Prudie - //Andy I am neither one of those trying to slander the woman nor particularly defend Ched Evans. I was reading the end of the thread and couldn't understand why you said she never claimed rape.
You need to step back from this thread and then re-read what you've written:-
"They interviewed the woman, and on the basis of what she told them, they charged Evans and Macdonald with rape"
" The woman did not accuse Evans or Macdonald of rape"
"I doubt they asked her if it was OK with her for them to do their job - don't you?" - this verges on snotty.
Can you not see that the rape charge didn't come from nowhere and the police didn't make it up? I wouldn't go to the police and claim my handbag had been stolen and then with no further comment from me they arrested whoever I'd spent the previous night with for rape. Ludicrous. //
My apologies for my sharp tone, which on reflection was inappropriate.
As I see it, this woman has been interviewed, and based on the events she has described, the police concluded that she did not give consent for intercourse with Evans, and legally, that is classed as rape.
That does not mean that she accused him of rape, or that the police suggested that to her. It would appear that she was interviewed, and advised that she could not remember what had happened. Under the law, that means she did not give consent, and that makes Evans' actions a criminal offence.
So I am left with the conclusion that she was asked what happened the previous night, and answered, and the police drew their conclusions from what she was told.
Let's hypothesise a step further shall we?
Let's ponder the possibility that, when she was advised that Evans was being charged, she advised that she did not want the charge to be brought - she accepted responsibility for her part in the event, that she was intoxicated and had placed herself in the situation - and wished to put it down to experience.
And the police told her that the matter was now out of her hands, they were charging, and there was nothing she could do.
Now the scenario looks a lot different doesn't it?
A woman who wanted to report a missing bag is suddenly on an unstoppable legal train that takes her into court twice, and having to move house five (that's five!) times because of being identified by internet trolls.
It's a hypothesis, but it no more outrageous than the speculation that has gone on since this case first came to court.
Food for thought maybe.
Oh, and to anyone who thinks I should 'get over' Evans; acquittal, none of my posts have complained about the judgement, or said that he should still be viewed as guilty.
I respect the rule of law - unlike those who think he should not have been charged and convicted in the first place.