Didn't get a chance to respond to this until now;
My particular situations were better than what could have happened. The exact details are too long to go into so you'll have to take my word on faith that I did not do what I was accused of, but I would hope the fact that I'm not in prison would tell you that I wasn't accused of anything extremely heinous.
In both cases, it was a matter of women who initially agreed to extended interactions, one agreed to a brunch date, one agreed to a walk, and these weren't coercive requests, just me telling them that I liked them and I'd like to get to know them better over a date.
In both individual cases, separate instances separated by about two years, I was called into my supervisors' offices and told, flat out, that I was sexually harassing the women in question and that I needed to stop or I would be immediately fired with no further investigation.
My best attempt to steel-man these women's positions is that I am a fairly tall man who can be perceived as physically imposing, and so perhaps they thought if they said no that I would have lashed out irrationally and meant them harm, and they didn't want to do that without having the backing of the work hierarchy, so they lied, said yes to my date requests, and then immediately went to the supervisors.
These experiences wrecked me for several years and even to this day, to some degree. Even more than that, I have been told multiple times that I am not an unattractive person, so this isn't a matter of "Don't be ugly".
Me attempting to show genuine interest to these women in a way that I was taught by my progressive upbringing was non-threatening was met with nearly destroying my employment and my reputation. And this was *before* dating apps really turned the entire situation to 11.