“Don’t you know I’m HUMAN too?” – The Atlanta Dream star recently sat down with former NFL quarterback Cam Newton to detail her time in jail, recalling how she was harassed and purposely humiliated, having been stripped in front of several males at one point.
“Don’t You Know I’m HUMAN Too?” — Atlanta Dream Star Opens Up to Cam Newton About Jail Ordeal and Harrowing Humiliation
In an emotional and raw interview, an Atlanta Dream star sat down with former NFL MVP Cam Newton to share a side of her story the public has never heard — her deeply traumatic experience behind bars.
The WNBA standout, whose identity is being protected here out of respect for her privacy and ongoing legal matters, opened up on Newton’s podcast about her time in jail, where she described not only being harassed, but purposely humiliated by staff members.
“At one point,” she said, her voice trembling, “they stripped me in front of multiple male officers. No privacy. No dignity. Just humiliation — like I wasn’t even a person.”
The moment was one of many in a powerful interview where she pulled back the curtain on what athletes often endure silently — how fame doesn’t shield them from dehumanizing treatment, and how mental health, justice, and public perception collide in painful ways.
“They looked at me like I was some kind of threat, not like a woman, not like a person.
I just wanted to scream — ‘Don’t you know I’m HUMAN too?’”
Cam Newton, visibly shaken by the details, responded with empathy and support:
“You’re not alone. And people need to hear this. You matter — your voice matters.”
The star’s revelations have sparked an outpouring of support from fans, fellow athletes, and advocates for prison reform, reigniting discussions about how women — especially women of color — are treated in the criminal justice system.
Social media responded immediately:
“Stripped? In front of men? That’s not just wrong — that’s abuse.”
“This is why we need accountability in jails. That’s not discipline — that’s humiliation.”
“Thank you for your courage. Sharing this will help others speak up.”
Though she did not go into detail about the incident that led to her arrest, she made it clear that her focus now is on healing — and using her platform to protect others from similar treatment.
“I don’t want sympathy,” she said. “I want change.”
The interview is already being called one of the most important conversations of the year in women’s sports — a reminder that athletes are not invincible, and that beneath the jersey is a human being demanding to be seen, respected, and protected.
“Don’t you know I’m HUMAN too?” — a question that now echoes far beyond the walls of that jail, and into the heart of a national conversation.