“least *some* women “
Most claims I have ever heard were false. *most*, not *some*, *most*.
I have some workplace experience connected to this general subject.I worked for a long time in a big city ER.Along with the heart attacks,strokes,car accidents and gunshot wounds we saw we also saw a fair number of women who stated that they had been raped.Our ER had a team of specially trained nurses and physicians (mainly gynecologists) who were assigned to evaluate and treat them.Their goals were to treat any physical,and psychological,injuries they might have sustained *and* to collect evidence (swabs,photos,etc,etc) that could be used by a prosecutor in court.
Long story short...most of the times that the nurse assigned to the patient did an initial exam/interview they'd come out and talk to their fellow nurses about what they found.In most cases I heard them say things like "this poor woman,she's the real deal" (not an exact quote,of course) but sometimes I heard them express doubts as to the truthfulness of the woman's claim.
Just sayin'...
In the current environment, false claims probably outnumber real ones 25-1 or more. The incentives to do so are real, and the deterrents to false claims negligible. It has primarily become an economic weapon for women to use against their male competitors.