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2009-11-03 10:01:04
By Paul Deal
BBC News
Peter Bacon will set off for the airport next month for a flight to Malaysia.
But it won't be Peter Bacon who will step off the plane at the other end.
Mr Bacon, a 27-year-old graduate from Canterbury in Kent, says the stigma of
being wrongly accused of rape has led him to create a new identity and make a
fresh start thousands of miles from Britain.
In March, a jury at Winchester Crown Court heard that a woman was so drunk that
she was incapable of giving consent to sex and that Mr Bacon took advantage.
He insisted that the woman had consented. The jury returned a unanimous not
guilty verdict in 45 minutes.
Since then, Mr Bacon has been busy reinventing himself.
'Nightmarish'
Speaking to Victoria Derbyshire on BBC Radio 5 live, he said: "I've changed my
name by deed poll now - the whole name.
"I've changed my passport, my taxes, my National Insurance, my NHS records.
Everything, basically."
He has set up new Facebook and Hotmail accounts - and his degree certificate
bears his new name.
Rape survivors and alleged rapists are both entitled to justice. But justice
means convicting the men who commit rape
Ruth Hall, Women Against Rape
"I enquired about name changing on certificates before I graduated. Because,
apparently, your degree certificate is a historical document, they will not
change your name; it's impossible. So, if I didn't do it before graduation,
then I couldn't do it.
"My name has come up a few times since the original newspaper interest died
down. My name is going to keep on coming up and I'd rather move away and start
again, I suppose.
"You've still got your name connected to it. Just to have it connected to
something like that is bad, terrible, nightmarish. It doesn't matter what the
outcome was."
Mr Bacon said he felt like an innocent man "but punished all the same... it
just seems like a load of doors have closed to me because of this, even though
I've done nothing wrong".
'Traumatic'
In August, a former Emmerdale actor, Lewis Linford, was cleared of sexually
assaulting a woman at a nightclub in Hull, East Yorkshire.
Lawyer Nick Freeman, who represented him, believes the law that allows rape
defendants to be named while their alleged victims remain anonymous should be
reviewed.
[Lewis Linford] was a completely innocent victim whose life was traumatised
by a fabricated allegation
Nick Freeman, who represented Lewis Linford
Mr Freeman said: "Those who are investigated and charged in such cases should
be given the same protection as the complainant until such time as they are
convicted.
"The judge should always retain the discretion to lift the veil of anonymity in
deserving cases prior to conviction.
"If you have a serial sex offender, they shouldn't be able to hide behind
anonymity so as not to impede police investigations.
"Counsel should be able to apply to the judge for anonymity to be lifted and he
would grant it or deny it.
"In the case of Lewis Linford, the jury was out for just seven minutes, so he
got a lot of positive publicity and sympathy.
"But it had an extremely traumatic effect on him and his family - emotionally,
physically and financially. He was a completely innocent victim whose life was
traumatised by a fabricated allegation.
"She was entitled to remain anonymous while he was subjected to the full glare
of publicity."
Break away
Women Against Rape does not share Mr Freeman's view about anonymity for men
accused of rape.
Ruth Hall, from the campaign group, said: "Most rapists are serial rapists.
Many rape cases could be won if more than one woman came forward to give
evidence."
She said if suspects were given anonymity, police would not be able to find
other alleged victims.
Ms Hall said: "Rape survivors and alleged rapists are both entitled to justice.
But justice means convicting the men who commit rape.
"We have sympathy for anyone accused of something they didn't do, but that
applies to all crimes.
"Rape survivors need anonymity or no-one would come forward to report rape."
While the debate goes on about the rights and wrongs of anonymity, Peter Bacon
has decided it is time to leave Britain. But why Malaysia?
"It's getting a new start really, isn't it? A lot of people here know me as
Peter Bacon. I'd like to go to a place where nobody knows me and I can start
using my new name, start a new Facebook group, just rebuild a life really.
"I'm surrounded by too many people who know me as Peter Bacon.
"But I think as soon as I get to the airport with my passport and I'm boarding
the plane then I'll think 'that's it, there is no more Peter Bacon from now'.
"So hopefully, I'll be starting my life again completely afresh. It should be
good."