New Allegations Surface in Rotherham Case
Thirty victim testimonies reveal shocking new claims that British police officers participated in the systematic sexual abuse of children during the Rotherham scandal. Five women report being sexually assaulted by officers while underage, adding a disturbing dimension to the UK's worst child protection failure.
Pattern of Institutional Failure
The Rotherham scandal, which involved at least 1,400 children between 1997-2013, was previously attributed to British-Pakistani grooming gangs. New evidence indicates police officers raped victims in patrol cars, threatened them with gang retaliation, and deliberately ignored exploitation. One victim described being repeatedly assaulted over three years: "He knew where we hung out, demanded oral sex or raped us in the police car."
Controversial Investigation Launched
South Yorkshire Police (SYP) has initiated a new criminal probe into officers' involvement. This investigation faces immediate criticism as SYP is examining its own personnel. Professor Alexis Jay, who led the original inquiry, condemned this arrangement: "An independent body must handle these allegations."
Broader Systemic Failures
The 2014 Jay Report documented how authorities dismissed evidence due to fears of racism accusations, class prejudice against victims, and desire to protect institutional reputations. Most victims were white working-class girls in care systems, though British-Asian girls were also targeted.
Political Response
Prime Minister Starmer initially resisted demands for a national inquiry before conceding last month. The new police abuse allegations have intensified calls for comprehensive investigations into similar patterns in multiple UK cities.