Jenny wrote a letter to her friend about it at the time, and told her brother and mum.
She withdrew from life and it was only when her 24-year-old brother died when she was 23 that she decided to try “to live my life again”.
She studied at the Central School of Speech and Drama and one night, when she was dancing with friends at a student bar, a friend arrived and dropped the late edition of the Sun on the table.
It reported that the famous man who had sexually assaulted her had been arrested after other women made similar allegations.
She said: “It was the first moment that it occurred to me that I hadn’t got myself into a difficult situation and that this man and his friend could be serially violent.”
This made her feel a “moral obligation to report” him, but said this was her experience and it was OK that most other survivors “don’t want to report or ever talk” about their experience.
She was interviewed by police twice and then, four days later, she was with her boyfriend who was reading a tabloid when he looked at her and said: “I didn’t know there was two of them.”
He knew something had happened, but she had protected him from the intricate details of the assault.
Jenny was not named, but there in black and white was the confidential report she made just days earlier in the police station.
“It was terrifying,” Jenny said.