Skip navigation

Former ‘Jane Doe’ fights for other rape victims

Police ignored Donna Palomba's case, now she's helping others seek justice

NBC video
Rape victim goes public to help others
April 27: Donna Palomba shares her story with TODAY and discusses how she turned a traumatic experience into something positive.

Today show

Boy is OK after tree branch skewered his neck
Garret Mullikin, 12, was riding a dirt bike for the first time when he fell off it — and onto a thick tree branch that drove into his neck and through his lung. Now recovering after emergency surgery, he said he feels “a lot better than when I got the stick in my neck.”

The Week in...  
  
Image: Sunshine International Aquarium Reveals Fennec Babies
Getty Images
  Animal Tracks
From a trio of fennec foxes to a gang of squeaky clean monkeys, find images of animals great and small.
Image:
AP
  Week in Pictures
Prayers for rain, street battles in Honduras and Michael Jackson's last dance are among this week's memorable pictures from around the globe.
Image: Sean "Diddy" Combs, Ashton Kutcher and Malaria No More Host The White Party
Getty Images
  The Week in celebrity sightings
Ashton and Demi go all white for charity, Tom and Suri catch a musical Down Under, the Harry Potter kids are together again and more.
  Magazine honors Jackson, Fawcett
July 6: People magazine is releasing tribute books to remember the lives and legacies of Michael Jackson and Farrah Fawcett, who both passed away on the same day last month. People's Larry Hackett talks with TODAY's Natalie Morales.

By John Springer
TODAYShow.com contributor
updated 10:24 a.m. ET April 27, 2007

Donna Palomba was alone in bed on a September night in 1993, when she heard the distinct sound of footsteps approaching closer and closer.

Then she saw him. The man in the mask.

With her husband away on business and her children asleep down the hall, the Waterbury, Conn., woman was no match for the shadowy figure in her bedroom. Armed with a knife and a handgun, he cut Palomba's bed clothes and raped her.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

When it was over, the man menaced Palomba with the gun and threatened to return and kill her if she told anyone about the assault. Although she did run to the home of a neighbor and called 911, for some time afterward Palomba wondered if calling police was a mistake.

They didn't believe her.

The lead investigator for the Waterbury Police Department accused Palomba of making up the story, and threatened to charge her with making a false police report.

“Why did they think you weren't telling the truth?” TODAY host Meredith Vieira asked Palomba during her first live television interview Friday.

“I think it was due to misinformation, a person who gave them a rumor that had no validity at all,” Palomba said.

The rumor — that Palomba was involved in an extra-marital affair — led police to merely go through the motions. Doctors collected and saved the rapist's DNA during an examination at a hospital, but the investigation stopped there.

Years went by, and Palomba went about her life with the support of her family and a new friend in a high place. Waterbury Police Chief Neil O'Leary was on Palomba's side, and refused to let the case fade away.

Jane Doe No More
Fast-forward 11 years to 2004. A man named John Regan, a close friend of Palomba's husband, was arrested and charged with attacking a 21-year-old co-worker who managed to get away. It started O'Leary thinking, and a DNA sample was taken from Regan.

A few months later, a lab run by Connecticut's famous forensic sleuth, Dr. Henry Lee, linked Regan's DNA to the sample taken from Palomba's rape kit in 1993.

“He had been in our home. He had never acted inappropriately,” Palomba recalled during Friday's interview. “He was someone we'd never think about in the case.”

Despite her experience, Palomba is now telling her story and hopes to persuade other rape victims that they shouldn't let a sometimes flawed system victimize them over and over.

“I want to make that clear. It is very important to come forward and go to the police, even though I went through what I did,” said Palomba. “Had I not done that and not gone to the hospital, the case wouldn't have been solved and he could have still been out there. Right now, he is behind bars, where he should be.”

As part of getting on with her life, Palomba dropped the “Jane Doe” pseudonym prosecutors had been using in court papers. On Sunday, a “Dateline NBC” special “The Man Behind the Mask” (7 ET/6 CT) will chronicle her fight to get police to believe her and investigate her rape.

“I want other victims to know they have done nothing wrong. It's not their fault,” Palomba said. “It doesn't diminish who you are. It is part of my healing process.”

For more information, visit janedoenomore.org.

© 2009 MSNBC Interactive.  Reprints

Sponsored links

Resource guide