior lawyer. We were satisfied there was sufficient evidence not only from the complainant but from another witness whose evidence supported that of the complainant."
The law allows defendants accused of rape to be named, but the government intends to introduce anonymity for alleged rapists until conviction. - Daily Mail
"I've not been able to sleep properly since all this happened. Some of my friends shunned me and my parents in Nigeria were heartbroken and scared of what might happen to me."
Naheed Hussain, Chief Crown Prosecutor for CPS South Yorkshire, on Monday night defended the decision to bring the case but said he would conduct a review following the judge's comments "to see if any lessons can be learned".
He said: "The decision to prosecute was taken by a senior lawyer. We were satisfied there was sufficient evidence not only from the complainant but from another witness whose evidence supported that of the complainant."
The law allows defendants accused of rape to be named, but the government intends to introduce anonymity for alleged rapists until conviction. - Daily Mail
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