a 25 year oldStanford UniversityThe Santa Clara County District Attorney announced on the 15th that the employee had been charged with a felony charge after falsely claiming that she had been raped twice on campus last year.
Jennifer Gries, who works at University Housing Services, reported to Santa Clara County last Augustsexual assaultAccording to the forensic report, he was murdered by aAfrican AmericanMen attack. Two months later, Grace again reported being assaulted by men on campus. According to the police investigation, it turned out that Grace was simply infatuated with a co-worker and made up the story of attacking him in revenge. The attack has caused uneasiness among the students regarding the security of the campus.
Grace claims she was sexually assaulted and twice applied for grants from the California Crime Victims Board (CalVCB). He was arrested on the morning of 15th and will be summoned at a later date. If found guilty, she will take into account her punishment.
District Attorney Jeff Rosen said it was a rare and devastating crime. “We empathize with those who have been implicated, applaud our fellow students who took care of each other on the way to class, and are always open to actual victims of sexual assault,” Rosen said.
On August 9 last year, Grace went to Holly County Valley Medical Center for a forensic examination of the sexual assault and said she did not want to report the matter. She is then told that, as a legal reporter for law enforcement, the forensic doctor must report, and Grace signs a consent form. Grace told the forensic examiner that she had been sexually assaulted in a bathroom in the parking lot of the Munger dormitory building at Stanford University by an unknown assailant, whom she described as an African-American man in his 20s. She was about to get her car when the assailant approached her, threatened her not to scream and then sexually assaulted her.
On October 7, Grace again asked for a sexual assault trial at Stanford Hospital. She told nurses that on her way back to the office after lunch, an unknown man grabbed her arm, took her to a storage room in the basement and sexually assaulted her. When describing the assailant’s appearance, Grace gave the same answer.
Both cases reported by Grace were considered high priority cases because of the high public safety threat posed by sex offenders, but the medical examiner came up with a different story than the one described by Grace.
At the same time, hundreds of students carried placards reading “Stanford University Protects Sexual Assault” and marched on campus. Students expressed concern about the security of the campus in general.
Given the potential risk, the Stanford Department of Public Safety continues to investigate the sexual assault incident. The investigation revealed that Grace had filed a sexual harassment complaint against a male co-worker who was physically similar to the rapist. A friend of Grace’s also reported that Grace had privately stated that she and the male co-worker (in this case the actual victim) were actually in a boyfriend and girlfriend relationship, and that she named him, and made up all the stories. . it up.
Grace also claimed that she had twins as a result of the sexual assault, but she miscarried. The lab results showed that she was not pregnant.
On January 24 of this year, Grace was interviewed by Investigator Sheena Woodland of the District Attorney’s Office. Grace then wrote a public letter of apology.
san francisco (tagged to translate) sexual assault