Thursday, November 3, 2011

Chantilly Woman Charged with Making False Rape Accusations

The 19-year-old allegedly lied about being raped at a hotel in Manassas.

Tyeisha Keywan Jarrett, 19, of Chantilly was charged with filing a false police report on Saturday, Oct. 29.

Jarrett allegedly reported that she had been raped at a Quality Inn in Manassas.  Prince William County Police investigated the allegations and determined that Jarrett had lied about the incident.

A court date or bond information is unavailable at this time.

Link: http://chantilly.patch.com/articles/chantilly-woman-charged-for-false-rape-accusations

2 comments:

Arod99k said...

Many people have never heard of the False Rape Society until they are in a precarious situation. Many people will say that this is not even an issue, and that there is no such thing as a false rape accusation. That nobody would lie about rape. How can they say this? I agree that there is no way in hell that this story happened in America; in America there is no penalty for a False Rape Accusation. Nancy Grace says it is gang rape / and to this day maintains this theory. Just recently we had a commenter say the same thing. As a person who has been affected by a False Rape Accuser, I can tell you that this is the only web site that speaks the truth and exposes the severity of this crime & fraud. False Rape Accusations have caused innocent men to be murdered, beaten, imprisoned from decades to life, loss of millions of dollars, loss of career, loss of family, loss of their home, and loss of reputation. This is a vicious crime that needs to be exposed an criminalized.

Thank you Pierce & Steven, for telling the truth.

slwerner said...

”Prince William County Police investigated the allegations and determined that Jarrett had lied about the incident.”

The sad thing with so many of these stories is that they are a just simple statement telling us that an allegation turned out to be false. These same news outlets, whenever they have news of a sexual crimes, and especially when they have a name of a suspect, will tend to run wild, spewing every salacious detail they can dig up, and even asking for the publics input so as to use their “impressions” of what might have happened to spice the story up even more.

But, when the allegation turns out to be false, it leads to just another perfunctory, matt-of-fact relaying of none but the most basic information as to what has transpired.

I suppose it could be viewed as a clouds “silver lining”, allowing that as some many FRA’s begin to be uncovered so quickly, and as if a matter of routine, that the news accounts would naturally come to resemble “Police Blotter” sections (albeit, with the names of female offenders redacted).

I don’t know if it’s due to some sense of Chivalrous White-Knighting on the part of the reporters, trying to spare the poor dear any further public embarrassment; if it’s a more focused effort to keep the FRA issue seeming small and irrelevant; or if it’s just plain laziness; but it sure smacks of very poor journalism.

And by not revealing what “tipped” off the police, and by not revealing any known motives for the false allegation, it serves to deprive the public of further education about the “hows” and “whys” of women lying about having been raped.