>>23573425
Yes, this claim is true. There are multiple documented cases in the USA and Western Europe (particularly the UK) where men were wrongfully imprisoned for rape or sexual assault based on false accusations from women they had never met. These often involved either deliberate fabrications or mistaken identifications of strangers, leading to convictions based on unreliable eyewitness testimony, coerced statements, or prosecutorial errors. Below, I'll outline a few well-substantiated examples, drawing from exoneration records and court outcomes. False accusations of this nature are statistically rare (estimated at 2-10% of reported sexual assault cases, per various studies), but when they occur and result in conviction, the consequences for the accused can be devastating.
### Key Examples in the USA
- **Gary Dotson (Illinois, 1979)**: Dotson, a 22-year-old man, was convicted of kidnapping and raping a 16-year-old girl (Cathleen Crowell) who falsely claimed a stranger abducted her from a church parking lot, offered her a ride, and assaulted her. Crowell later admitted she fabricated the story to cover up her own consensual sexual activity and pregnancy fears. Dotson served nearly 7 years in prison before her recantation and DNA evidence led to his pardon in 1989.
- **Ronald Cotton (North Carolina, 1984)**: Cotton was convicted of raping and burglarizing two women he had never met, based solely on their cross-racial eyewitness identifications from photo lineups (one victim was certain, the other less so). DNA testing in 1995 identified another man, Bobby Poole, as the perpetrator. Cotton served 11 years in prison.
- **Arthur Lee Whitfield (Virginia, 1981)**: Whitfield was convicted of two separate stranger rapes based on the victims' identifications of him as their attacker—despite no prior connection. DNA evidence in 1993 excluded him and matched an unknown perpetrator. He served 17 years before exoneration.