gracesmum petallus there have been many victims of 'groupie' behaviour, and 15 year old girls thowing themselves at adult men who should not have exploited them, but instead used their celeb status to keep themselves immune from the consequences. Probably, many of those underage girls thought little more of it if they came out of those experiences unscathed, but they will understand now how near they came to being harmed, how lucky they weren't, and that to be made to engage in sexual activity against their better judgement or without consent could have had nasty consequences. If any of these women have recently complained, the detectives investigating their complaint will work through this issue with them, and very few would decide to continue with a prosecution, knowing that cross-examination would elicit a lack of continuing evidence that their lives had been adversely affected. So, as gracesmum says, there is a difference, but we shouldn't be fooled into thinkng that's who these complainants are.
The women who DO complain and see it through to prosecution will have suporting evidence - they will know intimate details they might not have otherwise known, maybe had abortions, treatment for STIs, ongoing issues with the impact of having been sexually abused, some may have had children as a result. Despite compellng evidence, the rate of acquittals is still biased in favour of the abuser.
The hidden side of this historical celeb abuse is a phenomenon that has been found through working with sex offenders. A number of celeb sons have also become abusers, having witnessed all the bed-hopping and indiscriminate promiscuity, and learned the wrong way to behave, so ended up being prosecuted themselves. There have been a couple reported in the press in the last few months.
When detectives raid family homes and remove computers and bags of other stuff, they're looking for lifestyle indicators of abusive, entitled attitudes to sex, which will persist many years after the perpetrator has committed the abuse being omplained about. No single factor indicates guilt (not unless there is existing DNA or photographic evidence) and the CPS have to prove guilt beyond reasonable doubt. Very few complainants who undertake this daunting exercise will be doing it lightly, not when they're faced with the doubts of a jury, the retribution of the media and an angry celeb.