Singer Axl Rose accused of rape by model Sheila Kennedy

“He treated her as a possession to be used solely for his sexual pleasure. He didn’t use a condom. Kennedy did not give permission and felt dominated. She felt there was no escape or way out and was forced to agree. She believed that Rose would physically attack her, or worse, if she said no or tried to push him away. “She understood that it was safest to lie down on the bed and wait for Rose to finish attacking her,” the lawsuit states.

At the nightclub in New York, the singer invited Kennedy, MTV presenter Riki Rachtman and another model to a party in his hotel room, where the singer allegedly offered the guests cocaine and alcohol.

Initially, Kennedy and Rose kissed, a gesture that was consensual, “unlike the sexual encounter they later had,” as the lawsuit explains.

After this, the artist began to have sexual relations with the other model, and He proposed to Rachtman and Kennedy to have “group sex,” but they both turned him down and left the room.

As he walked into the hallway, Kennedy heard the sound of a glass hitting the floor and the singer called the model he was dating at the time a “whore.”

At that moment he left the room and angrily walked to Rachtman’s suite, where he found Kennedy: in anger, he knocked her down, grabbed her by the hair and dragged her across the floor back to her room, causing her knees to bleed.

There he placed her face down on the bed, tied her hands with stockings behind her back and raped her: ““She lied, with her hands tied behind her back, bleeding, vulnerable and alone with Rose while he was in a state of volatile, sexual rage,” the lawsuit states.

This isn’t the first time Axl Rose has been accused of sexual assault: In 1985, he was accused of abusing a 15-year-old girl, and in the 1990s, his then-wife, Erin Everly, accused him of spitting on her, hitting her her, tied up and dragged several times by her hair, and that she had forced her to sleep with him.

Kennedy filed the complaint thanks to a one-year legal window to seek justice for past sex crimes, made possible by the New York State Adult Survivors Act, which expires this Thursday.

Source: El heraldo

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