This book is dedicated to all those who
bravely stepped-up to support women
who have been raped or sexually abused.
COVER:
BACK COVER:
BLURB:
After weeks in Thailand following the death of her fiancé, Sam Tyler returns to Australia, having indirectly cracked a global paedophile and child-trafficking ring, taught eight Thai kids to swim, and established a home for homeless Thai kids – Baan Mick. An old friend of her father’s, Kitty, has secretly purchased her current office and two adjoining properties for Sam to repay a debt Kitty owed to Sam’s father in the 1970’s. Sam throws herself into work, organises renovations, becomes involved in a sexual abuse case against a high-profile swimming instructor, Duncan Reith, and initiates a class action involving 60 clients.
Reith is arrested and granted bail but flees to Cambodia. Sam alerts the Chief of Police in Chiang Mai, Thailand and Reith is arrested and extradited to Australia. Criminals attempt to rescue Reith in-flight, but Thai police escorts overwhelm the criminals who are offloaded in Malaysia. With a mass of evidence, Sam is ready for trial until a leading barrister is killed and Sam is almost murdered by criminals. Now she has two bodyguards, but the DPP asks her to be Leading Counsel in the case against Reith, learning that nine of Reith’s victims have committed suicide.
Negotiating a class action with the two rich owners of the Sunshine Swimming Centre, Sam offers one of them sad, personal news, but pushes both men for a fair settlement. Appearing in court with her young clients, Sam calls on police and forensic experts to provide credible evidence, her brave clients tell their sad stories and describe how they were groomed and how the abuse affected them. Duncan Reith is Sam’s last witness, but she has explosive, personal evidence to present to him.
Will the rich owners of the swimming complex compensate the victims? How will Sam honour the nine victims who have suicided? What information does Sam have on Duncan Reith?
Acknowledgments:
I wish to acknowledge the courage of any woman who has come forward and reported their sexual abuse or rape to the relevant authorities. Sadly, it is said that eighty-seven per cent of rape and sexual abuse cases are never reported in Australia, and some of my close colleagues have called me a ‘courageous author’ for writing about the subject. That may be so, but I wrote this book for several reasons. I wanted to enlighten those who know nothing about the subject or turn a blind eye to it. I also wanted to encourage victims of sexual abuse to come forward, find a decent barrister, and prosecute their offenders in a court of law. Hopefully, this book might achieve that.
ISSUES RAISED IN THIS NOVEL:
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