Because Morgan was murdered in his bed, there was an immediate assumption that he had been killed by an ex-girlfriend, or someone else he knew, who was there by invitation. As his case progressed, it became clear that this was a random attack. That Morgan had actually caught the eye of the killer while walking home alone, barefoot, after a night out drinking.

So where were the calls, following this revelation, for men to take care not to walk the streets alone at night? To not get drunk? It is not hard to conjure up the cacophony of possible headlines, if a woman had been stalked home and killed by a man who had spotted her walking alone and tipsy at 1am, with her stilettos over her shoulder. Alongside the inherent misogyny in so much tabloid victim-blaming that goes on, there is also an unwillingness to accept that men are vulnerable, just like women – statistically, sometimes more so. And this may even have played into the assumption by the press, Morgan had actively engaged with his killer, rather than being the sitting duck that he so clearly was.

Many male victims of sexual assault and domestic violence have reported feeling too ashamed to tell anyone, because they felt it made them less of a man or even because they were scared no one would believe them.