Maya Forstater, 51, the head of the charity Sex Matters, has revealed Scotland Yard has been investigating her for the crime of malicious communications since August 2023.
The alleged crime, which carries a punishment of up to two years in prison, relates to a post Ms Forstater wrote on X/Twitter about trans former GP, Dr Kamilla Kamaruddin.
Dr Kamaruddin said that after transitioning, patients allowed her to perform 'more intimate examinations that they did not let me to do when I was a male GP'. Ms Forstater tweeted in June last year that Dr Kamaruddin 'enjoys intimately examining female patients without their consent'.
Perfectly reasonable inference to draw from his actions. If he disagrees, it's up to him to sue for libel. In a civil court. It's absolutely no case for the police to bother with.
But she claims that while on holiday, she was sent an e-mail from the Met Police which said she would be arrested unless she voluntarily attend a police interview.
Here, try under 'v'
*sighs*
'And obviously I didn't want to be arrested so I went. So I had to get a solicitor and went into the police station to be questioned, and it was only then that they told me what the tweet that was supposed to be a crime was.
'I sort of thought that this must be mistake. It was like half a tweet. It didn't tag anybody. It was attached to a blog post that explained why I'd said it.
'It was not a threat to anybody, it was not obscene, it was based on facts and quite disturbing fact that a doctor who is male was boasting about examining women who wanted a female doctor, and who were told they were getting a female doctor.
'Most people want a woman, and if you ask for a woman you should get a woman.'
Well, quite! If there's any sort of crime committed here, it's surely false representation and sexual assault by the doctor, but since the police have been entirely captured by this ridiculous cult, we'll wait in vain for them to do anything about it...
But she has still not heard the outcome of the investigation ten months after first being contacted by the force. But she told MailOnline: 'I don't think I targeted a member of the trans community. I think I talked about a male doctor who was doing something inappropriate.
Ms Forstater, who has not ruled out legal action against the force, said that she was told she was being questioned for 'targeting a member of the trans community'.
'If you can't call that out, then what you're doing is you're making a section of society unable to be criticised and unable to be scrutinised... even when they're in a position of asking a woman to take her underpants off and be examined.
'It's a situation where the utmost respect should have been given to the patients, not to the identity of the of the trans identifying doctor.
'And if you can't call that out without the police saying you're targeting a vulnerable community and then calling you in and basically acting like a private police force then bad things will happen.
'People will not respect the privacy and dignity, and the consent of women.'
Well, the police certainly don't, as they've proved time and again...
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