A shameless British woman has claimed for years that she was gang-raped and trafficked by “Asian groomers”, going so far as to smash her own head in with a hammer to sell the ruse, a new documentary reveals. Ta.
Eleanor Williams, 23, went to extraordinary lengths to make false claims that she had been repeatedly trafficked for sex since she was 12 years old, leading police to stop her fraud until the fraud was finally uncovered and she was put behind bars. filed a complaint. According to a new BBC documentary.
'Liar: The Fake Grooming Scandal' will reveal never-before-seen footage of Williams' years of fraud that shocked Britain and put innocent people at risk.
Detective Constable John Robinson, of Cumbria, said in the documentary: “It's hard to understand why someone would go to that extent, what their motive could be, other than a desperation to be believed.” .
Williams, who was found guilty of nine counts of perverting the course of justice and sentenced to more than eight years in prison in March, was beaten, raped and “groomed” by Asian thugs. He posted his claim on Facebook saying, “I was robbed.'' It quickly went viral.
She reportedly claimed that she was raped and trafficked for the first time when she was just 16 years old.
In one police photo, Williams' face is badly beaten and bruised so badly that her right eye is completely swollen and shut shut, but she appears to be smiling in the photo.
She made repeated complaints over the next three years, and in July 2019 police were called to her flat in Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria, again claiming she had been beaten and raped.
Footage broadcast by BBC3 showed Mr Williams bleeding from the mouth and unconscious, at one point reaching out to officers as police tried to investigate what happened. There was also a scene where he whispered, “Help me.''
Authorities say it was all an act.
Police later discovered the truth and said that CCTV footage showed her returning home, seemingly unharmed, just 20 minutes before she called police.
In March, Williams apologized before being sentenced to prison. The Guardian newspaper reported.
“I understand that your job is to believe in the jury's verdict, and that's fine,” she wrote in a letter to the judge, the newspaper reported. She said: 'I know I made some mistakes and I'm sorry. I don't think that's an excuse, but I was young and confused.
“I'm not saying I'm guilty, but I know I did wrong in some ways, and I'm sorry,” she added. “I am shocked by the trouble caused at Barrow. If I had known the consequences of that situation, I never would have posted.”
Williams' lies had serious consequences, and one of the men she falsely accused, business owner Mohamed Ramzan, attempted suicide after his arrest.
Another man who was wrongly accused and spent 73 days in prison had his window smashed and the word “rapist” spray-painted on his home after his girlfriend named him as her attacker.
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