Quite possibly the victim was well aware of how 'fans and some of the fraternity' react at such things. See the way 'fans and too many of the fraternity' reacted to the Coughlin incident and attacked the victims - to the point for some of those girls of destroying what was left of their lives - and have gone on patting themselves on the back for being such a wholesome and all good sportspeople community. Including several who recently have been lauded by 'fans and some of the fraternity' here and on other forums.
It's a documented fact that it takes enormous courage, more than most of us have and certainly more than any of those 'fans and some of the fraternity' have, to try and stand up alone and isolated as they are made and speak up against someone with fame on their side. And sometimes it takes time. Ask Ashley. Ask Gracie.
Gracie filed a complaint at the time of the incident. U.S.figsk and Safesport were fully aware but dithered and dallied and did absolutely nothing. This is part of the problem with Safesport. The problems go deep; Safesport is still currently being investigated by Congress for financial irregularites, questionable hiring practices, inconsistent and suspect handling of cases affecting athletes in many sports, etc.
It took Gracie writing a book years later, simply to honestly tell the full story of her career, for Safesport and U.S.figsk to get rattled and then start trying to save face, ending up in more harm, inconsistencies, and chaos. The person who had harmed Gracie had been allowed to compete at the same competitions where she was entered in the aftermath of the incident.

After Gracie's book was released, Safesport finally pulled the case out of their inactive backlog and banned the perpetrator, without having investigated or done a thing at the time of the initial report or at any point. Much less did they try to protect Gracie. The banning of Gracie's attacker happened three years after he had retired, only because of the revelations in Gracie's book.
Gracie also brought some sense of closure and three-dimensionality to the John Coughlin story. Safesport had simply dropped the claims against Coughlin after his death. They cared absolutely nothing about the women Coughlin had harmed. Nothing was done to provide assistance or counseling to them. Ashley said nothing at the time she was abused (age 17) because she knew her career would have been over before it started.
Meanwhile, U.S.figsk and people in skating, including fans, seem to believe Safesport is the answer and the remedy, when it is not. Again, there is an atmosphere of fear and silence, triggered online shaming and blaming without factual information, cyberbullying, and the lumping of every incident together. No one is challenging Safesport for accountability, nor providing leadership that focuses on awareness, prevention, and especially effective reporting, immediate investigation, liaising with law enforcement when necessary, full and timely resolution of claims, guarding against false claims, and providing reliable resources for athletes in need.