Woman speaks about ordeal after abduction and rape by fake taxi driver
However, Sophie feels that as the crime was so serious he should have been given 15-16 years.
New guidelines for the sentencing of rape offences came into effect in Scotland last month - with higher jail terms for cases like this. "Sometimes you get that feeling of just lock him up and throw away the key," Sophie said.
"Despite the appeal, the charges were abduction and rape.
I think those two together, I think it needed to be a lot longer, 15, 16 years. "
"But the car pulled up quite a bit away from where I was supposed to be.
"My alarms were starting to go off that something's not quite right here.
But I'd had a few drinks and was slightly impaired. I thought 'just get home'. "
"I was going through my head 'how do I get out of this?'
but my body couldn't move," she said.
"He initially opened the door and from there it was very fast.
The next thing I remember is being in the middle of that barber shop with the door locked and the shutters down and it was such a quick turnaround.
"Mainly in my head was 'just do as you are told'.
My immediate thought was that he might kill me. "
Sophie saw a back door and thought there might be a back exit but found this was not the case.
"He then approached me and it became quite aggressive and violent," she said.
"He was a lot taller than me, older than me, stronger than me.
There was not anything that anyone in that circumstance could do differently. "
"I was saying 'no, stop' and crying my eyes out.
It was so intense and scary. I don't think I have been more terrified in all my life.
"When I got in, I couldn't lift myself up off the floor. I couldn't control anything," she said.
"I wanted to stay there and have the ground swallow me.
I was more terrified I would be blamed. There was a shame even from that point.
"It was something you should never have but that was the immediate thing for me.
My friend said 'no, I'm going to report this'. " "I waited about a week before I told my parents," she said.
"I was on autopilot – everything was going on around me but I wasn't aware of it.
"When I told my mum, it was silence for a minute.
She was trying not to cry for me. Then she said we want you to come home. We are going to work through this.
"When it came to the day of giving evidence, I just crumbled," she said.
"It was panic attack after panic attack.
Sophie met the prosecutor before the trial and said "thankfully he was very nice".
He told her his cross examination wasn't personal but he was just doing his job.
"I just really put my walls up and was like, 'no'," she said.
She said she has to constantly remind herself that she shouldn't feel any shame.
"The shame shouldn't be with me and the control shouldn't be with him," she said.
"The shame should be with him and the control with me. " If you have been affected by this story or would like support then you can find organisations which offer help through BBC Action Line
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