STUDENT DENIES RAPING WOMAN
AMUSIC student raped a woman who had fallen asleep on his couch after a night out which left her “extremely drunk”, a court has heard.
Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama (RWCMD) student Benjamin Williams Stacey, 25, is accused of raping the woman in Cardiff in 2019.
It is alleged that he took advantage of the woman after she had passed out on his sofa at his student home in Cathays and had sexual intercourse with her without her consent.
After the complainant, who has automatic lifelong anonymity, contacted the police the next day, Williams Stacey was arrested and DNA samples were taken. A positive match was later found with DNA from the victim’s underwear.
When asked whether he had sexual intercourse with the alleged victim, he said “I don’t know”, and when asked if he thought the complainant was able to consent he said she was not. He denies rape.
A trial at Cardiff Crown Court yesterday heard that Williams Stacey had been a student at RWCMD for several years.
Prosecutor Roger Griffiths said the alleged incident took place on a night out which went from Cardiff city centre to a house in Cathays where the defendant lived, and a number of people smoked cannabis in the garden.
In a video interview played to the court, the complainant said she had drunk seven to eight pints of lager throughout the night, had been among those smoking cannabis in the garden, and described herself as being “extremely drunk”.
Mr Griffiths said the complainant came from the garden and sat on the sofa for some time before lying down. He said the complainant remembered falling asleep on the couch, but woke when a man moved her legs apart, pushed her underwear to one side, and raped her.
“The episode lasted for five minutes and the male did not say anything,” said Mr Griffiths, adding that the male subsequently left the room and went upstairs. “She realised at that stage everyone had left the house and she was unable to see who it was because it was dark.”
Describing the alleged incident in her video interview, the complainant said she “just lay still” during the incident.
When asked the reason why she didn’t say anything during the incident, she said: “I was scared, I just wanted it to be over.”
The complainant contacted the police at 1.30pm the next day and was interviewed and forensically examined.
It was established that two men lived at the property where the alleged offence took place and Williams Stacey was arrested and examined, with DNA swabs taken.
A positive match was made with semen found on the complainant’s underwear which linked Williams Stacey to her forensically.
In his police interview Williams Stacey said he was seven or eight out of 10 in terms of intoxication at the start of the night, but after smoking cannabis in the garden at his home he described himself being 10 out of 10 in intoxication and “in the worst state he had ever been in”.
He said he remembered being alone with the complainant when she was asleep on the couch in the living-room.
He then recalled going upstairs to his bedroom. He said he could hear the complainant coughing and retching but when he got downstairs she had stopped. He said he got himself a glass of water and sat in the chair opposite the complainant. He then told police his next recollection was waking up in his bed.
Williams Stacey was asked if he was the man who moved the complainant’s legs and had sexual intercourse with her. He said he didn’t know.
When asked if he had sexual intercourse with her or any sexual contact, he said he didn’t know. He was also asked if he would be linked forensically sexually to the alleged victim, but again he said he didn’t know.
When asked if the complainant was in any condition to give consent to sexual intercourse, he said she was not.
The defendant, of Cyfarthfa Street, Roath, attended lectures in the morning but was made aware of the allegation and was subsequently arrested when he returned home.
Concluding his opening to the jury, Mr Griffiths said: “We say the defendant raped the complainant. It’s clear that some form of sexual activity took place. He already said she was in no fit state to consent. It’s your decision to decide the facts in this case.”
The alleged victim was cross-examined by Kevin Seal, defending, and he asked the complainant why she didn’t open her eyes during the incident and ask the perpetrator what they were doing.
She said: “I was too scared. I wanted to seem like I was sleeping.”
Williams Stacey denies rape and the trial continues.