How Travelodge in Maidenhead gave sex attacker key to woman’s room

“I feel like they failed me, it makes me more frustrated that they haven’t said ‘OK yes we did this wrong’. Instead they’ve put the blame aside.” she said.
“If I checked-in on my own and the room booking is just for me why would you think it’s OK to let someone in in the middle of the night while I’m asleep?
“At least wake me up or phone the room or come up to the room. Anything is better than just giving someone a key card.
“The hotel said that he passed their security questions.
“The only thing he would know about me was my name.
“They said he was able to show them text messages, but I didn’t have his phone number and he didn’t have mine.”
She added: “I double-checked I locked the door. I couldn’t work out how he was in my room because I did everything that I would deem to be correct when you stay in a hotel.”
The woman, who is calling for Travelodge to change its procedures, said: “The anger was probably after – a couple of weeks later – when they were telling me that they didn’t do anything wrong.
“It’s not protecting people staying in hotels if you can just access by saying things to reception – that’s not OK.”
After reporting the incident to staff, she was later offered a £30 refund.
“I saw it as very insulting. It would have been better if they hadn’t offered it,” she said.
Travelodge has admitted the offer was inappropriate under the circumstances.
Smith was found guilty of sexual assault and trespass with intent to commit a relevant sexual offence following a four-day trial at Reading Crown Court last November.




