
đźš” A Real Monster in Uniform: The Truth About Wayne Couzens
He wasn’t a falsely accused man.
He was a Metropolitan Police officer.
And he used that badge to abduct, rape, and murder an innocent woman.
🕯️ Sarah Everard Didn’t Die by Mistake — She Was Hunted
On the night of March 3, 2021, Sarah Everard was walking home from a friend’s house in South London.
She never made it back.
She had done nothing wrong.
She followed every rule women are told to follow.
She wore bright clothing.
She stayed in well-lit areas.
She let someone know her route.
And still — she was taken.
By a serving police officer.
👮‍♂️ The Badge Was His Weapon

Metropolitan Police
Wayne Couzens wasn’t just any predator.
He was a Metropolitan Police officer.
He used his authority, his badge, his handcuffs, and his training to stop Sarah under the pretense of COVID regulations.
This wasn’t a spontaneous act.
It was calculated.
He hired a car. He bought equipment. He planned.
After abducting Sarah, he raped her, strangled her, and burned her body.
Then he lied.
Then he watched the news.
Then he pretended to help in the search.
⚖️ A Whole-Life Sentence — But Never Enough
Couzens was sentenced to a whole-life term — one of the rarest penalties in UK law.
It means he will never leave prison.
No parole. No release. No redemption.
But Sarah is still gone.
And her family is left with ashes.
And the nation is left with a brutal reminder:
Sometimes, the people we’re told to trust are the very ones we should fear.
🧨 Why This Case Matters for Truth Reclaimed
Because false allegations ruin lives, but missed predators end them.
Because men are often accused without evidence, while real criminals hide behind uniforms and institutions.
Because the system isn’t broken in just one direction — it’s broken at both ends.
Sarah Everard’s death wasn’t about one man.
It was about a culture of unchecked power.
About institutional blindness.
About the failure to see who the real threats are.
đź§ We Fight for the Real Victims
At Truth Reclaimed, we will always fight to:
Clear the names of the falsely accused
Expose the systems that protect real abusers
Remind the world who the true monsters are
Sarah Everard’s name must be remembered.
Wayne Couzens’ face must never be forgotten.
And the next time someone says “believe all accusations,”
We say: believe the evidence. Believe the truth. Believe the survivors.