Clayton Echard
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And so that's what I thought she was doing.
In my situation, it was more for, I think, for career advancement.
She wanted to use it because she was a mental health advocate at the time.
She had her own mental health podcast.
So she was looking to line me up as her next TEDx talk because she had done one on a previous victim where she claimed he physically abused her, which was a whole lie.
And so she was looking to set me up as her next story, which she had even alluded to at one point.
And I'm just scratching the surface.
I mean, that's the thing is there's so much.
Correct, yeah, and it's interesting, and I want to touch on this because it actually just came from another podcast where they brought up the similar concern of she's invalidating other women now.
She's setting us back, and I understand that.
I can see where that's coming from.
We don't want people to feel that they could potentially go in a position where it's like if I happen to share my story, my truth,
could i you know end up then being in a situation like this woman where now she's facing uh 14 years or 14 felony charges and over 50 years in prison um and so i don't want to deter any woman uh for from you know coming forward and speaking their truth uh and and and that's certainly again we as we talk about even in the podcast it's not about men versus women we don't want it to be that um
Again, when I say that this is more prevalent trapping in the sports industry or entertainment, it's still not prevalent when you take one or a couple of women doing this with the millions of women that are out there.
It's certainly less than a percent of women that are doing this.
Nonetheless, it does exist.
But it's just, yeah, I mean, it's a delicate subject.
I don't believe this is going to deter any future victims from coming forward and speaking their truth in fear of potentially having legal action placed upon them.
If you speak your truth, if Laura was telling the truth,