This story is about an 18-year-old teenager called Marie who lived in Washington. In 2009 she had reported being raped in her apartment by a man who had bound and gagged her. Then, confronted by police with inconsistencies in her story, she had conceded it might have been a dream. Then she admitted making the story up because she felt too much pressure from the police. When she admitted that she made it up, she started to be alone because most of her friends couldn’t accept that. She had to go to court and take therapy hiding the truth. Two years after, a Detective called Stacy Galbraith started to investigate a report of a rape in Colorado. Galbraith listened to the woman with a sense of alarm. When she knew the details about the rape, she tried to find similar cases even though in different cities and states. Galbraith and Hander shot, two women detectives, started to investigate the cases with similar description. The found some clues that could help to identify the attacker. By early March in 2011, a forensic computer specialist cracked into files that O’Leary had stored on his hard drive. He found a folder called “girls” — and pictures that O’Leary had taken of his victims in Golden and Westminster. Galbraith recognized them by sight. After looking through the images, she found an answer. It was a picture of the woman’s learner’s permit, placed on her chest. It had her name. And it had her address. She called the first detective who was in charge. She told him about that case, and showed him some evidences. At that moment, he realized he was wrong. First detective: he did not show empathic. He did not believe Marie’s version because she was a difficult teenager. He could not believe her details because for him it sounded like a dream for him. At the end, he recognized his mistake and he said sorry to Marie. Marie demanded the city because they made her take therapy and pay some money for being a “liar”. Marie: was a girl with a lot of problems in her life. She did not have a permanent house, and some of her foster parents said she was a teenager with some issues. Stacy Galbraith: Galbraith often volunteered to take rape cases. She was a wife, a mother. She was good at empathizing with the victims, who were overwhelmingly women. Most had been assaulted by a boyfriend, an old flame, or someone they had met at a club. Those investigations often boiled down to an issue of consent. Galbraith had a simple rule: listen and verify. Edna Hendershot: detective in Colorado. She was reported about a rape too. She was decided to find the attacker. A detailed oriented person. Great reputation as a detective. Society: at the beginning they saw Marie as a trouble for the society, she lost her job because everybody was making her feel embarrassed and uncomfortable. At the beginning the police was the best because they found the truth. When they knew what really happened, and how the police pushed her to tell lies, they didn’t want to trust them ...