Flashing: When men expose their genitals to females, what does it mean?
In the light of further revelations of Wayne Couzens' crimes, here is my longread on 'indecent exposure' and the effect on victims
South Korea’s Penis Park
Ask any woman and she will tell you exactly where she was - the weather, the time, the year, her age - when it happened to her. Because being flashed at has happened to an awful lot of women.
The first man to expose his penis to me has become part of my life, because five decades later I still can’t get him out of my head. I was eight-years-old and had been allowed to go to the shop on my own for the first time. I ran across the street in my school uniform and a man appeared in front of me, grinning. I saw he was holding his penis and rubbing it ferociously. I stood frozen to the spot until something made me run away. I don’t remember what he said but do remember that I was utterly terrified for several weeks after it happened.
Today, since revelations about the history of Wayne Couzens’ offending, flashing is being taken seriously as a sex crime by media and politicians. But why has it taken the kidnap, rape and murder of a woman by a serving police officer for flashing to be seen as a problem as opposed to a joke? Double child killer Colin Pitchfork raped and strangled to death two 15-year-old girls in the 1980s, and when arrested, confessed to police that he had exposed his penis to more than 1,000 girls and women over the years.
Yet despite its prevalence and obvious harm experienced by its victims, flashing is underreported and barely prosecuted. The latest figures show that police in England and Wales recorded more than 10,000 cases of indecent exposure in 2022. Of these, 594 cases ended up in court and 435 defendants were found guilty. CCTV cameras make it straightforward to prosecute. It is telling that flashing was not even a criminal offence before 2003.
Early Feminist Research
Feminist activist Sandra McNeill decided to research the effects of flashing on women for her Masters degree in I982. The timing was perfect: the Labour government had plans to decriminalise it. McNeill had been involved in the Women's Liberation Movement (WLM) since the 1970s and saw exposure as part of a continuum of male violence towards women. It should be noted that McNeil’s work from almost 40 years ago is still some of the only work that focuses from a feminist perspective on the effects of flashing on women.
By concentrating the victims’ experience, McNeill found that they routinely felt frightened, humiliated and degraded. The uncertainty as to what these men could do next means that women frequently think of rape and death.
Existing literature on indecent exposure, which tends to view it as an individualised mental problem and, as the word ‘indecent’ suggests, to do with public morality rather than threatening behaviour primarily targeted at women and girls. McNeill’s work challenged this kind of thinking and provided the first sociological account of flashing and how women are affected by it.
A decade later, senior criminologist Rosalind Beck wrote her Masters thesis in 1994 entitled ‘Rape from Afar: Men Exposing Themselves to Women and Children.’ “I found that the impact on victims can be considerable. Indecent exposure constitutes a form of visual violence and although it is on a sexual violence continuum,” she says. “I didn’t find that it was an offence from which one graduated in steps towards physical attacks on women and girls, and sometimes boys or men. Men could, for example, already be committing child sexual abuse in their family while also flashing around the same period.”
She continues: “I found that more than 50 per cent of women had been victims of indecent exposure at some time in their lives and some studies indicated it was the most common offence against women. It was also often referred to as exhibitionism. This term implied that it was seen as only a problem for the men who offend and for therapists who are concerned with their treatment, not with their female victims.”
Beck feels that many sexual offences have been trivialised, such as ‘peeping Toms’, stalkers and rape in marriage, and blames this a failure in the criminal justice system to protect women. “Only around 15 per cent of those who experience sexual violence report it to the police,” she says. “Offenders are therefore free to continue virtually unchallenged by the criminal justice system.”
This takes on an added poignancy with the murder of Sarah Everard. When Beck presented her research to the British Criminology Conference in the mid-1990s, it was well-received and reported in the Independent. This led to an interview on Woman’s Hour and Beck’s university was contacted by Scotland Yard, who wanted a copy of her thesis to help the police take crimes like this more seriously.
Vigil for Sarah Everard
Beck adds: “Hearing about the alleged offence of indecent exposure now linked to this police officer [Wayne Couzens], I have to wonder: how seriously are the police now taking it? Is the offence still being seen as minor and not urgent enough to merit an urgent response? What has Scotland Yard done to improve its policies and procedures during the intervening 27 years since they requested a copy of my study?”
She adds that one positive outcome was that her work was incorporated into the Sexual Offences Act 2003, but questions what impact this has had on victims. “Has this legislation failed in its purpose to offer some protection to women from men who commit indecent exposure?” Beck asks. “Judging by what seems to have been at best a tardy response by police in the present case, it would unfortunately appear that not much has changed. It is high time that the criminal justice system took ‘minor’ sex offences seriously.”
The Picture Today
Office for National Statistics and Crime Survey for England and Wales figures show that one in 10 women have been flashed at. Last year, there were at least 113,000 incidents of a man exposing his penis to an individual, with the vast majority of victims being women and girls. Approximately one in 17 adults say they have been a victim of indecent exposure since they turned 16.
But as with all types of sexual violence and harassment, women and girls rarely report flashing. Not only due to the stigma of being blamed, but also because exposure of the penis is seen – by other men - as funny and harmless. Additionally, men who flash women are considered to be a bit weird and sad, often eliciting sympathy. Vera Grey says, “Some women feel quite sad for the guy. But he is saying to her, ‘I have a penis, look at my penis’, and we live in a world where the penis has particular significance and message and threat. That message is sexual violence. That's the world women inhabit.”
Vera-Grey believes we need to look at the effects of sexual violence outside of the medical model of trauma. “When it comes to things like flashing, the harm is much more pernicious than trauma, it's about how it sends a really strong message to women about the fact that they need to be constantly on guard and constantly vigilant,” says Vera-Grey. “We are haunted by it, and being told by Cressida Dick and others that we are hysterical to feel scared. Flashing does scare women.”
She is concerned that many of the victims of flashing will have experienced other forms sexual assault. “For some young women it is an initiation into the continuum of sexual violence,” says Vera-Grey. “You are supposed to feel fear, you are supposed to be scared of the penis, all hail the mighty penis.”
Gia is in her early 50s and able to reel off a whole catalogue of times that men have exposed their genitals to her. “I was first flashed when I was 10, at a swimming pool. The second time I was 14, a guy pulled over in a car. The third time, I was 17, walking down the street and a guy was standing in a doorway. The fourth time, I was 21, on the tube and a guy across from me started wanking. The fifth time was a year ago, during the day, just off Clapham High Street.”
The Law
Flashing might be one of the most common sexual offences, but very little is known about the effect it has on its victims. However, according to results of an online survey completed by 1,075 women, 58.7 per cent had been flashed. The most likely place to encounter an exhibitionist was in an open green space such as a park, and that while the perpetrators did not usually chase the victims, those who did chase the women would become more aggressive.
The most common reactions in the victim were surprise, disgust and fear. Some 29 per cent of respondents said they took action to try and prevent further incidents, while just seven per cent reported the assault to the police. The report found that the impact on victims of encountering an exhibitionist was similar to being a victim of other types of sexual assault.
Dr Fiona Vera-Grey is assistant professor of sociology at the University of Durham and an expert on sexual violence. She recounts how a male journalist expressed surprise at being told that one in 10 women had been flashed .
“He thought that was a lot,” says Vera-Grey,” but most women have been flashed. These men literally have no idea of how common it is because it does not happen to them. They then think that they have the right to talk about it with authority.”
Prior to a change in the law in 2003, flashers were typically arrested under Section 4 of the 1824 Vagrancy Act, which states that, “every person wilfully, openly, lewdly and obscenely exposing his person with intent to insult any female ... shall be deemed a rogue and vagabond.” If convicted, the maximum penalty is three months in prison for a first offence, and one year in prison for a second offence. However, while women are encouraged to report these crimes to the police, there is a low chance of the men ever being arrested.
Flashing: Its History
In the 1980s, one approach to try and stop men flashing women was pioneered by clinical psychiatrists in the United States. It involved lining up a row of female volunteers and telling the flasher to expose himself in front of them. The women were instructed to stand there and show no response. The idea was that it changed the meaning that flashing had for the man if the women seem not to care. The experiment was eventually deemed to be unsuccessful and halted.
Flashing used to be called ‘exposure’, and the assumption was that these men who flashed never commit any other crime. Some flashers have been known to use penis pumps to enlarge their genitals before exposing. An online group of child abusers**, since closed down by police, was called the Dick Flash Club. But of course, police are not immune from this crime, for instance, in 2001, serving police officer Andrew Chatfield exposed himself to a group of elderly women in a care home. It prompted a slew of light-hearted news reports about the case being “zipped up”, which shows the disregard with which the media took this crime.
There is also the offence of peeping, and criminologists understand that some of these men do go on to commit rape. Studies have shown that in the five years following an offence for indecent exposure, 5-10 per cent of perpetrators would be caught for a more serious sexual offence, while around 25 per cent reoffended with a further exhibitionistic offence. These crimes also including voyeurism, which only became a criminal offence in 2003, as well as the relatively criminal offence of ‘upskirting’ - taking photographs under women’s clothing without her consent.
Digital media has transformed the scale and opportunities for exhibitionism and sexual abuse. One concern is the non-consensual distribution of images of personal nude photos of women and girls via the internet or other digital means. As well as the high number of unwanted 'dick pics' sent by men to women.
Sending dick pics is a new form of flashing. Carrie* tells me: “When I was younger, my sister was flashed on her way home and the police were called, notes taken and questions asked. Fast forward to 2021, and not a week goes by that I don’t see a penis I haven’t asked to see. Whether on dating sites or on social media, the unsolicited dick pic is like a calling card for abusers. The police couldn’t be less interested in following up.”
In an online survey in 2020, 1,087 men were asked questions regarding their motivations for sending unsolicited pictures of their genitals to women online. Unsurprisingly, the most common response was ‘sexual excitement’. The study found that men who sent unsolicited dick pics had a much higher level of narcissism and greater ambivalent and hostile sexism than men who did not send dick pics.
Jen* tells me: “I have received several dick pics over the last six years. I feel a boundary has been crossed but I do not feel intimidated or unsafe because I can block the perpetrator and report them online. I always forget that it's the kind of thing that should be reported to the police. I don't know why so many men think it's acceptable to send us pictures of their ugly penises.”
A Flash of Power
Radio and TV presenter Chris Evans has openly admitted to flashing in front of female colleagues, including when sexually aroused. He told the Sunday Times: “If you get your willy out, it is the funniest thing. Everybody laughs. Girls love it.” This view was not shared by his producer Fiona Cotter-Craig who described being flashed at by Evans as “very unpleasant”.
Similarly, Doctor Who star John Barrowman gleefully admits to exposing himself on TV sets, laughing it off as mere “tomfoolery”. A female runner on Doctor Who told the Guardian that she frequently saw Barrowman expose himself on set. “He would get his genitals out on a regular basis … he’d just sort of have his balls hanging out his trousers or something, which he just thought was really funny,” she said. On one occasion, she said that she saw Barrowman “slapping” his penis on the windscreen of one of the driver’s cars, “thinking it was really funny”. During a live BBC radio interview, broadcast to audiences via a live webcam, Barrowman also exposed his penis. Barrowman later dismissed complaints, saying it was merely “light-hearted banter”.
For Vera-Grey, “To these men is it a laugh. For women it is experienced as a threat.”
The Psychology of Flashing
Retired psychologist Anne Carling* has worked with dozens of men who flash, including those in hospitals and care homes who, she believes, expose themselves to these women in a bid to exert some power in a powerless situation. “The nurses are much more powerful than the patient, which is a complication. If you can't even feed or wash yourself, some of these men compensate by flashing to get back some power.”
Flashing was often culturally trivialised as a topic of farce and treated as pathetic or funny. For instance, flashing has been humorously depicted in popular culture for decades. From Benny Hill sketches back in the 1970s and 1980s, all the way through to a 2007 episode of the US version of The Office, in which the boss, Michael, pretends to be a flasher to amuse his staff. While the idea of a ‘flasher mac’ is so embedded in common parlance that many people joke about this without a second thought. You can even buy a ‘men’s flasher costume’ from Amazon for your next fancy-dress party.
Benny Hill
Exhibitionism is considered a psychiatric disorder by many mental health professionals. Carling had a client who has been arrested for exposing himself and masturbating on buses. “I think he genuinely wanted to change because he realised he was getting himself into trouble. But he had no conception that what he was doing might harm women,” she says. This bloke had a pretty shitty life, had been bullied at school, there was something quite pathetic about him. He couldn't understand the consequences of his actions.”
Carling adds: “When I said to one particular flasher I was working with, ‘You don't know on that bus whether there's women who've been sexually abused, and if you wank in front of them, that's going to trigger their trauma about their own abuse’, he looked really shocked, upset and was immediately contrite. It was clear that he had spent no time considering the potential impact on his victims.”
This man was eventually reported and subsequently sentenced to eight months in prison for indecent exposure: “He had very little power in his life,” says Carling. “Maybe wanking in the back of buses gave him a momentary feeling of power that was a compensation for this desperate, awful life that he had. He said, 'I've really tried to stop myself but I don't plan it, it's just impulsive'.”
I asked Prof Wilcox why he thinks so many men commit this crime, but he tells me although he accepts that an awful lot of women and girls have been subject to it, it is not the case that significant numbers of men flash.
“It’s something that can become quite compulsive,” says Wilcox. “These guys are really busy. Most men who expose, they do lack social confidence. If you look at Wayne Couzens, this is a sadistic psychopath, who might expose and who might look at pornography on his day off, and he might use it to plan something quite horrendous.”
He adds: “I've worked with men who might decide that they'll miss a bus in the morning because they got up late, and they'll get so angry that they decide to stalk somebody and expose themselves. There's not a lot of joined up thinking there, it's just a way to fuel their anger.”
Child abuse by any other name
Gia tells me about being flashed at aged 10 whilst enjoying a friend’s birthday party at a hotel swimming pool.
“There were only four of us in the pool, and an old man was reading the paper next to it. We noticed his genitals hanging out of his swimsuit, then noticed he’d ripped ‘eye holes’ out of a newspaper to watch our reactions. He chased us into a sauna with his penis out, so we ran screaming to the reception area and he continued chasing us. The woman at reception just said, ‘Oh. He does that to everyone.’ And that was that, we were left scared and confused.”
Ellen* recalls how a 14-year-old schoolfriend was flashed. “A man had exposed himself to a girl at the school. The trauma was written all over her face. It clearly affected her deeply. We were all frightened to walk that route and would talk about how we'd respond if it happened to us. Many of us naively thought it would be a funny experience. We didn't have a clue how grown men think and how dangerous that kind of situation could be.”
Julie Foster was also at school when she was first flashed at. “It was shocking at first but then we got used to it and used to chase them away,” she tells me. “Looking back, I'm astonished that it became normalised for a bunch of 11-18-year-olds to accept seeing a man wanking in the playing field. I think my calmness was a learned response, they want a reaction and if you don't give them one hopefully they'll go away.”
Rosalind Hardie grew up in Leith in Scotland. In 1974, aged nine, she heard rumours about a ‘bad man’ who hung around at the bottom of Pilrig Park. “One day me and a friend went out on our bikes and a man said that he had lost his dog and could we help him,” she says. “He told us he needed to pee and called me over. He said he was finding it difficult to pee so I had to help him by putting my hand on his penis to help him. I did so, briefly, but then yelled that my friend had signalled that somebody was coming. As soon as I got to her, we both got on our bikes and cycled back to our street.”
“In 1983, a girl was abducted and murdered in Edinburgh and I started having nightmares about what had happened to me and my friend in the park, conflating the man who had flashed then tried to make me wank him in park with the killer.”
A culture of Fear
Claudia Clare is an artist living in London, and tells me she has, “Been flashed more times than most people have had hot dinners.”
For Clare, it began when she travelled to Italy and Spain on her own aged 16.
“It was relentless,” she says, “Parks and public gardens were where it happened most. I'd hear a hissing sound, turn round and a man would be wanking at me. It didn't stop me using parks or gardens. I wanted to draw and paint there so I did. But it did stop me talking to men. I learnt at 16 that they were not to be trusted. Even now, almost 60, I keep my senses alert in a park any time of day.”
Clare didn’t report any of the incidents, but four years ago she saw a man in an opposite window to her home masturbating in full view of the gardens at the back of two streets of houses. Many of those households included teenage and younger girls.
“I now recognise, after being a feminist for decades, that this behaviour is a prelude to further acts of sexual terrorism against women and girls. I suspect it was those early days of experiencing flashing almost daily that most influenced my decision to follow my lesbian impulse.”
Jo* was out shopping with her husband in the town centre [in England] one Saturday when she spotted a very tall and muscular man standing outside a shop.
“He had a very imposing presence and was wearing skin-tight silver leggings and obviously no underwear,” says Jo. “His genitals were improbably large and engorged and I was instantly shocked. I shouted, ‘That is obscene and you fucking well know it’ as we walked past. I was angry with myself for giving him the attention he was after. My husband told me he is a well-known figure in the town. Why is he being allowed to do this? He was all puffed up and pleased with what he was getting away with.”
Exposure of Policing Failures
Tracy Earnshaw lives in Newquay and has reported flashers several times to the police.
“I was regularly told, ‘What do you expect, it’s Newquay’?” I was flashed at when I was with my daughter, aged 14. The man was in the window of a hotel. It was 4pm. He shouted, 'Here, come and take a look at this'. When I reported it to the police, they said, ‘You don’t want to go to court, do you?’ I said, ‘Yes, I did.’ I insisted they arrest him. They came back and told me he had said he was sorry, it was a bit of fun. They eventually conceded that had this occurred in a posher part of Cornwall, they would have arrested him.”
As a general rule are we taking the crime more seriously? “Yes,” says Professor Daniel Wilcox, a forensic psychologist in Birmingham who treats sex offenders for the probation service. "Where a person gets into deviance, they are very likely to move into other offences. Typically, flashers have the highest crossover of all sex offenders into crimes against children. With flashers, people tend to focus on the jokes, but other behaviours will develop, such as rape, bestiality, assault."
This is not to say that the flasher you see on the railway platform today is a rapist. "They work up to committing more serious crimes over time," Wilcox says. "However, flashers are prone to stalking, rubbing themselves up against women in crowded trains [frottage] and sending offensive pornographic letters and photographs to targeted women. It's part of the offender profile."
He adds: “Exposers do have crossover [into other sex crimes] that research indicates to be pretty substantial. If somebody could expose to a mother that's got a child with them, they lack a sense of moral concern.”
Wilcox admits that policing of flashing offences is inadequate, which is a marked shift from his attitude to the crime back in 2001. “Ignore him and walk away,” he told the Guardian when asked what action victims should take. “Flashing is an angry act. These men are so unskilled at communicating with women, they tell me they would find it easier to flash at a woman than to go up and say hello.”
When I speak Wilcox recently I ask if he had changed his mind since 2001? “I'm quite content with people being held accountable,” he tells me. “I think it should be criminalised because it is causing emotional harm to others.”
He adds: “Somebody who is a high frequency public masturbator may go on to be interested in other kinds of deviant sexual activity because he's crossed that threshold, but he may be locked into that. So he's going to be seen as low-harm in comparison with somebody who commits forced sexual assaults.” As we end our conversation I am left wondering what other form of sexual assaults there are.
The Girl on the Train
Rebecca Brueton tells me about an incident in 1989 when she was a child travelling home with a friend.
“A man masturbated at my friend on the tube while staring at her breasts. He was tall and in a bright yellow jacket, so would have been easy to pick out of a crowd. It was a packed train, and 100 per cent obvious what he was doing, but no adult intervened. It went on for a couple of stops. After he finished, he just got off the tube and went on his way.”
Dr Fiona Vera-Grey says: “Women are taught to doubt ourselves when it comes to sexual violence, we are called paranoid and hysterical, so it was hard for us to really make sense. It starts to make you feel like you should be vigilant and feel different about how you operate in public space.”
In Setting the Boundaries, a report on the 2003 Sexual Offences Act, the authors outline how the 19th century offences of indecent exposure appeared to be ‘quaint’ long before the laws were overhauled, contributing to the impression that indecent exposure is a minor nuisance rather than criminal behaviour.
It is not just the unpleasantness of the experience: in incidents where the exposed penis is erect or being masturbated, the effect is to induce fear, shock, disgust and a fear of rape or death. Jennifer Temkin’s research for Setting the Boundaries showed how the common perception of men who expose themselves as sad and lonely but harmless is a misrepresentation.
Research among those convicted of serious sex offences shows that many had previously committed what were considered to be minor offences such as exposing or voyeurism. In one study it is estimated that 80 per cent of rapists began with non-contact behaviour. Not all those who expose are serious sex offenders, but there is a clear link between exposure and other sex crimes within a significant number of these men.
What is the solution? It cannot be denied that had Wayne Couzens been dealt with by the criminal justice system (CJS) when he was first reported for flashing in 2015, that Sarah Everard might still be alive today. But it is not only the responsibility of the CJS to deter men from committing sex crimes.
Vera-Grey believes that peer pressure and peer influence makes a huge difference to men's behaviour. “Flashing is illegal but people are more likely to change their behaviour based on peer norms rather than the norms of the law. The culture behind men is telling them things like ‘Your penis can intimidate women, women are there to be intimidated, humiliated, degraded, women aren’t humans’.” The message given to men today is that if they chose to rape a woman, bearing in mind the current conviction rate for reported rapes is under one per cent, they will very likely get away with it. Why, then, would men worry about facing consequences for taking out his penis in public?
*Some names have been changed to protect anonymity.
** I choose not to use the term ‘paedophile’ as its literal meaning is ‘lover of children’, and additionally to that, I believe it medicalises a criminal activity.
Cue in swimmer Lia Thomas and his enablers who ask the female swimmers to find somewhere else to change if they don't like being flashed by him in the women's locker room
Thank you Julie. I remember. 41 years ago. I was 12. On my way home from school. It was late autumn, a misty time of year. The leaves on the ground were no longer crisp and I was alone. I was walking through a park with a row of trees and bushes to one side. The other side was the wide expanse of the park. I heard a slight cough and rustle in the bushes. I looked and stood, like you, frozen to the spot. A man dressed in red lingerie, a bra, suspenders and stockings but no pants. He began to masturbate. He had a beard and a smile on his face that got wider as he saw my fear. I ran home. I told nobody. I have never forgotten this. It was however, my ‘initiation’ into understanding that as a female my instincts were to be trusted. That sadly, because of my sex, I was vulnerable.