"He went from a man to a monster. I can't quite describe the feeling, the sadness, to know what was about to happen and that I would or could not have done anything to stop it. I was literally shaking and drooling... I threw some very feeble punches, but I could not move my arms...I could not move anything.' Audrey told ACA
She claimed that after the first alleged
attack, she managed to escape his place but Henry followed her and when
she went to passersby for help, they refused to help after Henry
allegedly told them to ignore her and 'to stay out of it'. And when she
managed to get a cab to take her to her hotel, Henry forced his way into
the taxi and allegedly raped her again in it. (and the taxi driver
allowed that to happen? Huh?)
She said another man eventually came to
her rescue and took her to her hotel and her family rushed her to the
hospital, where doctors found her entire body covered in bruises.
'He was crushing me, he nearly suffocated me... He could have killed me,' Audrey told ACA.
CCTV footage captured Alafu
waiting in the lobby for Ms Pekin, as she stopped at the hotel before
they continued with their night out. It was before the alleged attack
took place
|
A number of Facebook posts by Henry Alafu,
under a different name, including a picture he uploaded of the two
together the night before, led to Pekins family to believe it
'evident' he was the man who allegedly attacked their daughter.
Police were in possession of Alafu's
phone number, Facebook profile and current address, but the Pekin family
says they did not do enough.
'It's just so hard to know what to do,'
Ms Pekin's father, Karl, said. It's incredibly frustrating... They could
have picked him up - he was still a threat. It's clear who he was,
clear where he was, so we don't know why he wasn't picked up.'
It was not until January 12, 18 days after the alleged attack, an attempt to arrest the Nigerian national was made. Four of
Alafu's friends were arrested in a raid on the property on January 14,
however it is believed he had escaped by that point.
Police
tracking revealed his phone was later used in Jakarta before being
deactivated. His Facebook account was later opened from Nigeria.
The Pekin family was paid more than $14,000 in legal fees over four days to proceed with the case.
'I think Bali is a lawless country,' Ms Pekin said.
'It has laws when it feels like it.'
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