​The 2 out of 3 Rule. Roughly 63% to 75% of sexual assaults are never reported to the police Why Integrity Matters ​Justice is built on the assumption of truth. When someone makes a false accusation, they aren’t just attacking an individual; they are sabotaging the safety net meant for everyone. ​The most profound damage is the burden of doubt placed on real victims. Every time a fabrication comes to light, it hardens the public heart. It gives skeptics a reason to look at a person in pain and ask, "Are you sure?" instead of "How can I help?" This leads to a tragic cycle: survivors stay silent because they fear the stigma of being labeled a liar, and when they finally do find the courage to speak, they are met with a wall of suspicion built by those who lied before them. ​Furthermore, a false accusation is a life sentence of its own. Even when the truth prevails, the "digital footprint" of a lie remains. We must protect the integrity of our words—not just for the sake of the accused, but to ensure that when a real victim cries out, the world is actually listening. ​False accusations don't just hurt the accused—they silence survivors. ​When someone lies about a crime or an action: ​They steal resources from people in actual danger. ​They build a wall of skepticism that real victims have to climb over. ​They create a culture of fear where the truth is treated like a choice rather than a fact. ​We need to foster a world where the truth is sacred. If we want people to "believe survivors," we have to stop people from weaponizing the systems meant to protect them.