Man found guilty after luring 18 men on Tinder with fake profile to rape his ex-girlfriend

A woman began receiving strange house calls from over 18 men who were looking to satisfy their kink. The Tinder profile was accurate – it was her face, her name, her information. But she never agreed to being “roughed up,” nor did saying “no” mean she wanted more.
A UK man has been found guilty after he stole his ex-girlfriend's identity to create a Tinder profile, which lured strange men to her door.
The abuser, Asad “Ash” Hussain, started dating the victim after sliding into her direct messages, under the moniker “Micky Renney.”
After several dates, Hussain began exhibiting abusive behavior, including ringing the victim’s doorbell for two straight hours while she had a male friend in the house.
When the relationship ended, the victim began receiving visits from random men at all hours of the day, saying that they’d matched on Tinder.
But the victim knew nothing about this and definitely did not invite them to her home address, where she lives with her teenage daughter.
One evening, four separate men visited her address, claiming they’d received identical messages.
The visits didn’t stop, and other men kept turning up, claiming that the victim had invited them over to engage in rape play.
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Rape play, rape fantasy, or ravishment, is a consensual sexual roleplay scenario in which a person acts out forced sexual scenarios.
The men told her that “she” had specifically said that she wanted to be “roughed up” and that if she said no, it meant she “wanted it more.”
Another man shattered the glass panel of the victim’s front door as “she” supposedly told the man that the door was unlocked, and the door needed a “shove” as it was “stiff.”
One of the Tinder users even broke into the victim’s home while she was at work, and her daughter was home.
However, the man was in only for a few minutes and left without any issues.
These Tinder “dates” cooperated with the police and all gave statements that were “incredibly similar,” according to Cheshire Police.
The men explained that they would match with whom they believed was the victim and were quickly invited round, given her address, and her personal phone number.
At least 18 men were fooled by Hussain’s plan and were willing to engage in rape fantasy roleplay, but it’s unclear as to how many men were actually involved.
Hussain was found guilty of stalking (involving serious alarm or distress), assault, and failure to comply with Section 49 RIPA notice (not giving authorities access to his devices).
Despite orchestrating a plan for strange men to rape his ex-girlfriend, Hussain was only charged with stalking and assault by beating.
Tinder and Hinge parent company sued by rape victims
While the men in this case assert that what they believed they were engaging in was consensual rape play, six women in the US have sued the company responsible for Tinder and Hinge for leading unsuspecting women into the hands of rapists.
After meeting a Denver cardiologist, Stephen Matthews, on Match Group’s various dating sites, a handful of women were drugged, raped, and sexually assaulted by the same man.
The victims accused the dating giant of “accommodating rapists across its products,” according to The Guardian.
Lawyers representing the women assert that apps like Hinge and Tinder allowed known abusers to keep using their apps despite reports of rape.
This negligence allowed sexual predators like Matthews to have access to more vulnerable women.
While Match Group told one of the victims that Matthews had been permanently banned, the lawsuit claims that the predator remained active on Hinge and was even promoted by the company as being a “standout” match.
The lack of guardrails and arguably defective functions (including the inability to report a person once unmatched) continually facilitates a space in which people, mostly women, are at the mercy of sexual predators or evil ex-boyfriends.
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