
Now, Prout, 19, has co-written a memoir, “ I Have the Right To: A High School Survivor’s Story of Sexual Assault, Justice, and Hope” (Margaret K. So she decided to come forward and not be an anonymous victim anymore. “I’m tired of being an anonymous victim while my attacker is this superstar scholar-athlete,” she told her mother. privileged, preppy, naive, impressionable, flummoxed.” Prout, unnamed in the story, felt she was portrayed as a “blank nothing. Her assailant, Owen Labrie - who the previous year was acquitted of felony sexual assault but convicted on three misdemeanor counts of statutory rape and using a computer to lure a minor for sex - was described as a golden boy: handsome, suntanned, captain of the varsity soccer team and “a winner of the headmaster’s award for selfless devotion to school activities” whose Ivy League admission was rescinded after his arrest. Paul’s, had sexually assaulted her two years prior. The magazine had published a story about her rape case, in which she claimed an 18-year-old senior at her former high school, the elite New England academy St. One day in February 2016, Chessy Prout, then 17, picked up an issue of Vanity Fair. The dark truth behind the glamorous facade of ballet schoolĮllen Barkin claims director 'ripped' her merkin off during nude scene Spare me these sickeningly hypocritical Met Gala celebrity cockroachesĪctor claims agency fired him after he refused to pose nude for Oscar-winning director who promised Marvel role
