Woman raped by Brock Turner wants world to know her name
Turner loses appealIn releasing the book, says publisher Penguin Random House, Miller is reclaiming her identity. On January 18, 2015, at about 1 a.m., Turner raped Miller behind a Dumpster near an on-campus fraternity. In a 12-page impact statement that went viral, Miller said the rape left her "closed off, angry, self-deprecating, tired, irritable, empty." Her impact statement was also recited from the floor of the US House of Representatives. The power of Miller's impact statement demonstrated she had "the brain and the voice of a writer from the very beginning," she said.
Why Chanel Miller, Brock Turner's Victim, Wants You to Know Her Name Now
Chanel Miller has come forward to reveal herself as the victim of Stanford swimmer Brock Turner. Ten syllables and nothing more than that, she told 60 Minutes in an episode airing Sunday, Sept. 22. Until now, Miller was known only as "Emily Doe," keeping her name private as a sexual assault victim. Turner was found guilty of sexual assault in 2016. Turner now lives with his parents in Ohio, where he reportedly works at a factory making $12 an hour.