'By requiring rape victims to hand over unrestricted swathes of deeply personal data, police were inadvertently sending a message: we’re not just investigating the person you say attacked you; we’re investigating you, too.' MoyaCrockett
The practice of investigators demanding access to rape victims’ digital histories has been scrapped – and not a moment too soon, writes contributing women’s editor Moya Crockett.doesn’t exist. Your house has been burgled, so you call the police. Once they arrive, they ask to go through all of your belongings. They want to read every single letter kept in your desk drawer and comb through all the photos tucked away in a shoe box under your bed .
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