In the spirit of exploring answers, very much not arguing.
I have a similar experience (if not rape some level of physical or sexual abuse). I also believe them. I have long spoken, including here, that we as a society need to seriously address that. No real sign so far. Women are not safe in our society.
Their experience does not necessarily mean that Mason Greenwood is guilty.
There is, in my judgement, a real danger that society does not reflect the values that we wish to see upheld. That we do not invest or support it to do so...and that instead we allow ourselves to be divided, and encouraged to take individual action - that may in itself be de-facto anti-social. To some a vigilante is a freedom fighter...but can we really trust all vigilante's to hold appropriate society mandated values? Is there not a danger that we are just encouraging a criminals charter.
My view would not be that individuals should levy their personal sanctions against an action that they perceive to be wrong (causing the death of strangers, abusing women, singing about tits, whatever), but rather that we come together and insist our society upholds the values that collectively we endorse.
I'd prefer to see us take to the streets and march on the establishment to insist that our mothers, our sisters, our partners, our children, have a reasonable expectation of being safe, and in the short term at least the expectation of support and redress in the event of that safety being compromised. That we will disrupt and withdraw our participation from a society that does not uphold those values.
I do not think a bunch of individuals exercising their judgement on individual cases, with imperfect information, and mandating a course of action that placates them, in that scenario.
We need to collectivise, to organise, and to insist on actual democratic processes and building a society that we can be proud of.
There's a lot of work to do, because we are failing ourselves and so many others who hold our values, by lashing out on a case by case basis, and forgetting about it next week.