Teri Hatcher opened up about the sexual abuse she suffered while offering to help President Trump understand the weight of an incident's impact. Her message follows Trump's criticism of Brett Kavanaugh accuser Dr. Christine Blasey Ford Tuesday.

"Mr. President @realDonaldTrump, I’d like to take this opportunity to weigh in on the process of recalling a sexual assault," Hatcher captioned the image shared to her Instagram account Wednesday. She added the hashtags Me Too, believe and survivor.

Hatcher, 53, documented what she remembered from one alleged assault. Hatcher previously identified her maternal aunt's then-husband, Richard Hayes Stone, as her abuser in an interview with Vanity Fair in 2006. She said at the time, the abuse began when she was just 5-years-old.

"His erect penis, that he was stroking as he sat behind the wheel of the car," Hatcher's image read. " 'Do you want to touch it?' he asked. I said, 'No.' He took my hand to touch it anyway," she added. "There were tissues. I didn’t know what they were for, but then I did."

The "Desperate Housewives" star continued to describe the incident.

"I was face down on the seat looking at the floor as he violated me. He said, 'Do you like how this feels?' I said, 'No.' He said, 'Someday you will.' "

Hatcher also mentioned Stone's other victim, Sarah Van Cleemput, who shot herself, after leaving a note incriminating Stone. "She committed suicide," Hatcher wrote. "I battled demons."

Indirectly addressing Trump's mention that Ford did not remember how she arrived at home following the incident during her testimony, Hatcher also included information she could not recall: "The address of where it happened. How I got there. How I got home. What day or month it was. If anyone was drinking beer."

In conclusion, Hatcher addressed Trump and offered her insight as a sexual assault survivor.

"Mr. President, I am a survivor, who stands available to help you understand the way the memories of a trauma like that work," she said. "It might be hard for you to understand. I can readily explain in detail that 'I don’t remember' is often the most honest response surrounding questions of an assault. It does NOT mean it didn’t happen. Please do not add 'Mocked by President' to the injury list of a sexual survivor. It’s just plain wrong."

Hatcher came forward and testified against her former uncle, a move that helped cinch his conviction. Stone had served six years of a 14-year sentence when he died of colon cancer in 2008, according to San Jose's The Mercury News.

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