SALT LAKE CITY When sexual assault survivor Alli Fields told her friends what had just happened to her, she said their reaction downplayed the gravity of the situation. They thought it just sounded like a bad date. There was no, You have to report that, you ve got to tell somebody, that s not OK, Fields recalled.
It wasn t until she talked to a male friend that she realized what happened was rape and was not simply a really crappy date. That was the first time that somebody had told me what had happened to me. And I think it s ridiculous that I didn t even understand that, because we don t talk about it, Fields said Wednesday as she, other survivors, local leaders and prevention advocates met at the Utah Coalition Against Sexual Assault building in Salt Lake City to mark Denim Day.
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Salt Lake County Mayor Jenny Wilson, left, Salt Lake County District Attorney Sim Gill, Liliana Olvera-Arbon, executive director of the Utah Coalition Against Sexual Assault, and Salt Lake County Sheriff Rosie Rivera listen to speakers at the Utah Coalition Against Sexual Assault building in Salt Lake City to mark Denim Day, an event designed to bring awareness to sexual assault on Wednesday, April 28, 2021.
Ashley Imlay, KSL.com
When sexual assault survivor Alli Fields told her friends what had just happened to her, she said their reaction downplayed the gravity of the situation. They thought it just sounded like a bad date.
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6PM: Downtown rally after Chauvin verdict
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SALT LAKE CITY The chants and signs were the same, but a sense of renewed hope appeared to replace anger at a protest Tuesday evening in Salt Lake City soon after a jury convicted former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin of murder in the death of George Floyd. It knocks the wind out of you. I ve never seen justice before today, and that was a long road to see it, said Lex Scott, founder of the Black Lives Matter Utah Chapter as a rally formed at the Salt Lake City Department of Public Safety.