How do you disprove sexual abuse allegations?
Posted: Mon Jan 23, 2023 4:58 pm
I'm desperately trying to prove that a child sexual abuse allegation made against me is incorrect and I don't know how to do it. My wife developed an incorrect view that I was abusing our 2 and 5 year old daughters over the course of last year which ended in my arrest in December after one of her friends reported it to social services. The police took only 2 weeks to find no evidence (after medical checks, phone analysis, DNA checks, bedroom camera footage etc) and released me with NFA. Social services did not believe it met the significant harm threshold after a conference, but they say they are bothered by what my daughter has said.
I think I understand what has happened but don't know enough about child psychology to be able to frame it properly. My wife has been hyper-vigilant in the last couple of years (something happened to her when she was young), then taught our oldest daughter that if someone touches you and you don't like it to tell her. So my daughter dutifully says her Dad 'touches her sometimes and she doesn't like it'. She's just turned 5 so she has no idea that tickling or playing chasing games is not 'bad' touching and seems to be saying what she thinks Mum or the interviewer wants to hear. Then a cycle of confirmation bias and validation starts. I'm a great Dad and would never harm my children in anyway.
I'm now in a place where my wife seems convinced some kind of abuse happened, I haven't been home in nearly 2 months, she's engaged a lawyer and refuses to allow our children to spend any time with me if she isn't present. Social services have a CIN (?) assessment in place until March and I don't trust them at all. They are a juggernaut of assumptive guilt that is heavily weighted against fathers and they don't seem to have the right level of experience to deal with the case. I've never met anyone from social services in person nor have they seen me with my children and they seem to politely ignore me.
It's a horrific and devastating experience and my world has collapsed. I've got a lawyer now but I don't know where else to turn other than finding a child Psychologist expert who can support. Any ideas?
I think I understand what has happened but don't know enough about child psychology to be able to frame it properly. My wife has been hyper-vigilant in the last couple of years (something happened to her when she was young), then taught our oldest daughter that if someone touches you and you don't like it to tell her. So my daughter dutifully says her Dad 'touches her sometimes and she doesn't like it'. She's just turned 5 so she has no idea that tickling or playing chasing games is not 'bad' touching and seems to be saying what she thinks Mum or the interviewer wants to hear. Then a cycle of confirmation bias and validation starts. I'm a great Dad and would never harm my children in anyway.
I'm now in a place where my wife seems convinced some kind of abuse happened, I haven't been home in nearly 2 months, she's engaged a lawyer and refuses to allow our children to spend any time with me if she isn't present. Social services have a CIN (?) assessment in place until March and I don't trust them at all. They are a juggernaut of assumptive guilt that is heavily weighted against fathers and they don't seem to have the right level of experience to deal with the case. I've never met anyone from social services in person nor have they seen me with my children and they seem to politely ignore me.
It's a horrific and devastating experience and my world has collapsed. I've got a lawyer now but I don't know where else to turn other than finding a child Psychologist expert who can support. Any ideas?