She was a young college student. He was a lawyer who worked in the office of the state attorney general in Montgomery, Ala. They met at a college-related function and he immediately started showering her with attention.
Although she was very attractive, she wasn’t accustomed to this kind of attention from a man in the “adult world,” especially someone with his sort of position and power. She was flattered to have someone like that notice her and think she was worth taking seriously.
He asked her on a date and ended up taking her to his apartment. Very soon, he was trying to sexually force himself on her. It wasn’t just a request. He was physically trying to take her clothes off against her will. She realized that this important man was trying to rape her.
She was able to escape that night and find another way home.
Afterward, she felt shame and humiliation. She didn’t tell a soul, because it felt shameful that such a thing could happen to her and she couldn’t imagine trying to make someone believe her word against the word of such an “important man.”

The time is rapidly coming when I’m quitting Facebook for good
Reading through hundreds of my old articles has been unsettling
Be careful what you hunger for; it’s very often not what you need
Conservatives betray their own values when they mimic enemies
Only through death of empires can something new take their places
Anarchist vs. minarchist debate misses the shift to post-statist world
I was getting frustrated with the interview Sunday afternoon, but I wanted to keep things civil and polite.
Self-disclosure of flaws is how I stop myself from deceiving you
Tenn. woman threatened for allowing daughter to ride bike to school
If you aren’t free to to be a bigot if you choose, you’re not really free