The UK Rape Gang Inquiry Report is out. Read it. All of it.
What's documented in this report is absolutely sickening.
250,000+ estimated victims. 149 local authority districts. Nearly 40% of the country. The first recorded case goes back to 1955.
The pattern was the same everywhere. Girls as young as 11 groomed with alcohol, drugs, gifts. Raped by organized networks. Passed between groups. Trafficked between cities. Filmed for blackmail. Threatened into silence.
Every institution knew. Police treated children as willing participants. Social workers closed cases with clear evidence sitting in the file. NHS staff documented genital injuries, STIs, and pregnancies in children then sent them back into danger. Teachers watched older men collect girls from school gates and said nothing.
Politicians knew too. They were briefed. They chose silence because they were more afraid of being called racist than they were of leaving children in the hands of rapists. That's not a political statement. That's what the report documents.
This inquiry wasn't funded by the government. It was funded by 20,000 people who decided they'd had enough waiting. Led by survivors like Sammy Woodhouse, who was raped as a child in Rotherham and spent years fighting a system that blamed her for her own abuse.
The Met has quietly opened a review of 9,000 child sexual exploitation cases. The National Crime Agency launched Operation Beaconport to reexamine thousands of dropped files.
Evil exists. It operated in the open for decades because every institution that should have stopped it decided its own comfort mattered more than the children it was supposed to protect.
The question is whether anyone with power will actually do something about it this time.

What's documented in this report is absolutely sickening.
250,000+ estimated victims. 149 local authority districts. Nearly 40% of the country. The first recorded case goes back to 1955.
The pattern was the same everywhere. Girls as young as 11 groomed with alcohol, drugs, gifts. Raped by organized networks. Passed between groups. Trafficked between cities. Filmed for blackmail. Threatened into silence.
Every institution knew. Police treated children as willing participants. Social workers closed cases with clear evidence sitting in the file. NHS staff documented genital injuries, STIs, and pregnancies in children then sent them back into danger. Teachers watched older men collect girls from school gates and said nothing.
Politicians knew too. They were briefed. They chose silence because they were more afraid of being called racist than they were of leaving children in the hands of rapists. That's not a political statement. That's what the report documents.
This inquiry wasn't funded by the government. It was funded by 20,000 people who decided they'd had enough waiting. Led by survivors like Sammy Woodhouse, who was raped as a child in Rotherham and spent years fighting a system that blamed her for her own abuse.
The Met has quietly opened a review of 9,000 child sexual exploitation cases. The National Crime Agency launched Operation Beaconport to reexamine thousands of dropped files.
Evil exists. It operated in the open for decades because every institution that should have stopped it decided its own comfort mattered more than the children it was supposed to protect.
The question is whether anyone with power will actually do something about it this time.

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