Scott Mills

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I think the 3 year thing is more that the victim didn't remember the exact dates but that it was during that period.
 
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Under sixteen would mean still at school, no job so no money, hard to see how this wouldn't be obvious to an adult.
 
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We don't know it was over a three year period. It could be that whatever it was happened at some time between year 1 and year 3.

I think it's more likely to be a one-off myself because while I've read Scott likes young men; as discussed that is common and not illegal, and there's not been anything about him liking underage boys.
 
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I do think about the alleged victim in this case, watching all this unfold.

There is a lot of support for SM despite his statement which was not a compete denial of what may or may not have happened.

The statement has been carefully curated with knowledges that we aren’t privy to. Scott knows what he did and didn’t do. He knows what evidence the boy has. Scott knows the case was closed in 2016 due to lack of evidence, knows precisely what he was accused of back then.

The boy can rightly sell his story to the press if he wants, I wonder if he is thinking to do that?

CSA survivors seeking justice can be very driven, a voice that needs to be heard. Even many years later.
Why do you keep saying boy?
 
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We don't know it was over a three year period. It could be that whatever it was happened at some time between year 1 and year 3.

I think it's more likely to be a one-off myself because while I've read Scott likes young men; as discussed that is common and not illegal, and there's not been anything about him liking underage boys.
It can’t have been a one off or they’d be saying sexual offence, rather than sexual offences. So it’s clearly more than once!
 
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I think the 3 year thing is more that the victim didn't remember the exact dates but that it was during that period.
I think this is really unlikely for a teenager. There are so many more transitions to mark the passing of time to hang memories on than later in life. If he were in the middle of his GCSEs he'd remember that, for example. So a 3 year window of time to place a singular event seems unlikely to me.
 
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But I don’t recall seeing Fry with a procession of young men, it seems like they met each other and that was it, not that he only ever goes for young looking lads.

Presumably if the “only” or main attraction is looking young, then the young spouses will be ditched and replaced in due course.
Stephen Fry does seem to be quite interested in fictional explorations of youthful sexuality.

He wrote a play centred around a male teacher embarking upon a sexual relationship with a 13-year-old boy (https://www.independent.co.uk/news/media/fry-under-fire-over-paedophilia-play-186150.html)

He wrote a novel in which a 15-year-old boy instigates sexual relationship with various women (The Liar)


But it's all good, because underage sexual experiences with older people are nothing to whinge about, according to Stephen Fry:

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SM's statement is really annoying and self-serving, it only gives information that is already known apart from thanking his supporters, it is real damage limitation.
Thankfully the ready-made excuse of 'it was one kiss in a nightclub' seems to have fizzled out on the thread - no-one gets caught up in a national investigation for something that trivial.
 
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It’s a historic sex offense allegation, in which the alleged victim was below the age of 16 at the time.

Many years later that victim is now an adult obviously.

I’ve known CSA survivors confide what happened to them in their much later years, it’s so sad they have carried this burden for so long but inspiring they felt finally able to share.

For a CSA survivor, being heard and being believed is important, and helps to shed any feelings of blame or shame. Justice also gives a lot of closure.
 
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I feel high profile cases such as this one can inspire others to come forward. Empower is maybe a better word.

Times have changed since the mid 90s, fortunately.

If SM is guilty, how sad in 2016 the victim’s case didn’t proceed legally. I hope in such a constellation the victim had support.

I’ve known CSA victims crumble when they themselves became parents, that was then their trigger to speak out after many years. I’ve known others finally feel safe in an adult relationship and that was their prompt to speak out.
 
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Because blurring the lines takes away from other victims
I don't understand what is meant here: in what sense does referencing that a victim of past sexual abuse was a child when it happened take anything away from other victims, and what 'lines' are being 'blurred' in referring to said victim as a 'boy' (which he was at the time of the alleged offenses)?
 
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