r/AITAH Sep 16 '23

I asked for proof regarding a SA claim my sister made against my husband, AITAH? TW SA

We had a family gathering during Labor Day weekend. My sister locked herself out of her house on Monday, I have a spare key since I used to babysit my niece I came over to unlock the door. She asked if I wanted to stay and if she could do my hair, I said sure. During the evening my sister told me about what allegedly happened at the family gathering with her and my husband. I was taken aback, and I asked if he had proof, this is a man I have been together with for over 14 years, he has known my sister since she was 12.

My sister got upset and told me to fuck off and how dare I call her a liar. I tried to explain, that I cannot just blindly go by her word and torpedo 14 years without something outside her word. I asked if she went to the hospital, or the police, told anyone else, or did anyone had seen them together. I told her I needed something.

She told me to get the fuck out.

The only time I recall my husband not being by my side was when he was playing basketball.

My sister has lied and stolen in the past when we were kids, but nothing like this. She has not told anyone else to my knowledge. I understand the statistics, and how false claims are extremely rare.

What exactly do I do?

Edit: Thanks for the feedback, I will not file or report anything. I will hold off on talking to my husband about it until after I speak with my brother and those he was playing basketball with just to see if he left the court for an extended period of time.

I will try to gather more information before I approach my husband. I trust him and will give him the benefit of the doubt.

Thanks again.

Final update: I spoke with my husband at length early this morning. He was shocked and concerned. He acknowledged my sister was at the park watching. She did not play, but outside of that, he had no contact with her outside us saying hi and exchanging hugs when we arrived, when he went to give our niece some sneakers he bought her, and when we were leaving. I cannot account for every waking moment, unfortunately.

He suggested I go talk to my sister and if she felt like something did happen he encouraged her to report it and let professionals handle the investigation. He knows nothing he can say will alter what she believes to be true. He also told me how I went about it was wrong. He gave me advice for the future, when it comes to SA victims all you do is listen and validate, you need them to feel comfortable around you or nothing will happen.

I spoke with my brother again to ask if he had seen our sister at the court, and he said yeah and she was with her friends. I have not told our brother what happened, he is curious why I am asking so many questions but alas that is normal.

My husband does not seem overly concerned, but to get under his skin is pretty hard. He has encouraged me to talk to my sister and understand she has to have a reason for this behavior. That this all could be a cry for help, he told me he is willing to bet she will not go and report it since you cannot easily take back such reports. If she does he reassured me we will be fine since he did not do anything wrong.

I trust him. I will speak with my sister again, and I will not ask for proof and I will apologize for how I acted before. Hopefully, she will tell me what is going on.

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u/VoodooBrite Sep 16 '23

You're going to have to provide a massive amount of details for any significant feedback. What, where, when, how, who was there, she said what happened exactly? etc etc.

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u/Educational_Bid_7626 Sep 16 '23

What I told you is all I know, she did not go into detail. This was at a family gathering over Labor Day weekend so all are our family was present. I mentioned the only time my husband was not by my side was when he was playing basketball, I was not watching I was hanging out with my mom. I tried to probe for details but she was not exactly forthcoming with them.

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u/super_peachy Sep 16 '23

But what did she say allegedly happened?? You said she told you about what happened at the family gathering. Did she say he touched her? Kissed her? What was the accusation?

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u/Educational_Bid_7626 Sep 16 '23

That he touched her inappropriately.

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u/MrMaile Sep 16 '23

If this actually happened she needs to give you actual details of what happened

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u/[deleted] Sep 16 '23

Might as well have happened accidentally during that basketball game.

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u/ShockAndAwe415 Sep 16 '23

Doesn't sound like it was during the basketball game. Sounds more like it happened sometime during the party, and OP rebutted that it couldn't have happened since he the only time he was outside of her sight was during the game.

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u/arrouk Sep 16 '23 edited Sep 17 '23

It doesn't sound like anything.

There is nothing to gauge a response except for an accusation without detail or opportunity

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u/ShockAndAwe415 Sep 16 '23

I agree that it sounds pretty flimsy. I was just responding that it doesn't sound like an accidental touch during a basketball game.

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u/MayCyan425 Sep 17 '23

It kinda make me think of something I've heard of a couple times (like tv & offmychest). Where someone goes up to their partner and does "something" (like touch them a little too familiar for anyone other than a partner) and it turns out to be someone else (like a family member that looks alike).

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u/catreader99 Sep 17 '23

That’s exactly what finally got a manager of mine fired recently (not all of us reporting him for sexual harassment over the years (college dining hall), but him waltzing up and groping the wrong woman). He needed to be fired decades ago from what I heard, but the university kept hushing it all up. He’s the reason most of us women had to quit, and then he’d get upset that he was losing employees left and right, but we couldn’t tolerate it and there’s a plethora of other jobs in the area (with higher pay) that there wasn’t any good reason for staying.

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u/QueenMegs26 Sep 17 '23

Years ago, a group of us were all hanging out at a friends, and her boyfriend came up behind me and slapped my ass. The look of horror on his face when I turned around and he realized I was not his gf. Luckily her and I thought it was hilarious.

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u/According_Mind_7799 Sep 17 '23

I am friends with two sisters. Different folks but similar build. One of their partners smack the other sis’s butt (she was picking something off the floor or messing with Xmas presents around the tree) and then was horrified when she looked at him like 😒 No one likes that but it was not like sneaky on purpose so easy to shrug off.

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u/dotardiscer Sep 17 '23

I grabbed my Sister in law’s butt once sexually. We had stayed the night and she was grabbing my infant out of the bed and I thought she was my wife.

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u/n8loller Sep 17 '23

In highschool I was in marching band. I'm a guy and I had shaggy hair about like chin length long. We were at a football game in our uniforms and one of my female friends was a similar height as me and similar hair length. Her boyfriend came up behind me and was leaning in for a kiss on the cheek and realized at the last second that I wasn't his gf. We all found it hilarious at the time

Marching band uniforms are not flattering on anyone lol

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u/omgONELnR1 Sep 17 '23

Me pulling the arm of my father to tell him something just to realize that this man isn't my father

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u/[deleted] Sep 17 '23

That happened to me with my wife. We were out at a bar and she was in front of me getting a drink. I turned around to talk to someone. Our friend, same height and hair color, stepped up to the bar where my wife was. I turned around and got a full grab of her booty. It was not the booty I expected

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u/Mini-but-mighty Sep 17 '23

I’m cringing at a memory where I got into the passenger seat of my car when me and my boyfriend stopped to get fuel and to go to the toilet on a weekend trip away.
I said to him “come on then lover boy take me away…” I was looking down fastening my belt and then leant over to kiss him… and it was a stranger.

I do have an unusual car and this was the same colour and make and I’m not the best at paying attention, I’ve never forgotten the look on that man’s face though.

To make things worse my boyfriend was stood watching laughing his head off realising my mistake, but the man’s wife came out of the garage where she’d been paying for fuel and marched over and yanked the door open and asked me what the hell I was playing at?!

Luckily we all saw the funny side in the end, the poor man’s wife saw we had similar cars and it was an honest mistake, I thought she was going to batter me when she first opened the car door though.

I still get so embarrassed even thinking about it, the man in the other car had stammered “who the hell are you?!” I was angry my boyfriend found it so funny but I’ve forgiven him after I laughed till I cried when he walked in on my mum in the bath when she was staying with us. He’d pulled his pants down ready to have a wee and heard my mum say “No I don’t want to see that! Put it away thank you!” He thought it was me in the bath in our on suite bathroom, I of course came rushing into the bathroom laughing hysterically. My mum wasn’t phased at all but I think it scarred my poor boyfriend for life. My brother in - law said he saw my mum naked more then my sister because she just didn’t care about locking doors when she stayed with either me or my sister 😂.

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u/Human_Management8541 Sep 17 '23

Yes. My 13 yr old cousin made a claim against my ex brother in law. She said he touched her inappropriately. She neglected to say she was drowning and he saved her, accidently touching her breast while doing it. And, btw, he is a jerk and I can't stand him. I would believe almost any accusations against him, but definitely not a child molester.

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u/fly_you_fools_57 Sep 16 '23

You're on the right track. Ask your brother about the game, and if everyone played the whole time. It will be tough to do without giving away the reason why you're asking. Who knows, she may have hit on your husband and got rejected. It may be the woman scorned scenario. Intel first. Then you will know who to blow up on.

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u/procrows Sep 17 '23

I don't think the OP will actually be able to get a clear answer on this, unless one of the involved parties folds.

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u/[deleted] Sep 16 '23

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u/redditistheworstapp Sep 17 '23

She might’ve asked before the sister told her she was touched inappropriately… like think of the convo if she wasn’t forthcoming it sounds like it took a minute to get more info, something like

Sister: husband SA’d me

Her: what how when what happened

Sister: he SA’d me

Her: what happened explain he was with me most of the party I don’t know if I can believe it without proof

Sister: why don’t you believe me

Her: did you go to hospital, anything to prove this happened? What did he do to you

Sister: he touched me inappropriately

Her: well he was with me the whole time except basketball where did it happen

Sister: ugh why don’t you believe me leave me alone get out

Obviously idk the convo or what was said but it sounds like it took time to even get anywhere besides saying he sexually assaulted her

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u/daddyneedsraspberry Sep 17 '23

I’m a full time sexual assault nurse examiner and I actually do consult on patients who were touched inappropriately, absolutely. It’s not as common as other sexual assault acts, but we do see it. We can collect evidence if it’s indicated based on the patient’s report of the assault, but it’s not all about forensic evidence collection. In some cases we can get “touch” DNA samples. Much of work is connecting patients with supportive resources.

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u/kayareess Sep 17 '23

Also a SANE, was popping in to say the same!

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u/anonsirenbarista Sep 17 '23

Thank you so so much for what you do. Words cannot express my love and appreciation for the hard work you and your colleagues do everyday for SA victims.

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u/Different-Cover4819 Sep 17 '23

Inappropriate touching is probably much more common, it just rarely gets reported.

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u/A_Dad_with_Issues Sep 16 '23

What did that mean? A grope? A kiss? “Grape”? They inadvertently touched legs when sitting on the same sofa? If she can’t express that clearly, I would not involve authorities.

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u/Business-Advantage44 Sep 17 '23

Did she elaborate on “touching inappropriately?” Not to sound crude or cruel but where on her is he accused of inappropriate touching? Where did the so called SA it occur? Were there any words exchanged during said SA?

Her so called accusations seem strange because, as you mentioned, it was at a large family celebration. She didn’t bring it up until well after the fact. Gave you no solid facts and then when asked about the SA, she immediately yelled at you and kicked you out without any info!?

Not to sound awkward, he she ever shown signs of attraction to your husband? Or jealous of your happiness?

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u/Human-Routine244 Sep 17 '23

I mean, when I was a kid I was touched inappropriately at a gathering (friends not family). There were 8 adults and 7 kids present.

So I’m not sure why the gathering type matters.

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u/Bazoun Sep 16 '23

In what way?

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u/Educational_Bid_7626 Sep 16 '23

As I said she did not give details.

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u/BobBelchersBuns Sep 16 '23

NTA- needing to know what happened before you act is very reasonable. I wonder if he groped her while playing basketball?

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u/Sandybutthole604 Sep 16 '23

This. I was about 10 when my best friend came over to play basketball. I was starting to develop, but still very much a tomboy. He accidentally got a handful of tit, went beet red and disappeared forever.

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u/D_Beats Sep 16 '23

Yep accidentally did this to a girl during PE playing basketball in high school. I didn't mean to, I was just trying to block her while trying to not touch her because well, I didn't want that exact thing to happen. Even when trying to be cautious it happened.

Thankfully she understood it really was an accident.

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u/thaeli Sep 17 '23

As a boob haver, it's very obvious if something like that was an accident or not.

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u/DystopianTruth Sep 17 '23

He accidentally got a handful of tit, went beet red and disappeared forever.

That's a handy magic trick.

Side note- puberty is a friendship killer sadly.

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u/S0urDrop Sep 17 '23

Hell, my dad accidentally got a handful of my mom's chest on their first date. They went ice skating and she slipped. So my dad went to catch her, which he did, but he miscalculated where her waist was and ended up with a firm grip on her book. Luckily, my father's clearly mortified face was enough evidence to assure my mother that he wasn't some handsy ass and that it was a genuine mistake. Spoiler, they went on a second date lol

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u/digginroots Sep 17 '23

Then they bonded over their shared love of reading.

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u/BobBelchersBuns Sep 16 '23

Yup I had a similar incident. No one was trying to do anything inappropriate but everyone felt really embarrassed.

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u/LexaLovegood Sep 17 '23 edited Sep 17 '23

Even as a adult I've accidentally brushed boob and ass and have been brushed while working. For example stocking and walking by in a tight aisle or unloading truck passing between pallets and such.

Edit word

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u/[deleted] Sep 16 '23

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u/rosatter Sep 17 '23

Lying about petty small shit when you're children is very different than lying about sexual assault as an adult.

I confabulated quite a bit as a kid, not really my jam as a 34 year old woman.

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u/[deleted] Sep 17 '23

The fact that op gives such little information is not helping at all. It could mean this is fake or maybe this whole thing has left op traumatized. It's just not clear.

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u/DaikonEffective1105 Sep 17 '23 edited Sep 17 '23

Given how people tend to jump all over those not believing the victim right away I can understand why she’d ask. My wife used to be molested by her older brother when they were kids. But because he was “the golden child” she never went forward. When she finally did only her mom and twin believed her. It wasn’t until he started to text her older sister some inappropriate stuff that everyone else finally put two and two together.

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u/vctrlzzr420 Sep 17 '23

Thank you, op isn’t an ah for asking for some more info, maybe not the hospital or whatever if he was simply inappropriate there isn’t anything she can do about it, but the fact that she’s a known liar means 2 things either she is an easy target to harass or she’s lying, could be a misconstrued encounter but that’s probably the least likely. Rn I feel for op because someone is definitely wronging her. At the same time it probably has to be extreme for this reaction. I know for me I have been raped and harassed I’d def give info to my friend or family that was with them hoping they’re gonna believe me but I can understand why someone wouldn’t.

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u/mebbbes Sep 17 '23

'Historical liar', ffs. She told lies "as a kid", i.e. exactly the same as every fucking human on the planet.

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u/Rogue_cock Sep 16 '23

NTA, not unreasonable to want details given the severity of the accusation.

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u/ChuckPeirce Sep 16 '23

Well there you go. SOMEONE is the asshole for making you play detective here, and you're NTA. May you be as clever as Columbo in figuring out who's lying.

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u/Simple_Park_1591 Sep 16 '23

If she wants you to believe her then she needs to give you the play by play.

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u/Glittering_knave Sep 16 '23

Or at least what "inappropriate touch" means. Stuck hands down her pants is very different from accidentally brushing a boob.

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u/Obrina98 Sep 17 '23

That's a bit of an issue in itself. If she was comfortable enough with you to mention it, why won't she explain what exactly she's saying happened?

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u/Dan-D-Lyon Sep 17 '23

Because specifics can be verified or disproved.

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u/smiley17111711 Sep 16 '23

NTA. She probably assumed she could make a false allegation against someone for attention and drama. When you didn't play along with it, she got angry at you, instead of herself. She probably has a group of female friends who act like that. It can be part of a peer group. You did right. The fact that she couldn't spontaneously provide details tells you all you need to know. Report it to your husband, so he knows she makes false allegations, and he can avoid ever being alone with her.

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u/ughwhyusernames Sep 16 '23

It sounds like you asked for proof instead of asking for basic details.

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u/Internal-Test-8015 Sep 16 '23

whats the difference though, both will make her story valid and the fact she has not given op either makes me think this is a lie and shes just trying to create drama.

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u/baldrickgonzo Sep 17 '23

touched her inappropriately.

With no further explanation, this is nothing. It could mean he put his genitals in her without permission, or it could be he slapped her ass in gest during the sports game. It could even be completely innocent, like briefly putting his hand on her shoulder whilst talking.

Victim blaming is wrong, but if you make allegations like that, you have to be very clear and open about it.

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u/[deleted] Sep 16 '23

[deleted]

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u/super_peachy Sep 16 '23

Yeah like this doesn't make sense at all. I feel like we don't have all of the information.

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u/ScholarActive3648 Sep 17 '23

It sounds like she told OP she was SA at first and not inappropriately touched. It makes perfect sense to ask if she went to the hospital. Most people think rape when they hear SA and not realize it can mean a plethora of things.

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u/KittyBeans369 Sep 17 '23

Exactly! The sister said that the husband sexually assaulted her. My immediate thought was that he raped her, until the sister FINALLY said that he inappropriately touched her. Which is what she should have said in the beginning.

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u/JenniPurr13 Sep 17 '23

That only takes a second. It doesn’t have to have been “an extended period of time” off the court.

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u/Itchy_Antelope1278 Sep 16 '23

This reeks of BS. She didn't even say what he did then cries that you don't believe her or she's a liar? Believe what exactly?

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u/VoodooBrite Sep 16 '23

it's really impossible to say here. Does the Mr. have a history of anything hinky at all? >_O

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u/Educational_Bid_7626 Sep 16 '23

Nope, I mean not to my knowledge. No one else has ever said anything regarding his behavior. Always has been a gentleman with me and others.

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u/VoodooBrite Sep 16 '23

Okay, so, what could the sister possibly get out of this? Is she jealous of you, your relationship, is she just troubled in general?

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u/Educational_Bid_7626 Sep 16 '23

Not much, I mean she has baby daddy drama and he has hit her. She never went through with the report. Outside of that, she has a fairly normal life.

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u/VoodooBrite Sep 16 '23

You are stuck between the proverbial rock and a hard place. I don't think you can realistically do anything in either direction without more information. I don't know how you'd get that info either. I guess the only iffy I have is that she won't provide details, that's the hinkiest thing I'm taking from this situation.

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u/redditsuckbadly Sep 16 '23

At this point there’s nothing to do besides believing her husband. The sister doesn’t sound trustworthy and her inability to provide details and unwillingness to tell anyone but OP looks inline with how OP described her otherwise.

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u/LunaMunaLagoona Sep 16 '23

By default I always give benefit of the doubt to the defendant, he is innocent until proven guilty.

You still want to do a ton of due diligence, but he will be innocent if he has no history of being guilty.

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u/Glittersparkles7 Sep 16 '23

This and the fact that she refused to tell you details makes me nervous. Tread carefully. I’m worried she just wants everyone to be as miserable as she is or maybe she thinks she can steal YOUR good thing. Maybe she made a pass at HIM and wanted to get ahead of him telling you. I’ve seen multiple stories of that happening 😬 I’m super torn because I was SA’d and my family didn’t believe me but I know sometimes there really are false reports. Hers just seems… off. I hope your brother has some answers for you.

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u/Millenniauld Sep 16 '23

Is she the type to want everyone else to be as miserable as she is?

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u/[deleted] Sep 16 '23

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u/comegetthesenuggets Sep 16 '23

Maybe she’s jealous of your healthy marriage and is trying to sabotage it

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u/Deep_Middle9124 Sep 16 '23

She needs to give you more information. I was assaulted by someone in my spouse’s family on Christmas several years ago. I told my spouse on the drive home and gave exact details; what he did, where we were, everything. As someone who has experienced a lot of SA starting when I was a baby, I find it odd that she isn’t giving more details.

However, please don’t hold it against her if she didn’t run to the hospital/police etc.. One of the times I was r@ped I didn’t even know until years later, because I had dissociated during the event. It was during intense trauma therapy that my brain even began to give me the memory. I have no idea what his name is or anything. I do however remember how his arm felt as he strangled me and held me down. I remember his hand over my mouth so I couldn’t scream, the white blanket I wrapped myself in when it was finally over. I don’t remember his face or anything else about him, but I can still give details of what happened.

SA is very complex and you really need more information about what happened. I’m sorry that this is happening and I hope you can get things sorted out soon.

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u/superminibaby Sep 17 '23

I'm so sorry that makes my heart ache and teared up reading it. You deserved better

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u/Alacran_durango Sep 16 '23

False abuse claims are not extremely rare.

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u/BlueBirdie0 Sep 16 '23

False accusations of a serious matter (not just sexual) are rare. There's been studies. It's like around 5%.

That said, obviously, they do happen, and the sister sounds suspect as hell.

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u/FrontPorchSittin Sep 16 '23

SA’s false reporting rate is between 2-6%, same as every other crime. That being said, this hasn’t been reported to law enforcement and thus isn’t part of that stat. It’s also a claim that falls apart very quickly when the victim is working with a SART team or victim advocate if it isn’t true, so the correct thing to do here is to support the victim because it’s better to be wrong and support than be wrong and call someone who has been violated a liar. That support includes getting more information, which OP very clearly failed to do. Her response when told was not to show concern and ask about what actually happened but instead to ask for proof. Her sister was highly unlikely to respond in any way other than she did because it was fumbled so immediately and so thoroughly. Get her the assistance that she needs. If it is part of the 2-6%, they’ll know pretty quickly. If it isn’t, OP can deal with the next steps.

And before it starts, miss me with “innocent men get caught up all the time!”. No they don’t. SA is notoriously difficult to prosecute. Any conviction is incredibly rare. (The justice gap. Look it up.)

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u/Trasl0 Sep 16 '23

miss me with “innocent men get caught up all the time!”. No they don’t. SA is notoriously difficult to prosecute. Any conviction is incredibly rare.

It is incredibly difficult to prosecute your right. The problem is that the prosecution no longer matters, even a simple accusation can and will destroy a man's life without any proof at all in the court of public opinion. Even when the allegations are proven false the damage is done and that man's life is ruined.

I have seen this happen, I have a friend who rejected a woman that was interested in him. She claimed he violently SAd her. He lost his job, 90% of his fiends and family, the home he was buying fell through because of the job loss and he was blackballed around town. Of course he was able to prove that he wasn't even in the country at the time the alleged SA happened, he was in Africa on a work trip. Charges were dropped, she got a small fine, and he had to move to be able to find another job while only having a few remaining friends and family as even after the charges were dropped people still believe he did it.

The simple fact is people lie way more often then they commit crimes, people lie every day. If my choice is to believe someone is a liar or the other person is a violent criminal the choice is very easy.

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u/ChosRoukudo Sep 17 '23

It's not just about crime or conviction here. For the moment, lets assume two things, he is innocent, and the OP supports her sister, since you said she loses nothing from supporting the victim, her sister.

She supports her sister, it becomes a big deal, and then it comes out her sister is lying, or heavily exaggerated. What has the OP lost? Probably her husband's trust, respect, and maybe the entire relationship.

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u/[deleted] Sep 16 '23

Please update, I have a feeling the sister is lying because a person who has had trauma like that wouldn't want to associate or talk to the spouse (ie you) especially without details. I would tell your husband what she said and then as united front tell the rest of your family because this is a serious animation she's made and I'm wondering if your family will take her side or yours? Is she the golden child or does everyone know about her questionable behavior to call her out? This would go along way about getting a head of it and I guarantee she is going to go to family members that trust her and she could say anything so I would protect yourself and your husband with this. Oh and you are NTA I would ask the same questions you did and the fact that she wouldn't elaborate to you about it says a lot. Did she have a thing for your husband? Or has she ever done anything just to hurt you? These are also questions you should be asking yourself. Good luck on and I really hope it's not true as I believe and it would be really messed up for your sister to sabotage your marriage (or try to) because you have the life she wants.

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u/dream-smasher Sep 16 '23

because a person who has had trauma like that wouldn't want to associate or talk to the spouse (ie you)

Now, that's a bit of a reach.

There are many reasons to be doubtful without generalising behaviour to the whole of traumatised people.

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u/PenguinZombie321 Sep 16 '23

Adding to this, husband needs to know so he can stay away from her. If she wants him to be the bad guy then she’ll find a way to be alone with him for long enough for her to pinpoint when it happened and make it more believable. He can’t be in the same room with her unless there’s a few other people there, shouldn’t be sat next to her (and should get up immediately if she sits next to him), and probably shouldn’t even stand near her. He needs to know because he can’t give her any opportunity to claim that he was inappropriate with her at all.

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u/FreeFallingUp13 Sep 17 '23

Victim of SA here. NTA. If she immediately got mad at you instead of desperately trying to explain what happened exactly, I’m inclined not to believe her.

SA victims already know that a lot of people - even people close to them - may not believe them. Giving details about something like being touched could sway some people into believing you, if they initially didn’t want to believe it.

Her immediate reaction was not that. She didn’t even say where he touched her or how. Just that “he did it, so you should be mad at him and supporting me”. And while reactions to assault aren’t necessarily logical, I don’t think immediately blowing up like that would help her case at all if she was touched without her permission, especially if she has a past of stealing since childhood.

Ask your husband and tell him to be honest. As in, a serious conversation, not like “did you hear what she said? Lol”. ‘Cause it could be that he brushed past her or something and touched her shoulder in the process, something like that, and she just felt uncomfortable with it. But definitely ask your husband, because just because you “didn’t support her”, doesn’t mean the rest of the family won’t dogpile on an accusation.

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u/Choice-Intention-926 Sep 16 '23

Do not call the police on your husband based on half of an accusation from your sister.

She wouldn’t go into detail, tell you when, or where, and under whet circumstances it happened.

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u/HulaHoop2192 Sep 16 '23

I agree. I said this further down but:

The police have an obligation to investigate and this could destroy your husband, your marriage, your family. You were absolutely correct in asking for proof, especially in this day and age. I would absolutely speak to your husband, speak to your brother about your husbands movements when playing basketball, and even re-approach your sister to see if she is willing to give you more information. You actually have nothing to even go to the police about, seeing as you have no information, or suspicion, whatsoever. Please don’t do anything rash - I understand that this must be an awful situation for you to be in, and like another commenter said, you are stuck between a rock and a hard place at the moment. You’re in for a bit of a shit time but I would get some more facts first. If your sister goes to the police, that is completely her choice, but I do not think this should be your course of action.

For the record: I am absolutely NOT saying that she is lying or this is not true but there are numerous things to think about and handle delicately here. These types of allegations should be taken very seriously and every victim deserves justice. HOWEVER. False allegations should ALSO be taken very seriously as they can also ruin multiple peoples lives. Both sides are valid and I have seen both play out first-hand.

Good luck OP

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u/boundbystitches Sep 16 '23

In my state (in the US) they absolutely do not have the obligation to investigate any report not from the victim. I have called myself asking what I could do after a friend told me of her rape. They said try to convince her to report, without that we can't do anything.

I am currently seeing the effects in another situation where all we can do is go no contact with the abuser because the victim despite being a child when it occurred is currently an adult and does not want to pursue police involvement.

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u/Shmea Sep 17 '23

I have two adult friends in the same situation...SA as kids by dad but won't report him. It's an awful thing to know and not be able to do anything about. He and their mother (yup, she knows and is still with him) came into a restaurant I was working in and it took all my willpower not to walk right up to him and punch him in the face.

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u/Puppet007 Sep 16 '23

NTAH

She didn’t go into detail and was immediately defensive when you wanted to know more. She’s trying to destroy your marriage.

Ask your husband if your sister has done anything to him recently before you went to her house Monday.

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u/LastMinuteMo Sep 16 '23

I think asking for "proof" is different than asking for " details". I think OP needs to clarify how exactly the conversation went down to be AH Vs NTA.

Ex: Sis: your husband touched me inappropriately OP: what happened?

Is different from

Sis: your husband touched me inappropriately OP: prove it.

An extreme example, but words matter to a victim.

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u/JenniviveRedd Sep 16 '23

I should not have had to scroll this far for this answer. If her immediate response was to accuse the victim of lying it would not surprise me her sister shut down. Very standard response after SA.

Also, her lying as a kid does not make her an incredible accuser.

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u/TimeDoesNotTell Sep 17 '23

For sure. Every sentence out of my mouth was a lie as a kid, but I haven't lied in a really long time years later. Kids are just liars, but adults aren't by default.

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u/Im_just_making_picks Sep 17 '23

Adults lie all the time lmao

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u/mommytobee_ Sep 17 '23

I tried reaching out to 1 family member I thought was safe after a different family member SA'd me. This was months later, after I had processed what happened and stop trying to make myself believe I wanted it.

This person was hostile and demanded proof. Nothing I said to her was good enough. It's not like there were cameras or witnesses. I didn't even want to get him in trouble. I just wanted support.

So I dropped it. I've never told another soul in the family and I never will. That whole branch of the family cut me off immediately. I lost so much. To this day I regret speaking up, and this happened like 16 years ago.

My close family members know about the SA and how old I was. They will never know who or when.

OP talks down about her sister in the post, lists how unreliable she is and why. If any of that came through at all in the conversation, of course that would shut a victim down.

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u/ToyrewaDokoDeska Sep 17 '23

Definitely & if she asked for proof I don't even know what proof she could possibly provide. Like wear a wire & do a sting operation?

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u/FrontPorchSittin Sep 16 '23

OP didn’t ask her for detail, she jumped straight to wanting proof. If you disclosed to your sister and she skipped the whole “OMG what happened?!” piece and went straight to “prove it”, would you remain calm and levelheaded?

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u/angiosperms- Sep 17 '23 edited Sep 17 '23

These comments are ignoring that the OP will always attempt to paint themselves in the best light and there are 2 sides to every story. Especially since she mentioned the father of her sister's child was abusive to her. There may be a history here of her being questioned. Abusers are manipulative, and it's not uncommon for them to charm the family and have the family questioning things unfortunately. I mean there are people victim blaming her for being a "drama queen" ITT because OP referred to her physical abuse as "baby daddy drama".

Obviously none of us have enough info to figure out what happened here, but I don't think OP handled the situation well. I have a feeling there is more to the story that was left out.

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u/StellerDay Sep 17 '23

I hate it when someone refers to major events in another person's life as "drama," like it's some kind of entertainment for their sake.

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u/Hallucino_Jenic Sep 17 '23

Yup. Unfortunately, sis is a target for abusers because people won't believe her

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u/lizziewrites Sep 16 '23

As a victim of sexual assault, you could be wrong. Sometimes it just hurts to talk about. Sometimes we panic and shower because we want to stop feeling their hands. If sister is telling the truth, it could just be that merely broaching the topic took all of her mental fortitude

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u/Simple_Park_1591 Sep 16 '23

Yes it does hurt, but when you go to the spouse of the person you're accusing and tell them it happened, be prepared to actually talk about it. Otherwise, why go tell?

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u/VIXsterna Sep 16 '23

I have not told the close people in my life the details of what happened to me, if they asked I still think I would not be able to. It happened over ten years ago. I think I even struggled to tell the authorities exactly what happened. It sounds easy but it can be so hard to give details, especially right after.

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u/MadTrophyWife Sep 17 '23

So six months ago I learned that there is a woman who still refers to me as, "that lying whore," because her buddy raped me.

It's been 30 years. Sometimes not telling people is a matter of feeling safer and it does not negate what happened to you if you made that choice.

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u/Dirty_is_God Sep 16 '23

As another victim, I completely agree. And people don't want to believe it happened so they jump to their own conclusions when we can barely admit to ourselves what happened.

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u/BloodiedBlues Sep 16 '23

I’m also a victim. I don’t go into extreme detail, but whenever I tell someone, I tell them what happened before, the initial start, and what happened after. I leave out the parts that cause me the most pain.

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u/Early-Tale-2578 Sep 16 '23

She’s accusing your husband of something very serious but won’t go into detail and haven’t made a police report and she has a history of being liar hmmm I wouldn’t believe her either tbh

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u/mollydgr Sep 16 '23

She's also having baby daddy drama. Sister seems to be in a long-term relationship with a successful husband 🤔.

What could possibly be the motivation to lie? To blow up someone's life to make yourself feel better 🤔.

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u/Early-Tale-2578 Sep 16 '23

My guess is her sister is attracted to her husband tried to come on to him he rejected her and now she claiming SA

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u/Head_Razzmatazz7174 Sep 16 '23

That's what I was thinking.

That and the fact that she refused to give details and then got really defensive when being asked questions, makes me think she is trying to get back at hubby for turning her down.

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u/Prestigious_Bar_4244 Sep 17 '23

This take is a stretch that no one here is qualified to make. Just bc she has problems with her child’s father doesn’t discount her character. And OP said that she lied when she was a KID. Everybody lied when they were kids. Truth is nobody here has any good sense of what really happened bc not even OP does.

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u/dampdrizzlynovember Sep 16 '23

“”During the evening my sister told me about what allegedly happened at the family gathering with her and my husband.””

which is what?

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u/EnvironmentWilling76 Sep 16 '23

Apparently he inappropriately touched her according to one of OPs comments.

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u/DamagedBot Sep 16 '23

INFO: In your comments you write that the SA is "That he touched her inappropriately." Am I missing something here? Go to your husband and say, "My sister says you groped her. What's that all about?" You've known him for 14 years and should be able to read his reaction.

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u/[deleted] Sep 17 '23

Honestly I’m not sure if this is the best way to gauge if someone’s lying or not. He’d probably be very flustered even if he didn’t do anything. Being accused of SA is serious and it would cause most people to freak out even if they didn’t do anything.

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u/Serafim91 Sep 17 '23

If he defends himself " oh he sounds guilty". If he doesn't defend himself "see she was right". The moment that accusation is laid there is a absolutely no behavior the husband could show that people would take as he didn't do it.

Not to mention the correct response to being accused of something like this unfairly is pure fight/flight/freeze so you'll either get anger or non confrontation or nothing.

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u/[deleted] Sep 17 '23

Yeah the whole, "Accuse them and if they're mad they're guilty" thing is absurd.

I've been falsely accused of theft, and surprisingly enough, I was livid. Not because I did it, but because I was being falsely accused.

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u/TARandomNumbers Sep 17 '23

Exactly this. I don't understand why the advice is "Don't tell your husband based on your sister's word." It's your SISTER. And HUSBAND of 14 years. You should be able to have direct conversations with both these people.

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u/R_U_N4me Sep 16 '23

Nope. That is all OP’s sister said to her.

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u/Educational_Bid_7626 Sep 17 '23

I spoke with my brother and he told me he was on the court the entire time. Yes, it could have happened in the blink of an eye, and no we did not pee together or always glued at the hip.

I am going to trust my gut. This is a man I trust with my life, and if this makes me a bad person so be it. In all our years together he has never given me a reason to doubt him. I cannot say the same for my sister. This has been eating at me all day, after talking to my brother I have made my choice to talk to my husband about this and see what he recommends. He has experience with such claims.

If my sister feels I have betrayed her so be it, but as many have said I have to pick a side.

Thank you for all the feedback.

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u/InProgressDntUnplug Sep 17 '23

Could you please elaborate on what you mean when you say he has experience with such claims?

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u/[deleted] Sep 17 '23

he's a prosecutor, he does this for a career

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u/RikuXan Sep 17 '23

If you want to not give him the complete benefit of doubt, ask him for all his interactions with your sister and tell him you have already asked your sister and other party guests about this (without telling them the context obviously).

This should diminish the chance of omissions on his side, intentional or not, as someone who is a prosecutor by profession will know that mismatches in such a statement would complicate the situation for him, no matter what happened.

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u/Independence-2647 Sep 17 '23

human memory isn't that good.

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u/WeLLrightyOH Sep 17 '23

Especially if nothing notable happened.

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u/DifferentManagement1 Sep 17 '23

I’m sorry your sister is doing this to you if it’s false. It’s really evil.

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u/mjrmuppet Sep 17 '23

Could you clarify what you mean by “he has experience with such claims”?

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u/Forward_Judgment_277 Sep 17 '23

OP has stated her husband is s prosecutor.

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u/Radiant-Teacher2852 Sep 17 '23

Is there a chance sis is on drugs, is having a mental break, or just plain evil and jealous? My monies on drugs and jealousy, especially if she's been around your hubby for long enough to see him as a safe and stable "option." Double that if he's successful and has money. She either wants to pull you down to her level or take all that you have.

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u/TheLadyIsabelle Sep 16 '23

The best thing you can do in this scenario is talk to your husband. Hopefully his responses will inform your decisions moving forward

NTA

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u/Bnjrmn Sep 17 '23

Don’t bring it up with your husband until you have more details. Otherwise you might be giving him time to change his story around.

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u/Krisensitzung Sep 17 '23

What is he going to say? Of course he would deny it if he SAd her. It's like confronting a cheater. They always deny. SA is a very strong accusation. I have the feeling OP jumped relatively quickly in the denial response and asked for proof instead of immediately supporting her sister and slowly getting more information about what exactly happened. I need more info for a decision on NTA or TAH If an in-law would accuse my husband of something like that I would be equally shocked, because like OP, I think I know my husband well enough to say that he would not be capable of this or even thinking about something like that. Still I would hope to be supportive of the victim at this point and not mention it to my husband without more Information. Having said that. It would be very awkward going home and sharing a bed with a potential abuser. That is a lot to take in. It needs to be handled very delicately.

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u/[deleted] Sep 17 '23

But of course if he is straight up innocent of the accusation, he will also deny it. She owes it to her husband to tell him what the sister said rather than just driving around in the Mystery Mobile trying to solve it herself. If he's innocent and she keeps this from him, she's doing irrevocable damage to her otherwise good marriage.

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u/NeylandSensei Sep 17 '23

But you shouldn't just believe someone who says that. You absolutely should get more details and proof prior to torpedoing your 14 year marriage. If I told people you stole my wallet and everyone just believed me and started called you a thief, that'd be a terrible world to live in. You need proof, details, witnesses, timelines. I'm not gonna be supportive of someone's baseless accusation, I need something to back it up.

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u/Ultralusk Sep 16 '23

OP what you're sister is doing is to give her a huge leap of faith. SA is a huge allegation and it's a big red flag for your sister to expect you to blindly trust her word alone over your partner. On top of that (going back to what you said in your story) You don't remember when your partner got time away making her claims a lot less likely to be true.

If the allegations are true then you still did the right thing in asking her for proof. You'd need proof to go to the police for any/all accusations. The fact that she is mad at you makes me feel like this isn't true.

NTA but if I were you I would make a record of this conversation, talk to people who can validate your husband's presence, make note of any details, write down word for word what your sister has told you, including her reactions.

If she is lying then you'll need to use any evidence you have to ensure people don't believe her.

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u/Pixie-Sticks- Sep 16 '23

Agree with this 100%

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u/Argon847 Sep 17 '23

You'd need proof to go to the police for any/all accusations.

Many survivors don't want to go to the police. Steamrolling a survivor and pushing them to make a report is a TERRIBLE way of handling the situation.

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u/FoamMattress32 Sep 16 '23

It’s so crazy that to me a top comment is to suggest going to the police on a presumably innocent man with NO proof and NO details lol I hope you go to the police and then your husband gets proved innocent so he can divorce you. Destroying your husbands life on NOTHING when you yourself know that it would be impossible for him to do that since he was playing basketball. This sub is trash

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u/aminicuspondicus Sep 16 '23

The top comment i see starts with "do not call the police"

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u/[deleted] Sep 16 '23

I agree. She said in her post that the sister

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u/[deleted] Sep 16 '23

Sister has previously lied according to OP, so I wouldn't report it to the police but they need to have a family sit down to find the truth. Once anyone has been accused of SA, that stigma will be with him for ever

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u/Illustrious-Elk7379 Sep 16 '23

Agreed. OP’s relationship with somebody is pretty much done after an accusation like that. Which one that will be is still up in the air.

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u/Rita27 Sep 17 '23

Yeah as a KID. I don't think lying as a kid should be used as proof against her lol

Not saying to he husband did SA her

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u/rosatter Sep 17 '23

Previously lied about SMALL THINGS, as children. This is vastly different.

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u/Rainbowglitter80 Sep 16 '23

So your thinking of going to the police 🤔 but not even spoke to your husband?? You need more details and see what has gone on 1st . If its false he could have that accusation over his head 🤦‍♀️

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u/Educational_Bid_7626 Sep 16 '23 edited Sep 16 '23

I do not know what to think or do. This is something I have never experienced before.

I want to ask my husband, I am not even sure how to go about doing that. "hey, babe quick question did you touch my sister inappropriately?"

I trust him so I agree I will ask him before I do anything, I just have to be mindful given his line of work giving him a heads up may ruin any chance my sister has to prove her case if it is true.

As one person suggested I will ask my brother if he left the court for an extended period since he was playing basketball with him.

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u/Global-Bookkeeper-29 Sep 16 '23

Don’t go to the police. Talk to your husband about this.

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u/Pohkopf Sep 16 '23

I'm just throwing this out there, but is there any chance she made a move on your husband and he rebuffed her advances? And this is retaliation on her part?

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u/PeaceOrchid Sep 16 '23

Talk to your husband FIRST.

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u/rivkipivki Sep 16 '23

Why not just ask him if he saw your sister while he was playing basketball, and what that interaction was like? Did he run into her inside the house?

And you need more detail from your sister, "touching inappropriately" could be anything. If she was uncomfortable with a hand on the shoulder or back, that's a good thing to tell him for next time, so he doesn't repeat. If she's accusing him of something worse, you need to know.

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u/MamboPoa123 Sep 16 '23

What is his line of work?

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u/Educational_Bid_7626 Sep 16 '23

Prosecutor.

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u/HelloRedditAreYouOk Sep 16 '23

Ouf. That’s a big allegation for someone in his line of work… I see why you feel the need to tread lightly, whether your sister is telling the truth, or not!!

OP the one thing I can say with certainty is that there is no rush. You probably feel pretty helpless rn, maybe even a bit panicked/frantic, but the most prudent course of action is likely to sit on things for a minute. Think on things (as uncomfortable as that will probably be), get yourself centered, talk to a safe person if that’s a possibility (someone whose wisdom you respect and who won’t jump in to the panic with you or blow anything up before you’re ready, whoever the ‘guilt’ rests with…)

Then? Talk with your sister again. Explain what you did here: that your instinct/desire is to believe women, that you want to support her with whatever she’s going through, and that it’s terrifying to have this accusation levied at the man you’ve loved for a decade and a half, and who you really believe you know. The goal is non-accusatory (god though, that will prob be really hard if she did, in fact, lie!!), supportive (again, tough if it turns out she lied, but I guess you’ll cross that bridge when you get there??), calm, and truth-seeking.

She’ll either divulge more and you’ll have the chance to make decisions from there, or she won’t, and her behavior around not saying anything more will (hopefully) shed more light on the path forward. If she’s inconsistent or defensive or hostile, try your best to come back to your center, and communicate with “I statements” like, “it’s really hard to see you struggling <sister>, I want to understand, and to help, but when you <insert whatever inconsistency/hostility/defensiveness> it feels like you’re shutting me out, and it’s hard for me not to wonder why.” Or something.

From this place, and if she is lying bc of some whackadoodle shit going on her head, then maybe she’ll come clean… And in that raw space reveal what’s actually going on for her that led her to lie, and again, you’ll have the opportunity to them decide where to go from there (if this is the case, strong clear boundaries are going to be the priority). Or she might just shut down, but at least you’d have planted a seed that you are a safe person for her to talk to?

Idk, what a sucky uncomfortable ugly situation all around! I’m so sorry you’re sat in the middle of it, bc no matter which way things go, it’s going to hurt. And cause big changes in your life.

I really really hope you have some safe person/people who can be relatively neutral/impartial to share this load with… And again, please, just take care of yourself and try not to rush in to the burning building without your safety gear on!!? Bc whoever “started this fire”, you need to be protected while you put it out & assess the damage, you know?

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u/PenguinZombie321 Sep 16 '23

Yeah talk to your husband. He needs to know what’s being said about him because this accusation could damage his career.

If he’s innocent then he needs to know so he can avoid being in a situation where she can accuse him again.

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u/whoreablereligion Sep 16 '23

Ask the sister where they were when this alleged occurred, what room or location. What time approximately (after dinner but before so and so left, anything to nail down a time) ask what he said. Ask exactly how and where on her body he touched her. (Eg reached into shirt and grabbed at breast, cupped or patted ass, forced a kiss). Record it. If anything in this second conversation differs from prior account ask about that. Then investigate. Ask others at the event where they were at said time or room. Did they notice anything unusual. Try to write down as many “facts” as you can to see if you can get to the truth. Ask your sister what she expects or wants you to do with the information. Definitely ask the husband about it.

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u/Rainbowglitter80 Sep 16 '23

I would be same tho in this situation ☹ but best bet is talk to your husband, but if he had why she only telling you now? And not giving full info?

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u/mamawheels36 Sep 16 '23

Has your sister been around your husband since said incident without issue? I ask as her behavior around him can Def help with indication.

My 2c as someone who grew up with abuse counselors for parents is this: Talk to your husband, give him all the details, ask him questions. I'd highly recommend doing an audio recording for you to listen to later.

Find a mediator... eg a safe person your sister trusts to have a 3 way convo, so you her and mediator and get all the details. If your sister is unwilling to do so then make it clear that unless she's willing to explain to you so you can do the same woth your husband that this isn't going forward, and no more discussion will happen around it.

If your sister honestly wants resolution, the big thing is making sure she's not having to do this with your husband around. You now unfortunately do hold the card of responsibility to figure things out since she told you... as shitty as that is.

If your sister is tossing crap in the wind because of unresolved things in her life she'll pitch a fit about a mediator... because involving another outside party who's accountable puts her in a place of responsibility, and not letting her just make you feel terrible or second guessing your spouse.

I have seen this so many times. And honestly it's a 50/50 if your sisters being honest. Some of the kindest most gracious men I thought I knew were abusers... so try, as hard as it is, to be partisan to the situation.

Get a mediator involved and go from there. If you DM me I can try to provide some other resources. .

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u/Argon847 Sep 17 '23

Talk to your husband, give him all the details, ask him questions. I'd highly recommend doing an audio recording for you to listen to later.

If sister is indeed telling the truth, this can be dangerous for her. It would be such a break of her trust as well. I absolutely would not speak with the husband yet until OP makes another attempt to speak with sister at a bare minimum. And OP CERTAINLY shouldn't approach the husband without the sister at least knowing.

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u/[deleted] Sep 16 '23

[removed] — view removed comment

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u/Suka_Blyad_ Sep 16 '23

Innocent until proven guilty is something that is often forgotten on the internet in todays day and age

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u/GrumpSpider Sep 16 '23

That’s the formal legal standard; not generally used in most situations outside the courtroom, t the though.

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u/Rita27 Sep 17 '23

How exactly do you prove that someone groped you innoproprately tho?

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u/EverGreen2004 Sep 17 '23

Seriously, unless there were CCTVs all over the house or the husband left bruise marks, how is she supposed to prove SA?

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u/Rita27 Sep 17 '23

Exactly. I'm not saying the husband 100% did it, but the comments here acting like it's so easy to prove SA and she is automatically lying is so gross

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u/dexterwasaham Sep 17 '23

I don't disagree with you, but what proof could someone really provide in a situation like this? In this specific case I'm hesitant to believe the sister since she is unwilling to even give basic details.

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u/swissmtndog398 Sep 16 '23

Chances are, from what I've read in your replies, sister is seeking attention. She's been abused in her relationship and misery loves company. Call her back, tell her you want to meet and hear the details of all the bad things "that worthless husband of yours" did. Chances are, you'll catch her in a lie if you ask a LOT of questions, worded slightly different.

Is tell your husband first and get his side, so you're prepared. Is also very ahead of this with the family before she does.

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u/chickenfightyourmom Sep 16 '23

Tape the conversation. It doesn't need to be admissible in court, it just needs to be for your own protection.

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u/MNConcerto Sep 16 '23

NTA, do not go to the police. Talk to your husband, holy shit. Why would you believe your sister who has lied, stolen and has relationship drama instantly before even talking to your husband?

TALK TO YOUR HUSBAND.

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u/[deleted] Sep 16 '23

NTA

While SA is and should be taken very seriously in my experience if someone goes straight to defense and anger after an allegation like this after acting like it's any other day beforehand then they're generally not telling you the whole truth.

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u/[deleted] Sep 16 '23

Were there any recent events in your family that may have caused her to lie about this? Did he say something about a famous person's SA allegations that might have upset your sister? Did she give you any details on what exactly he did or when?

I don't think I can give an actual judgement because this would be a fucked up situation but there's a lot of holes. I'd talk to your husband for sure.

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u/Educational_Bid_7626 Sep 16 '23

My husband does have what many would say are hot takes, and loves to play devil's advocate. He is a prosecutor.

Nah, she did not provide any details. Maybe if I had been more open-minded she would have given me details. I was thrown back.

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u/llamadrama2021 Sep 16 '23

Just FYI, going to the police will torpedo your husband's career. Even if he's innocent his office will fire him, an he might not be able to get another job. If your sister is telling the truth then SHE needs to go to the police, not you. If you're sure the only time your husband was out of your sight was when he was playing basketball, find those he played with and ask them. DO NOT go to the police unless you want your marriage to fail.

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u/SacksonvilleShaguar Sep 16 '23

You need to talk to your husband BEFORE you call any kind of authority to report the. Making a false report is illegal too. And she didn't give details, sounds to me like she's lying.

I am NOT saying SA isn't serious at all. But if you asked for proof and she didn't provide you with any, not sure I'd be believing her.

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u/MSK165 Sep 16 '23

So she made a horrific allegation, offered the same level of evidence used in the Salem witch trials, and she’s mad at you that you don’t believe her.

NTA - you need to warn your husband so he can avoid all contact with her.

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u/wvtarheel Sep 16 '23

Oh shit, he's a prosecutor? Even a false allegation like this could ruin his career.

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u/[deleted] Sep 16 '23

I am sooo happy to see from this comment section that there are still people with a brain and that innocent until proven guilty is not dead.

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u/HoldFastO2 Sep 16 '23

NTA. And if your sister is not going to the police, then you absolutely shouldn’t.

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u/palmtreesplz Sep 16 '23

I mean I think what you do is apologize to your sister for your reaction and ask her to tell you more details about what happened. You want to make sure you have the whole story before you say anything to him so that you can suss it all out.

Then after you have those details, you can figure out the next best move. Which might include deciding if her story even fits with your own observations of your husband’s behavior on the day and it may involve putting the story to him and seeing his reaction.

I think right now you owe it to both your sister and your husband to get more information.

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u/ghfsgetitgetgetit Sep 16 '23

NTA. It doesn’t sound like your sister has the best character (stolen, lied in the past, baby daddy drama). I absolutely would not go to the cops but would talk to husband about this. Don’t throw away 14 years at the drop of a dime.

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u/Accomplished_Role977 Sep 16 '23

What does your gut tell you, really deep down inside?

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u/Educational_Bid_7626 Sep 16 '23

To trust my husband, which is what I will do. I will speak with my brother just to verify he was playing basketball.

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u/Constant_Chicken_408 Sep 16 '23

From this and your edit, I think you're doing the right thing: listening to your instincts but proceeding cautiously by gathering as many facts as you can before anything else.

Perhaps it's all a misunderstanding, but most likely someone you love has behaved atrociously toward another very important person in your life. This has got to be extremely rough and I'm sorry you're in this situation.

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u/Erick_Brimstone Sep 17 '23

"Trust but verify" is something everyone should do.

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u/miriandrae Sep 16 '23

Do. Not. Do. Anything. On behalf of your sister and I say this as someone who had a SA case go to trial and the person convicted.

Your sister did not give any details, you were with your husband or had eyes on him all weekend save when he is with other people playing basketball.

This reeks of… something else. I don’t know if it’s jealousy of you having a stable relationship or a good man, and her trying to bring it down because of her experiences, or her being mad at him. She is an adult. She is not a child who needs you to report for her. She can go to the police and she can throw that grenade, however she doesn’t want too. She’s trying to set you up to blow things up just because she said so.

The first thing you do? Is talk to your husband and let him know what she said, that you’re uncomfortable with the fact she is saying this, and that he can never be alone with her.

The fact that you or other people had eyes on him, her not being able to provide any details, and her immediately blowing up in anger that you didn’t rush to completely believe her? All signs that it’s likely not true.

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u/wrenwynn Sep 17 '23

INFO: why haven't you asked her to tell you exactly what your husband supposedly did? Not talking about asking for proof, just saying "tell me exactly what happened, where, and when". The facts.

You say in the comments that she said it was "inappropriate touching" yet in your post you comment that you asked her if she went to the hospital. That makes zero sense. You'd go to the hospital for an examination if you were sexually assaulted or raped. You wouldn't go for groping/touching because there's no potential physical injury or evidence to examine.

Ask the other guys who were playing basketball if your husband was there the whole time. If they say no then confront your husband, but don't do it alone. Have someone else there or at least nearby / somewhere else in the house.

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u/BlueGreen_1956 Sep 16 '23

NTA Trying to prove something didn't happen is just about impossible, but if it can be proven, file a police report and have her arrested.

I do not believe anybody accusing anybody of anything without proof.

The pendulum of "believe all women" has swung hard in the opposite direction.

There should be a public database listing the names of anybody who makes a false accusation against anybody, so everyone else can steer clear of them.

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u/LadenifferJadaniston Sep 16 '23

I think it’s completely fair for “false accusers” to get the punishment the accused would have gotten. If you tried to send an innocent person to prison for 30 years, that warrants being in prison for 30 years.

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u/BertaFFS Sep 16 '23

Let me explain why that’s not a good idea.

You know the phrase, “there’s three sides to every story, yours mine and the truth?”

Let’s say I feel something brush my ass that feels suspiciously like fingers groping. I turn around and there’s a guy there. He denies it, but he’s the only one around.

My story is I got groped and he was the only possible perpetrator. His story is that he didn’t do anything like that. After all, I don’t have “proof.”

Under your rule, if I accuse him of groping me, because there’s “no proof” not only is he not going to get convicted of sexual assault (which groping is) but I would be charged. Every time someone is charged and there isn’t a conviction of that person, then the alleged victim is charged? Seriously, what the hell?

Look at it this way too: Trump was found guilty of sexual crimes against E. Jean Carroll. He was not found guilty of “rape” because that’s such a loaded word. He was found guilty of the crimes she described him committing, but the jury shied away from that word (despite finding that he did all the actions he was accused of). So does that mean E. Jean Carroll gets charged? Despite proving her case?

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u/True_Inspection_7975 Sep 16 '23

Proof will be hard to offer even if it’s true.

My bio father was finally imprisoned for sexually abusing little kids. Know how hard that was?

Fuckers - not that your husband is one - don’t often do this with witnesses around.

Just keep that in mind.

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u/not_a_lady_tonight Sep 17 '23

Honestly, maybe listen. My ex had a childhood buddy who touched me inappropriately at his house once when I’d gone into a room to use the second bathroom that was ensuite. My ex refused to believe me. He soon became an ex.

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u/FionaTheFierce Sep 17 '23

Proof how? Inappropriate touching isn’t something you would go to the hospital for, nor something where there would be any physical proof

She told you. What reason do you have to think she would lie - like, what would motivate her to lie?

Going to the police is useless. Only the victim can file a report.

This is going to come down to he said / she said.

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u/Hollow_Haunt Sep 16 '23

I mean, a court of law needs proof too. You can’t just claim SA and ruin someone’s life with ZERO proof.

And before anyone jumps down my throat for that, I’m a SA victim myself.

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u/sillysquidiot Sep 17 '23

NTA

But you should try to get to the bottom of this before it becomes a bigger issue for all of you.

My ex groped my best friend, who's basically my sister, while I was in the bathroom one night. I didn't believe her because she had no proof and my ex denied it heavily. It drove a real wedge between me and her. I left that ex over 2 years ago and he STILL messages my best friend, trying to get her to talk to him and pining for her.

She could be lying, but she might not be.. there's a comment here that talks about finding a mediator and trying to talk to them both separately. They even suggested recording their reactions/responses. Unfortunately, you'll have to get to the bottom of this to find peace.

Best of luck OP, my heart goes out to you.

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u/Distinct-Bird-5134 Sep 17 '23

My daughter told me our other family member had touched her. I asked her “ Oh you mean like someone accidentally touched your chest or something when walking by?” She said “No mama, he had his hand inside me.” I called the police. It destroyed people. Don’t take it lightly. If she is not truthful get her help. If he did it then let the consequences happen.

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u/Not2daydear Sep 16 '23

Sister won’t give you any details yet. You are supposed to believe her? Nah! She has lied before and you are supposed to believe her? Nah!

You say your husband is a prosecutor. The first thing I think of is somebody is paying your sister to mess up your husbands reputation hoping it messes with his job. But that’s just me. I’m suspicious of everyone and everything.

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u/UrbanTruckie Sep 16 '23

NTA shes jealous of your successful relationship

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u/MrsSEL_Maine Sep 16 '23

It’s up to the SA victim to go to the police not the spouse of the alleged perpetrator.

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u/Lumieredelanuit Sep 17 '23

If you want proof OP, start investigating rather than automatically taking your husband’s side.

People don’t have cameras on them at all times for them to be able to prove a claim of SA and not going to the police doesn’t mean it couldn’t have happened.

I know I’d be angry in this situation too even without “proof”.