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British beauty queen sexual assault man in restaurant, victim: I feel assaulted, if she was a man would definitely be jailed

According to the British media on August 30, recently, a case in the city of Christchurch, Dorset, England, sparked a wave of alarm, the protagonist is the 2003 Miss Europe competition for the United Kingdom, the pre-elected beauty queen Samantha Williamson. Her disorderly behavior in the high-end restaurant, not only to the victim physical and psychological injury, but also in the process of justice to arouse many controversies.

Last June, a couple, celebrating their 40th anniversary of marriage and their husband's recovery from throat cancer, carefully planned a £1,200 weekend vacation and stayed at the award-winning restaurant on the river side of the Captain Club Hotel in Christchurch, Dorset.

The 44-year-old mother-of-two, from Salisbury, Wiltshire, was so drunk that she sat at the bar and snapped at others before jumping onto the lap of Steven Kennedy, who was enjoying a quiet dinner, and murmured provocatively: "I want to sit on your big bamboo." When Steven refused decisively, Williamson was infuriated, swept drinks and candles off the table, spilled liquid on Steven's wife, and an argument broke out. Steven pushed her away to protect her, and the two fell to the ground. Williamson not only spat at him, but also scratched him to make him bleed.

Steven, the 59-year-old 6ft 2in 23 stone (8 stone lost during throat cancer treatment) heavy goods vehicle driver who wanted nothing more than to celebrate quietly with his wife, suffered such an unwarranted disaster. He recalled, "She was like in The Exorcist, acting crazily, and she had no idea which planet she came from."

Surprisingly, instead of arresting Williamson, the police chose to send her home, where she was charged only with sexual harassment, rather than actual physical assault. This week, Williamson appeared in Poole Magistrates' Court and was sentenced to a six-month community service order, wearing an electronic tag to impose a curfew, and paying the victim Steven £1,000 in compensation.

Steven was extremely angry at the verdict. He said emotionally that Williamson's punishment was much lenient than what men might have received, and he even considered filing a private lawsuit. He believes that if the roles are reversed and he forcibly contacts strange women through sexual teasing, he will face completely different severe penalties. "If I put my groin a woman's face, I'd be locked up in a cell for the next two nights and dragged into court on Monday morning. But that night, the police drove her home and she wasn't charged until December, which was so unfair."

Williamson's life was like a bright star. After winning the "Face of the Year" model trial held by a hair salon in her hometown of Bournemouth in 1998, her modeling career rose all the way, carrying out missions all over the world and participating in the Miss Europe pageant in 2003. Although she didn't win the championship, she didn't give up her dream. She married Josh, a stockbroker, and became a full-time mother after giving birth to her son Parker.

However, life hasn't gone well. Her father-in-law has revealed that Williamson suffered an anesthesia and was frustrated at work because of body problems. After the marriage broke up, she returned to England, married former restaurant owner Charles Williamson and raised a daughter, but the marriage also ended in failure. Since then, she joined Bernmuth window installers Adrian George with a 18-year criminal record.

The incident caused a huge psychological trauma to the couple. That carefully planned holiday was to celebrate the important moment in life, but became the beginning of a nightmare. Steve is still awakening from the nightmare to the present day, repeating the scene, he feels unable to protect his wife, leaving her intimidated and self-guilty.

From a judicial perspective, there are many questions about case handling. The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) did not charge Williamson with assault, despite closed-circuit television footage showing she also hit two other people during the fight. Steven believes that if he had not kept urging the authorities, the case would not have reached the court, and the way the police handled the case from the beginning exacerbated his trauma.

Williamson, whose defense team called alcohol her "Achilles heel", was in difficult times, struggling with daily mental health issues and an inability to be around her children. But Steven has no sympathy for it, and he firmly believes that everything Williamson gets is what she deserves.



News raw data sources → https://news.qq.com/rain/a/20250830A06XS400

17WorldNews[2025.08.31-01:55] 访问:57
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