Typical rapist is a charmer, not a misfit: Oz study
December 8th, 2010 - 3:24 pm ICT by ANISydney, Dec 8 (ANI): A new Australian study has found that a typical rapist does not look anywhere threatening, but rather he is talkative, charming, engaging and even employed in a good job.
The person is not a loner and he can be found at work, at a party, at the pub, or even in the home, not waiting in the shadows to pounce on unsuspecting women.
The study of 33 sexual assault survivors by the Australian Institute of Family Studies revealed that the rapist is even known to the victim and he has been working assiduously at getting her to trust him.
The victims reveal the rapists appear as “nice” and “normal” men who they trusted, and they included friends, colleagues and partners.
Some of the men were business owners, a pharmacist, a police officer, a military officer and a professional working in the field of preventing violence against women.
But the perpetrators took calculated steps to target their victims and build a relationship with them, using alcohol and drugs to control the situation.
Dr Antonia Quadara, a co-author of the study, said that after a brutal sexual assault the men would deliberately reframe what had happened and act in a “nice” way.
“They would make the woman a cup of tea, or send her a friendly text message, or request another date,” the Sydney Morning Herald quoted her as saying.
“The victims said this ‘nice’ behaviour confused them and made them question what had happened, even though the assault itself was extremely brutal,” she stated.
She said one in six Australian women are sexually assaulted from the age of 15 and stranger rape represented only a small minority of these assaults.
“He’s Mr Nice Guy. Everyone thought he was, like, sweet and kind … he’s the sort of person who appears as charming and thoughtful,” one of the victims, Amanda, revealed. (ANI)
- Intoxication fuels sexual aggression - Sep 08, 2011
- Castration for rapist? Many women don't agree - May 03, 2011
- 'Slut walk' protests begin in Australia - May 28, 2011
- Sexual assault an unseen foe for US troops - May 01, 2011
- Rahul's healing touch - visits victims of sexual assault - Feb 07, 2011
- All 269 guilty in Vachathi mass rape, assault case - Sep 29, 2011
- Jailed rapist released early assaults again within weeks - Jun 08, 2011
- Australian man raped woman for 13 hours - May 11, 2011
- Oz Govt.condemns murder of Indian in Sydney - Mar 14, 2011
- Strong link found between victimization experiences, substance abuse - Feb 25, 2011
- Rape is fault of the victims, say half of women: survey - Feb 15, 2010
- When a couple, men, women don't think differently - Mar 23, 2011
- Two taxi drivers held for killing woman in Delhi - May 14, 2012
- Chinese man is first to be prosecuted of sexual assault of another male - Jan 05, 2011
- Men jabber more than women - Feb 18, 2011
Tags: alcohol and drugs, australian women, co author, cup of tea, loner, military officer, morning herald, nice guy, party at the pub, perpetrators, preventing violence, rapist, rapists, sexual assault survivors, small minority, stranger rape, sydney morning herald, unsuspecting women, violence against women, waiting in the shadows