A former student has called for defendants accused of sexual offences to be given anonymity after being acquitted of raping a 22-year-old woman who took her own life.
Elgan Varney offered his condolences to the family of Keele University student Hannah Stubbs after the CPS offered no evidence against him during a hearing at Stoke-on-Trent Crown Court.
Hannah, who was studying physiotherapy, killed herself in August 2015 while police were investigating her claims against Mr Varney.
In a statement read out by his solicitor, Hollie Alcock, Mr Varney questioned the timing of prosecutors’ decision to drop the case four days before a trial was due to begin.
Mr Varney, 33, formerly of Newcastle-under-Lyme, stated: “This is not a time of celebration for me - quite simply, I should never have been charged and put through this horrendous ordeal.
“I will sadly never know the exact reasons for Hannah’s actions.
“My anger and frustration is directed at the police and the CPS who have had overwhelming evidence from the outset that no crime was committed.”
Mr Varney, whose QC described the aborted prosecution as “terribly disturbing and distressing” for all those involved, said he had been looking forward to the facts of the case coming out at trial.
Calling for a change in the law to provide anonymity to those charged with but not convicted of sexual offences, Mr Varney added: “I fully believe that all sexual allegations should be investigated in a robust, fair and balanced manner and offenders should be brought to justice
“However, in the current climate it’s far too easy for innocent people to be falsely accused.
“Police and CPS policy offers no protection to those wrongfully accused and many lives are left in tatters.
“It is a problem that has to be acknowledged and not ignored for fear of putting genuine victims off reporting.”
Mr Varney claimed there was an “awful stigma” surrounding sexual allegations and said the impact of having his name in the media associated with abhorrent allegations, despite being innocent, had been nightmarish.
He continued: “It impacts future prospects and you are never allowed to fully move forward when the fact that you have been accused is one click away on Google.
“The pendulum has swung too far and fairness and balance needs to be restored so that the presumption of innocence is not completely eroded.
“I’d like to finish by saying a big thank you to my family, my friends and everyone who has stood by me. Without you I don’t think I would be here any more.
“I hope I can now pick up the pieces of my life and be left to try and move forward in peace.”
The CPS said the case had been kept under regular review and prosecutors were no longer satisfied that there was a realistic prospect of conviction.
Prosecutors have met with the family of the complainant to explain the reasons for the decision, a CPS spokesman said.
In a statement, Hannah’s parents, Paul and Mandy Stubbs, who live near Stafford, thanked friends, family and police for their care and support over the past 19 months.
“Our overwhelming feeling is one of loss,” they said.
“And we don’t want what happened to Hannah to define her life or our memory of the kind and loving person that she was.
“Hannah had decided to study medicine, and later physiotherapy, after hearing a missionary doctor speak at our church about the 2010 earthquake in Haiti.
“She was very good at what she turned her hand to, and could have achieved anything.”
Mr Varney was cleared by Judge John Fletcher of two counts of rape and one of sexual assault after prosecutor Karim Khalil QC said the decision not to continue the prosecution had been taken at the "highest level" of the CPS.
An inquest into Ms Stubbs’s death recorded a narrative verdict that she had taken her own life following post-traumatic stress.