She also said the reason for delay in coming out with the sexual harassment allegation was that it took her time to "come to terms with the fact that I had been assaulted".
"When I finally did, all that I wanted to do was to erase the memory from my conscience. This was a man I had admired, I looked up to him," she said in an interview published in The Wall Street Journal.
"Third, in cases of assaults, where there is no physical evidence, it's one's word against another's, really. There's no reason why a law graduate would have won over a judge with a spotless record. Even now, for instance, when I appear before the panel, I feel I'm being looked at with suspicious eye. I have to constantly justify that I'm not lying, I'm not making up this story. I feel humiliated," she said.
The law graduate, who first made public the allegation by writing her ordeal in a blog, said though she had not expected it to go viral, she was happy that it has caught national attention and triggered broader debates.
The intern had accused the sitting judge, who retired recently, of having misbehaved with her in a hotel room last December when the nation was grappling with the gangrape of a 23-year-old woman in the capital.
