Nearly two decades of weight, released in eight words.
Nearly two decades after an alleged incident at a Melbourne nightclub, Ruby Rose stepped into a social media thread and, in eight words, set in motion a public reckoning she had long carried in private. The Australian actress, now 40, described a non-consensual act she attributes to Katy Perry, then walked into a police station the same day — acknowledging the report likely falls outside any statute of limitations, but insisting the act of naming carries its own necessity. Perry's representatives have denied the claims categorically. What remains is the older, harder question that such moments always surface: what does it cost a person to speak, and what does silence cost them instead.
- Rose's allegation erupted not from a press conference or legal filing but from a comment thread about a Coachella quip — the casualness of the entry point making the gravity of what followed all the more disorienting.
- Perry's camp moved quickly to discredit Rose, invoking her prior public disputes as evidence of a pattern, while Perry herself has remained silent — a denial by proxy that leaves the central allegation unanswered in any personal terms.
- Rose's public reasoning against filing a police report — that victims should not be asked to spend years in court reliving each assault — shifted within hours when other users argued that filing could protect future victims.
- After leaving the police station, Rose posted an unprompted declaration that she is not suicidal and does not use drugs, a signal widely read as fear of retaliation from unnamed powerful figures she says she named to officers.
- No investigation has been confirmed, the statute of limitations likely bars prosecution, and the only verifiable outcomes so far are a filed report, a denied allegation, and a woman who says she is still standing.
It began with eight words dropped into a social media reply about Katy Perry's reaction to a Coachella performance. Ruby Rose, the Australian actress and model, read Perry's comment and responded not with a take on the show but with an allegation she says she had been carrying for nearly twenty years: that Perry had sexually assaulted her at Spice Market, a Melbourne nightclub that has since closed, when Rose was in her early twenties.
What unfolded over the following hours was a public disclosure of unusual rawness. Rose described the alleged incident in explicit detail — saying she had positioned herself on a friend's lap specifically to keep distance from Perry, and that Perry approached her while she appeared to be asleep and performed a non-consensual act. When users attempted to minimize the claim, Rose responded with graphic specificity that left no room for reinterpretation.
She addressed the silence directly. It had taken nearly two decades, she wrote, because trauma reshapes a person's ability to speak — and because Perry had offered to help her secure a US visa around that time, a dynamic she says kept her quiet. She also described the particular difficulty of naming a woman as a perpetrator, calling it a hundred times harder than speaking about men. Before disclosing anything traumatic, she told followers, she reminds herself it is acceptable if no one believes her — that the point is to release the weight before it destroys her from within. When one user simply wrote that they believed her, Rose said it brought her to tears.
She initially said she would not file a police report, explaining that she had not filed reports for what she described as multiple rapes by men, and that asking victims to spend years in court reliving each incident was too great a burden. But after users argued that filing could protect others, she changed course. Hours later, two posts arrived: 'I did it.' Then: 'Just left the police station.'
Her update from outside the station carried a particular weight. She wrote that she had named people inside who hold considerably more power than she does, and that naming them frightened her. Then, unprompted, she stated that she was not suicidal, did not use drugs, and had no health conditions — a declaration widely read as a signal that she feared what those names might bring down on her.
Katy Perry has not personally responded. A representative issued a statement calling the allegations categorically false and dangerous reckless lies, pointing to Rose's prior public disputes — including a 2021 campaign alleging unsafe conditions on the set of Batwoman — as evidence of a pattern. Those earlier claims were denied. No law enforcement body has confirmed an investigation is underway, and Rose herself has acknowledged the report likely exceeds the statute of limitations. What she says she has is witnesses, photographs, and the record of having finally said it out loud.
It started with eight words. Ruby Rose, the Australian actress and model, was scrolling through Threads on Sunday, April 12, 2026, when she came across a post about Katy Perry's reaction to Justin Bieber's Coachella set. Perry had quipped from the crowd about Bieber's unusual choice to perform along to his own YouTube videos. Rose read the comment and typed her reply — not a joke, not a take on the performance — but an allegation she says she had been carrying for nearly twenty years. "Katy Perry sexually assaulted me at spice market nightclub in Melbourne. Who gives a shit what she thinks."
What followed over the next several hours was a public disclosure of rare rawness and detail, unfolding in real time across a social media thread as Rose moved from the first accusation to a police station and back again.
Rose is 40 now. She was in her early twenties when the alleged incident took place at Spice Market, a Melbourne nightclub that has since closed. A documented social connection between the two women exists from that period: ABC News reporting from 2010 captured Rose and Perry spending an evening together in Melbourne after Perry attended a school formal Rose was at during a promotional visit, and the two were photographed together. In her Threads posts, Rose described what she says happened that night in explicit terms. She said she had been resting on her best friend's lap specifically to keep distance from Perry. She says Perry approached her while she appeared to be asleep, bent down, pulled her underwear aside, and performed a non-consensual sexual act against her face. Rose says she immediately vomited. When a user attempted to minimize the allegation by referencing Perry's song "I Kissed a Girl," Rose pushed back with direct, graphic specificity. "She didn't kiss me," she wrote, and described the act in terms that left no room for reinterpretation.
Rose addressed the nearly two-decade silence head-on. "I was only in my early 20s. I'm now 40. It has taken almost 2 decades to say this publicly," she wrote, adding that the delay itself was evidence of how deeply trauma reshapes a person's ability to speak. She described the particular difficulty of disclosing woman-on-woman sexual violence, calling it a hundred times harder than speaking about male perpetrators. She also named a specific reason for staying quiet: Perry had offered to help her secure a US visa around that time, and Rose says that offer was part of what kept her silent. She described having told the story before, but framed as a "funny little drunk story" because she hadn't yet found the language to call it what it was.
She also described the internal ritual she uses before disclosing something traumatic. Before speaking, she tells herself it's acceptable if no one believes her — that the point is to get the weight out of her body before it destroys her from the inside. When one user simply replied "I believe you," Rose wrote that it brought her to tears.
Rose initially said she would not file a police report. She explained her reasoning plainly: she hadn't filed reports for what she described as multiple rapes by men, and she wasn't prepared to spend years in court reliving each incident. "Let's say each case took only 6 months to resolve," she wrote. "You're asking too much of victims to spend 6 years in court reliving their abuse." She also challenged Perry's camp directly, saying Perry was welcome to sue her, that the incident happened in public and was witnessed by multiple people, and that she had photographic documentation. She suggested there was additional material from the years surrounding Perry's 2017 single — widely read as targeting Taylor Swift, a close friend of Rose's — that she had not yet disclosed.
Then, after users raised the point that filing could protect others, Rose changed course. She announced she would walk into a police station that day, acknowledged the report was likely past any statute of limitations, and said she would update people on the process when she was ready. Hours later, two posts: "I did it." Then: "Just left the police station."
Her post-station update carried a particular weight. She wrote that she had named people inside the station who hold considerably more power than she does, and that naming them frightened her. She then added, unprompted, that she was not suicidal, did not take drugs, and had no health conditions — a statement that read as a direct signal that she feared what naming those people might bring down on her.
Katy Perry has not personally commented. A representative issued a statement through Variety calling the allegations "categorically false" and "dangerous reckless lies," and pointing to what they described as Rose's documented history of making serious public allegations against various individuals — a reference to a 2021 Instagram campaign in which Rose alleged unsafe working conditions on the set of Batwoman, naming a Warner Bros. executive and a co-star. Those claims were denied. Rose departed Batwoman after its first season in 2020; she cited a stunt injury requiring emergency spinal surgery and a latex allergy, while Warner Bros. Television said she was not rehired due to workplace behavior complaints.
No law enforcement body has confirmed an investigation is underway. Rose has acknowledged the report likely exceeds the statute of limitations. What she says she has is witnesses, photographs, and the record of having finally said it out loud — and a warning, posted publicly, that she intends to still be here.
Notable Quotes
The allegations being circulated on social media by Ruby Rose about Katy Perry are not only categorically false, they are dangerous reckless lies.— Representative for Katy Perry, via Variety
It has taken almost 2 decades to say this publicly. It just shows how much of an impact trauma and sexual assault takes.— Ruby Rose, via Threads
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
Why does the trigger matter — the fact that it started with a Katy Perry comment about Bieber?
Because it shows how disclosure actually works. It's rarely a prepared statement. Something mundane trips a wire, and suddenly twenty years of weight is in the room.
Rose said she'd told the story before but framed it as a funny drunk story. What does that tell us?
It tells us how survivors often survive — by finding a container for something that doesn't have a safe shape yet. Humor is a way of holding something you can't fully look at.
She initially refused to file a police report, then changed her mind within hours. What shifted?
She was persuaded that filing — even symbolically, even past the statute of limitations — might protect someone else. That reframe moved her from self-protection to something larger than herself.
The post-station statement about not being suicidal — that's striking. What was she actually communicating?
She was telling anyone paying attention that if something happens to her, it wasn't self-inflicted. She named powerful people inside that station. She wanted a public record of her state of mind before those names became known.
Perry's rep cited Rose's history of public allegations as context. Is that a legitimate counter?
It's a standard move — establish a pattern of accusation to undermine credibility. Whether it's legitimate depends entirely on whether the prior allegations were false, which hasn't been established.
Rose talked about woman-on-woman violence being harder to disclose. Why would that be?
Partly because the cultural script for sexual assault is built around male perpetrators. When the perpetrator is a woman, there's no ready framework — and often more disbelief, more minimization, more pressure to reframe it as something else.
She said she has photos and witnesses. Does that change the legal picture?
Not much, given the statute of limitations. But it changes the public picture considerably. It means this isn't purely her word against a denial.
Where does this story actually go from here?
Probably nowhere legally. But the record exists now — filed, public, detailed. That's what Rose said she needed. Whether anyone else comes forward is the thing worth watching.