
My paedo dad sold me for sex to dozens of truckers in laybys and carved ‘warning' symbols into my skin after raping me
MONSTROUS BETRAYAL My paedo dad sold me for sex to dozens of truckers in laybys and carved 'warning' symbols into my skin after raping me
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UNTIL the age of 12, Kate Price lived in fear of her violent father, who subjected her to frequent beatings and sickening sexual assaults.
But over the decades that followed, she was plagued by disturbing, hazy flashbacks that indicated she'd endured an even darker horror, with only a breadcrumb trail of clues that included a mysterious figure called 'Chicken Plucker'.
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Kate Price, now in her 50s, told The Sun how she broke a cycle of abuse to create a loving family
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Kate as a young girl posing with her childhood cat on her family's front porch
It was only when she embarked on radical treatment with a trauma specialist that she unlocked hidden memories and discovered she'd been horrifically drugged and sold for sex by her father to strangers in laybys across Pennsylvania.
'With my eyes open, I saw a hundred trucker men who had raped me," she says now.
Kate's gut-wrenching story first came to prominence in a Pulitzer Prize-nominated investigation that shone a light on the sickening underground network of predators operating in the US state, with judges, attorneys, and law enforcement officials corroborating key details of her shocking flashbacks.
Her father, who has since died, was never charged. He was investigated by federal officials but denied any wrongdoing.
In her remarkably powerful new memoir – serialised in three parts here for The Sun – Kate, now in her 50s, tells how she broke a cycle of abuse to create a loving family of her own and become an advocate for trafficking victims...
Part One: 'You will always be mine'
"Where's Daddy?" was the first sentence I ever spoke. I asked this not because I wanted to find him, but because I didn't want him to find me.
Most days, my father would stop at a bar on the way home from work and drink with his friends.
By the time he walked in he was fuelled with liquor and rage, looking for my older sister Sissy or me.
He'd ambush whomever he found first, pounding us with clenched fists, careful not to leave any bruises on the more visible parts of our bodies.
Punches to the stomach and knocks to the sides of our heads were standard. Choking happened on a less regular basis.
I was abused by my HIV positive father
My father often woke me hours after I had gone to sleep and loaded me into his pickup or took me to our garage behind the house, though the details of what happened after were vague.
On those nights I often woke to the smell of rubbing alcohol and the feeling of a cold ball wiping my bicep before I felt my father's rough hands prick my arm with a needle.
Or he'd wake me with instructions. 'Drink this,' he'd whisper, handing me a plastic bottle filled with a gooey liquid that tasted like cough syrup.
He would whisper, 'Shhh, we're going to a party.' My body would go limp as my father took off my nightgown and changed me into clothes, my mind sputtering in and out of consciousness as he carried my listless body outside.
I always woke up in the morning wearing my nightgown but no underwear. My hands would cup the soreness between my legs.
I'd have no idea what had happened. My brain struggling to patch together various slivers of memory – flashes of glaring headlights, empty beer bottles, an abandoned warehouse, a movie theatre, and our backyard garage; wisps of smells of motor oil, wet grass, whiskey, beer, and cheap cologne filling my nose; the sounds of running truck engines and men laughing.
No longer wanting to deal with the despair, I grabbed the first pill bottle I could find and swallowed one pill after another
Kate Price
When I was six, my father discovered I had a crush on my neighbour Bobby, who was a year older.
In one swift motion, he yanked me forward, grabbing and turning my left wrist to expose the tenderest part of my arm. Then he snatched his ever-present pocketknife.
I stood frozen as he dug an X into my forearm. Despite the pain, I was too shocked to scream.
'You are mine,' he said, spitting the words as he carved. 'You will always be mine.'
I'm not sure whether my father carried or threw me down the two flights of stairs to our basement. Either way, I passed out. When I woke, my entire body ached as I replayed the relentless punches and kicks.
I was certain my father intended to kill me and might one day succeed.
And it would be my fault, because as he had told me, 'You make me do bad things.'
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A young Kate poses with a basket on Easter Sunday
Credit: SUPPLIED
Later on, I decided to take matters into my own hands.
One detail lodged in my brain was a name I'd heard my father use on his CB radio – a man called Chicken Plucker. Who was this?
One day, I leaned into my father's truck and picked up the CB microphone.
'I am looking for 'Chicken Plucker,' I said. A voice crackled, 'This is Chicken Plucker …'
Without warning my father appeared. He just smirked. The curious part of me was satisfied. Whatever was happening to me was real. My quest to learn the truth had begun.
I'd have no idea what had happened. My brain struggling to patch together various slivers of memory
Kate Price
My father was the only authority I had on boyfriends and girlfriends.
'You make me feel so special and loved,' he said, as we lay together in my bed. 'This is our special time that's just for us. Don't ever tell Mommy or Sissy.'
I didn't protest. At the time, I thought this was normal, especially after he had explained, 'This happened to me, so it's happening to you.'
I didn't know I was allowed to say no. 'Only special little girls get to be sexy,' he said.
On one hand, I liked the way his affection made me feel important, yet on the other hand, such intimacy made me feel like I was his wife, not his little girl.
When I was twelve, my mother sat me down.
'Your father's gone,' she said. 'And he's not coming back. He's marrying someone else.'
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Kate poses for her second grade school photo in 1977
Credit: Supplied
While relieved I no longer had to suffer, a part of me was crushed and betrayed. My father's mistress was only seven years older than Sissy.
When I finally met this woman months later, she dripped with sex, the opposite of my mother in every way.
My sense of shame and despair around what had transpired in my home in rural Pennsylvania, which I couldn't tell anyone about, peaked one winter night aged 16.
No longer wanting to deal with the despair, I grabbed the first pill bottle I could find and swallowed one pill after another. Nothing happened.
I could breathe easy for the very first time after my father and stepmother moved to Florida.
Part Two: Confronting the horror
After her father and stepmother moved to Florida, Kate managed to turn her life around by going to university.
But it wasn't until years later that she met trauma specialist Dr Bessel van der Kolk, who used eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR), a form of psychotherapy designed to treat post-traumatic stress disorder.
She learned her body stored the pain from those early experiences, as hidden memories reemerged of how her father had trafficked her to strangers in laybys across Pennsylvania's Interstate 80.
As Kate drew strength from her treatments and learned more about sexual abuse, she learned her dad was working as an electrician at a hospital – and so wrote to them to warn them about his predatory history.
Hearing the hospital took steps to protect their patients, she found the courage to confront her father about his abuse...
I was about to speak the biggest truth of my entire life. In my EMDR sessions I'd pictured challenging my father like this, and now I was ready to speak truth to power in real life.
'So, Dad, you know how you apologised that time a couple of years ago for being a bad father, for leaving us?' I said. 'Well, what about admitting and apologising for hitting me … sexually abusing me? Dad, you raped me. A lot.'
I stopped short of confronting my father about trafficking me; mustering the courage to speak up about his abuse was difficult enough.
Silence. Followed by an explosion.
'Now she's saying I raped her!' he screamed to his third and most recent wife.
I wasn't going to let this go. It had taken me 28 years to find my voice and my truth.
'Dad, this happened,' I maintained. 'You know this happened. These things . . . you did this to me.'
But there would be no remembering, no admitting, no apologising. Right before the line went dead, my father shouted, 'Don't you ever call me again!'
Part Three: Fighting the traffickers
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Kate is speaking out to shed a light on what children are still enduring
In 2003, Kate married Chris, who had supported her when she'd first told him about her past. They later adopted a son.
Then, over ten years, she investigated the crimes against her. And, although her father died recently, she had long given up hope of ever getting justice…
The police had never investigated any domestic violence disturbances at my childhood home or arrested my father.
Internet searches to identify the liquid my father made me drink also came up empty.
I suspected the substance was some sort of medicine my father procured at the hospital where he worked as an electrician or flavoured alcohol but never found any confirmation.
I eventually found a clue. I discovered 'Chicken Plucker' means 'paedophile' in trucker slang.
I wasn't seeking vengeance against my father: I already had so many personal triumphs – loving family, loyal friends, thriving career, and a loving community – that I didn't need to exact a pound of flesh from an old man who couldn't hurt me any longer.
I sought the truth.
My father and scores of men had objectified my body. And others allowed this dehumanization and transactional violence to happen.
I could have charged him with the crimes he committed against me. But I didn't have faith he would be convicted. I didn't trust a jury of my father's peers.
The crimes perpetrated against me ravaged my central nervous system but have put my life's purpose into clear focus. Fighting for justice is in my bones
Kate Price
I am sharing my tragic upbringing to shed a light on what children are still enduring. The crimes perpetrated against me ravaged my central nervous system but have put my life's purpose into clear focus. Fighting for justice is in my bones.
I have also joined the local anti–human trafficking task force and provide CSEC (commercial and sexual exploitation of children) training for local law enforcement, advocates, policy-makers, and direct service providers.
My father told me I was 'different' from him and my mother after I tracked down 'Chicken Plucker' when I was six. I never quite understood what he meant. Until now.
Now I know I am unstoppable.
Our familial legacy of enabling and perpetrating violence and exploitation ends with me. I will work to disrupt cycles of child sexual abuse and trafficking until my last breath.
This is my calling.
This Happened To Me by Kate Price is published by LEAP at £22.
If you are affected by any of the issues raised in this article, please call the Samaritans for free on 116123.

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The Sun
20 minutes ago
- The Sun
Inside Britain's acid attack capital where kids ride around on bikes armed with Lucozade bottles full of horror fluid
BRITAIN'S acid attack capital is being terrorised by kids as young as 12 armed with Lucozade bottles full of skin-melting liquid, terrified locals have told The Sun. Across the UK, attacks using noxious liquids are on the increase, with figures from a Freedom of Information Request to UK police forces revealing a 10 per cent rise across the board compared to last year. 9 9 However, the statistics are most alarming in areas covered by Northumbria Police - Northumberland and Tyne and Wear - which astonishingly accounted for a quarter of chemical attacks in the UK last year. A prominent medic in Newcastle has warned of an alarming rise in the number of cases of young men being referred to him with eye injuries caused by acid attacks. And in the city's East End, locals say that acid is being used as a robbery weapon by youngsters who swoop around on bikes. A shopkeeper in Byker told The Sun: "Acid has become the weapon of choice for young kids who think they are gangsters, it's actually frightening. "You see them every day riding around on their bikes and they're carrying Lucozade bottle filled with acid. "It's a powerful acid, but they can buy it in DIY stores without being checked for a tenner and then they'll share it out, filling their bottles." As part of the investigation, The Sun was able to buy a five-litre bottle of acid at a nearby DIY branch for just £13. The shopkeeper added: "It doesn't surprise me that there's a rise in attacks because it's easier than buying a knife, and the damage it can cause is frightening. "I'm very wary now when I see kids coming in carrying bottles, and I know businesses who have been robbed by people threatening to swill them with acid. "Some of these kids are only about 12. They're too young to buy the acid - but old enough to use it." Inside Britain's acid attack capital where kids ride around on bikes armed with Lucozade bottles full of brick cleaner The safety label on the bottle we bought said that it contains hydrochloric acid and could be corrosive to metal, warning users to wear protective gloves and eye protection. While there were no nearby warnings that buyers have to be over 18, the nationwide chain store does enforce an age limit. The DIY giant signed up to a voluntary agreement in 2018 not to sell acid-based products to children. Newcastle dad Paul Laskey, 43, was one of the 200 acid attack victims identified in Northumbria in 2023 and 2024, losing sight in his left eye. Paul went out to protect his 16-year-old son, who had been robbed of his gold chain at knifepoint near the family home in West Denton, Newcastle. When he encountered 21-year-old Robbie Scott and demanded the return of the chain, he was squirted with acid from a plastic bottle, causing agonising and catastrophic injuries. Paul's eye was saved using groundbreaking surgery by consultant ophthalmologist Prof Francisco Figueiredo at Newcastle's Royal Victoria Infirmary - but he still lost his sight in it. The acid corroded both the inner and outer layers of his cornea, but his eye was rebuilt using corneal transplants and three grafts of amnion, which is tissue from the inner lining of a donated placenta. Paul said: "It's frightening how many kids are running around Newcastle with acid in bottles, and something has to be done to stop it. They need to be brought to court faster and given bigger sentences for possessing it. "I was squirted in the face with a mixture of battery acid and superglue. The glue was mixed in so that it would stick to the face to allow the acid to burn away the flesh. "It's a horrific weapon to use on anyone, and it cost me my eye. 9 9 9 9 "As soon as the liquid hit my face, I knew I was in trouble. I could feel it burning my eyes, my nose and my mouth, and I couldn't breathe. "All I could do was restrain him with an arm around his neck while he tried to spray me a second time. He was also flailing at me with a Rambo knife. "At the time, I was told the trouble spots for acid attacks were the North East and in London - the police said in London, it was used to disfigure people, and up here, it is to hurt and threaten victims. "It's the most frightening thing I've ever encountered. I was in fear for my life, and I wouldn't want anyone else to go through what I have suffered." There is still hope that Paul, a former doorman who now works on a university's maintenance and estates team, might see through the eye. The medical team that treated him will carry out stem cell injections in the hope of returning at least some of his sight. 9 9 9 Britain's most notorious chemical attack of recent years was carried out by Abdul Ezedi, who mixed the concoction in his flat off Shields Road in Byker before travelling with it to London to carry out an attack in Clapham. Afghan asylum seeker Ezedi, 35, attacked his 31-year-old ex-partner and her two children with the alkaline solution, causing the woman life-changing injuries. Ezedi himself was seriously injured in the incident and was found to have taken his own life by jumping into the Thames soon afterwards. The attack is still fresh in the memory of people in Byker 18 months on. Speaking yards from Ezedi's former home, Northumbria University student Izzy Brown, 19, has had first-hand knowledge of the devastation of an acid attack. She said: "A friend of mine suffered an acid attack from a former boyfriend after the break-up of a relationship about three years ago. "It caused terrible damage to her skin, hitting her shoulder and arm, and also caused some nerve damage. Thankfully, it didn't hit her in the face, or the outcome would have been even worse. "It's such a cowardly thing to do to another person. I can't imagine what goes through someone's mind to think that they want to disfigure someone for life because they feel rejected. "It's worrying to hear that acid attacks have become so common in this part of the world. I know how devastating it can be for the victims. "It needs to be treated as seriously as carrying a knife because the results can be just as bad. "My friend is recovering but has been left with scarring, and she'll carry the memory all her life." What to do in an acid attack: How to immediately help victims ACID attacks can cause catastrophic injuries and victims require urgent medical attention. But would you know what to do if you found yourself caught up in an incident? Here's the lowdown. Before you do anything else, call 999 and ask for urgent help. Then, the most important thing you can do to prevent serious injuries is to carefully remove the chemical and any contaminated clothing and jewellery, according to the NHS. You can do this by peeling back any items from the skin and eyes, while taking care not to touch or spread the chemical. Use gloves or other protective materials to cover your hands where possible, and use scissors to cut clothing instead of pulling it over someone's head. If the chemical is dry, brush it off the skin using another item. After that, rinse the affected area with as much clean water as possible. Do not use a wet cloth. The water will dilute the acid, so it's important to keep refreshing with new, clean water. You should stay on the phone to emergency services until the ambulance arrives and follow any advice the call handler gives. Once in hospital, an acid attack victim should receive immediate treatment. This could be in the form of continuous washing, cleaning the burn and covering it with an appropriate dressing, pain relief, and a tetanus jab if necessary. Minor burns, which affect the outer layer of skin and some of the underlying tissue, normally heal with good, ongoing burn care. But people with severe burns may be referred to a specialist burns unit for surgery and skin grafts. These kinds of injuries can take years to fully heal, and can leave people scarred for life. It can be easy to rush to conclusions when trying to help someone who is in agony. But don't act without thinking following an acid attack or it could make matters worse, experts warn. You may think that something like milk could act as a soothing remedy for an acid burn, but it's a bad idea. Milk is generally alkaline, but when it comes into contact with acid it causes an exothermic reaction, which creates more heat and can do more damage. Plus, milk can increase the risk of infection. Stick to running water - and lots of it. You should also protect yourself, as well as the victim, to avoid becoming a secondary victim. Wear gloves and protective clothing where possible. Dr Adrian Boyle, from the Royal College of Emergency Medicine, told The Sun: "It is vital to get across that people don't become secondary victims. "If you see someone exposed to acid, don't try to brush it off with your hands, or you'll end up burned yourself. "If the substance is in powder form just brush it off, using a piece of clothing to protect your skin." And it's not just acidic liquids that are used in corrosive substance attacks - very alkaline substances can be used too. Dr Boyle added: "Alkaline powders that get wet can suddenly start to react." His three-step plan is to, first and foremost, avoid becoming a secondary victim, call for help and dial 999. If water is available, use it to dilute the acid. Shoemaker George Beck, 61, said: "Anyone who throws acid at another person for any reason is a coward. "In my day, people used to fight with their fists if they had a disagreement; now kids will resort to anything because they want to be gangsters. "It was terrible that Azedi, a guy given a place to live in Newcastle, went and attacked that young woman in London. It was a horrendous crime. "For a man to attack a woman that way, especially in front of young children, was just unforgivable, and it's terrible to think he planned the whole thing just a few yards from here." Student George Crundwell, 19, said: "It is scary to think there are people walking around this city using acid as a weapon to rob people. "Attacking someone with acid is such an up-close and personal way of injuring someone. I've always thought of it as a crime committed by someone who knows their victim. "It's a terrible way of taking revenge on a person, to try to scar them with acid." Gail Spraggon, 64, said: "I'm surprised by the figures for Northumbria, it's a worrying thing to hear. "But to have acid used as a weapon to threaten people is just another thing to be concerned about when there are already all kinds of violent crimes." Melted eyeballs and mutilated faces… inside terrifying acid attack 'arms race' after surge in chilling assaults IT was an act of violent brutality that sickened the nation. Just days into the new year in 2024, Abdul Ezedi travelled down from Newcastle to target his ex-partner, aged 31, and her two children, aged eight and three, dousing them with chemicals before fleeing the scene. But worryingly, the monstrous incident in Clapham, South London - which left a total of 12 people injured - has proved far from an isolated case. Recent figures show attacks and other offences involving corrosive substances rose by a terrifying 75 per cent last year, with only eight per cent of attacks led to someone being charged. Now, after two pupils and a teacher were hospitalised this week following a chilling acid attack outside a school, fears are growing that the UK could see a return to the horrors of the previous crime wave that sparked terror across the nation. And as gangs snap up ever bigger 'zombie' knives to fend off rivals, experts have warned of an 'arms race' for grisly substances as thugs seek to gain the upper hand. Dr Simon Harding, a professor in criminology and sociology at St Mary's University Twickenham, describes the upswing in acid attack cases as 'very worrying.' 'It's always been part of the weaponry or the repertoire of people with criminal intent," he tells The Sun. "Those who feel aggrieved, those who want to seek revenge, those who want to take violent action against somebody else. "But it is a particularly despicable weapon to choose. "I'm certainly hoping we don't see a repeat of 2017-2018, which we could even call the summer of acid attacks. It was quite dreadful." Figures obtained through freedom of information requests to police forces show that 1,244 offences were recorded in 2023, compared with 710 from the year before, a rise of 75 per cent. It follows a 69 per cent rise recorded for the year before. Her dad, Alan Spraggon, 93, said: "Anyone who attacks another person with acid is a coward, especially if that person is a woman." Acid Survivors Trust International (ASTI) carried out an analysis which showed 498 physical attacks involving corrosive substances were recorded in 2024 - compared with 454 in the previous year. In 2023, Northumbria Police and the Metropolitan Police recorded the highest number of physical attacks - 18% and 16% respectively. While figures in 2024 showed a large fall in attacks in London - dropping by 78% - cases in Northumbria rose substantially. Attacks in the force area accounted for 25% of those across the country, despite the area making up just 2% of the population. ASTI executive director Jaf Shah said: "In Northumbria, we've seen a 49% increase to 121 attacks, so there's a massive disparity in terms of numbers, especially relative to population figures for each of those corresponding areas. So this is obviously a very worrying trend. "Professor Francisco Figueiredo, who is head of ophthalmology at Newcastle University, certainly picked up on an increase in young men receiving treatment with corrosive injuries in the eye. "A lot of the injuries he's treated are related to the use of ammonia, which is quite different to some of the attacks we've seen in other parts of the UK where sulphuric acid is commonly used." Northumbria Police say that there were 96 recorded attacks where a corrosive substance was found to have been used in the force area in 2024, a fall of six per cent on the previous year. Another 25 incidents were recorded where it was suspected that a corrosive substance was used. Superintendent Scott Cowie, Northumbria Police's Serious Violence lead, said: 'We take each and every report of a corrosive substance attack seriously. 'We will always strive to do everything we can to identify the perpetrators of these offences and ultimately bring them to justice. 'In conjunction with our partners, we also carry out education and engagement activity across our Force area to educate young people about the dangers of becoming involved in serious violence. 'To anyone who is a victim of such an attack, please contact us so that we can take the appropriate action. 'To report an incident which has previously happened, you can send us a direct message on social media or use the live chat or report forms on our Force website. 'For those unable to make contact via those ways, call 101. 'Where an incident is happening, you should call 999.'


The Sun
2 hours ago
- The Sun
My driving instructor dad abused me aged 12 while mum worked long hours in lockdown – he told me he was ‘educating' me
STANDING in the witness box, Amy Leigh's legs shook as she looked directly at the man in the dock who had sexually abused her from the age of 12. She hoped to catch a glimmer of remorse – instead her twisted father defiantly stared back at her. 6 6 6 Amy was preyed upon by her dad, Andrew Mackintosh, while her mum worked long hours at a supermarket during lockdown. He would make Amy walk around the house naked, control what she ate and beat her with a wooden spoon - while also claiming that the sexual abuse was his way of "educating" her And now she shares her harrowing story with The Sun, in the hopes other victims will find the strength to come forward... Like all victims of abuse, I'd been offered a screen behind which to tell my story in court, but I'd refused, wanting to stand up to my dad and to show him I'd survived, despite the damage he'd caused me. Even so, it was a huge challenge to face the man who was not only my abuser, but also my own father. Growing up in Warrington, Cheshire, my dad, Andrew Mackintosh, was the boss of our house. From my earliest memory, he'd always been strict, and nobody was allowed to challenge him, least of all me. Mum was out working long and unsociable hours in a supermarket, so often it was just us at home. If I forgot to do a chore or didn't listen, I was sent to my bedroom without any food. Once, when I was just a few minutes late home from a friend's house, he grounded me for a month. My childhood abuser walked free -Life stories When I reminded him that the month was up, he extended it to six months. I just couldn't win. He was violent, too, slapping my bare behind or hitting me with a wooden spoon that he carried everywhere with him. He'd drawn a sad face on one side and a happy one on the other and would show me the sad face when I'd done something 'wrong', before hitting me. More than once, he whacked me so hard that the spoon broke, then complained I was costing too much in replacements. Like any kid, I loved my dad and longed for his approval. But everything I did was wrong. I had lists of chores, and if I forgot the smallest thing, he'd scoff and say: 'You can't do a thing right. You'll never make anything of yourself.' In front of other people, he'd say: 'I'd never have had a child if I'd known she was going to be like this.' Slowly, I was brainwashed into thinking there was something wrong with me – it made me try all the harder to please him. One morning, when I was 12, after Mum left to work an early shift at the supermarket, Dad woke me and ordered me to climb into bed with him, saying we could cuddle. Uncertainly, I did as I was told, and it became a regular routine. He would wake me as soon as Mum went out to work, and I had to join him in bed. I lay, rigid and wide awake, wishing I could go back to my own room. I didn't know then that it was sexual abuse, but I hated it all the same – it was excruciating One morning, his hands moved under my T-shirt. 'This is 'our normal', other people could never understand. Our family is different from everyone else,' he said. I believed him. Besides, I was too afraid to question it. I didn't even dare tell my mother what was happening. Dad had isolated me from everyone, so I had nobody else I could turn to. Then he insisted that whenever Mum was out, I had to walk around the house naked. Of course, I desperately didn't want to, but saying 'no' wasn't an option. Later that year, after I'd turned 12, he began 'inspecting' my private parts, which was excruciating. I didn't know then that it was sexual abuse, but I hated it all the same. When I was 14, it escalated even further to him showing me pornography and abusing me, ignoring me when I begged him to stop. He got nothing out of it, he'd tell me. He was just trying to help me and educate me, and it was special between us. Afterwards, he sent me GIFs, as though the whole thing was a joke. It all felt so wrong, but I didn't know what to do. He belittled and humiliated me to the point where I had no confidence left. I became suicidal, believing I was worthless. I had nowhere to turn. During lockdown, Mum was a keyworker and out of the house for long hours. 6 6 6 But Dad was a driving instructor, and his work stopped completely, so we were alone for hours together. He made me watch films naked, and I wasn't allowed a blanket, even when it was cold. He also put up CCTV inside the house, telling me and Mum it was for our own safety, but I knew it was really there to monitor me when he was out. Once, Mum came home to find my underwear on the sofa, but Dad caused a row to make her feel she couldn't ask why it was there. He was clever at making everyone else feel like they were at fault for things he had done. He was strict with food, too, and even though I was slim, he'd weigh me weekly and record my weight. I worried all the time about what I was eating. 'I thought he was going to kill me' Aged 18, I finally left for university. I loved being away from home. For the first time in years, I wasn't living in fear of Dad creeping up on me and forcing an 'inspection'. I made friends and met a partner, yet I still felt I didn't fit in. Dad had drilled into me that I was different, and I believed that. One night, with my flatmates, I plucked up the courage to speak about Dad. But before I'd really started explaining, one of them said: 'That is not OK – you should go to the police.' I stared at her in confusion. It only made me think that Dad was right; nobody else could possibly understand our family. I clammed up again, thinking I'd made a mistake. Any time I went home, Dad would try to corner me. I did my best to avoid him, but he became increasingly aggressive, as though not having me around was making him angry. One time, I forgot to bring the washing in and he began hitting me and dragged me off the chair by my hair. I felt like I was destroying his life, and Mum's too. Yet, deep down, I knew he was the one to blame, not me I thought he was going to kill me. I managed to get away and ran up to my room. Then I heard him leave the house. I was terrified of him coming back to hurt me again, so the next morning, I left without saying goodbye and vowed never to go back. That was the last time I saw him. Soon after, I started counselling because I'd developed an eating disorder. I was so used to Dad controlling everything I ate that, even with him gone, I kept denying myself food. I survived on a packet of crab sticks a day and went from 9-and-a-half stone to 7-and-a-half stone. I had no intention of talking about Dad to my counsellor, but suddenly it all spilled out. 'This is serious sexual abuse,' the counsellor told me. 'He has groomed you so that you thought it was normal. But it's not. Please go to the police.' I confided in my then partner, too, who agreed that I'd been abused and urged me to go to the authorities. It was so hard to go against years of control and brainwashing. After speaking to the counsellor, I was put into hiding where I was studying at John Moores University in Liverpool. I lost touch with my uni flatmates and ended up dropping out of my course because of my mental health. I knew I had to speak out, yet I still felt terrible guilt. My dad had concert tickets for a band he really liked, and my mum had an anniversary holiday planned for the two of them. I felt like I was destroying his life, and Mum's too. Yet, deep down, I knew he was the one to blame, not me. 'Ruined my childhood' Eventually, I realised I had to do something. Since I'd left home, I'd noticed how his temper had got worse, and I worried he might target another child. His job meant he had access to other young people, and I couldn't live with that on my conscience. Once I'd spoken to the police, I called Mum and told her everything. She was devastated. She'd had no idea. She'd always believed Dad and I were close, and that it was a normal parent-child relationship. After he was arrested, she left him. She rang me every day, saying she blamed herself and that she should have known what he was doing. But Dad knew how to manipulate her, just as he manipulated me, and I didn't blame her. Dad appeared at Liverpool Crown Court in March this year. It was another blow when he pleaded not guilty. Reliving what he'd done to me was so hard, but I was determined to face him to show him I'd survived, with support from my current partner. I'm sharing my story to help others, and I urge anyone in a similar situation to ask for help. I hope they'll come forward for support as I did, because staying silent is not the answer The jury heard how he'd sexually abused me throughout my teenage years, and how the abuse became more extreme as time went on. I shook as I read out my victim impact statement, saying: 'The pressure of living with this realisation of how I was sexually abused was too much, and my mental health deteriorated. "I experienced suicidal thoughts and didn't want to live with this weight on my shoulders any more, becoming heavier and heavier. I struggled to cope. 'He ruined my childhood, and I have to live with this for the rest of my life – what he did to me.' The jury found my dad guilty of six counts of sexual activity with a child, including penetration, and the judge sentenced him to 11 years in prison. He will be on the sex offenders register for life. Afterwards, Detective Constable Cadman said: 'He put [his victim] through the stress of a trial by cowardly refusing to admit responsibility for his sickening actions. "The sentence reflects the severity of his actions. He is a sexual predator who exploited an innocent young girl for his own selfish and twisted gratification.' I felt so proud of myself. I still suffer flashbacks about the abuse, which causes sleepless nights and nightmares, but behind bars, my father is no longer a danger, and that provides me with great comfort. I'm slowly recovering from my eating disorder and am training for a new job. While the effects of the abuse will stay with me, I refuse to let it define me. My dad ruined my past, but he will not steal another second of my future. I'm sharing my story to help others, and I urge anyone in a similar situation to ask for help. I hope they'll come forward for support as I did, because staying silent is not the answer.

ITV News
4 hours ago
- ITV News
Wembley Stadium investigating alleged ticket scam at Oasis gig
Wembley Stadium authorities said they are investigating allegations that hundreds of Oasis fans were able to sneak into a gig at the venue without a ticket. The Mancunian rockers recently played a series of dates at the venue as part of their Live 25 tour. According to The Sun, up to 200 people were asked for £350 each to be sneaked into one of the gigs via a disabled entrance. Two concertgoers told the paper a large group was able to use a copy of the same ticket to get into the stadium, where they were then handed wristbands giving them access to the VIP area at the front of the stage. They said two women who allegedly orchestrated the scam told them they had 'ten groups of 20' waiting. One of the concertgoers told The Sun: 'We were given our tickets, which were all the same, and a woman drew a shape on our hands. 'We were told to go to the disabled door at entrance M, even though our tickets said entrance F. 'We showed our stamped hands to the person on the door, they scanned the tickets, even though we all had the same one, and let us in. 'Another member of staff then handed us a golden circle wristband and that was it. There were zero security searches. We just walked straight in.' A spokesperson for Wembley Stadium said in a statement: 'Entering Wembley Stadium without a ticket is a serious offence and we are investigating these allegations. 'If they are substantiated, we will refer our evidence to the police.' Oasis' run of concerts at Wembley between July 25 and August 3 was the first time Liam and Noel Gallagher appeared together onstage at the London venue since July 12 2009, when they performed during the Dig Out Your Soul tour. The band are playing at Edinburgh's Murrayfield Stadium this weekend, followed by Dublin's Croke Park. The group will head to Japan, South Korea, South America, Australia and North America later in the year. Oasis announced their reunion tour in August last year, 16 years after their dramatic split in 2009, which saw Noel quit following a backstage brawl at the Rock en Seine festival in Paris.