Gisele Pelicot’s ex-husband jailed 20 years for mass rape – DW – 12/19/2024
December 19, 2024
All other defendants also found guilty
The dozens of other defendants in the case were also handed guilty verdicts.
There were sporadic acquittals on certain charges, such as one man who was found guilty of sexual assault but not rape and one man who was acquitted of possessing child abuse imagery.
Dominique Pelicot’s co-accused were given sentences of between three and thirteen years. Journalists in the court said that Gisele Pelicot’s children looked unhappy at some of the shorter sentences.
Except for Pelicot, most of the sentences were a few years less than prosecutors had been asking for.
https://p.dw.com/p/4oLqP
December 19, 2024
Domnique Pelicot sentenced to 20 years in prison
After being found guilty on all charges, including aggravated rape and possession child abuse imagery, Dominque Pelicot was handed the maximum sentence of 20 years in prison.
He reportedly cried as the sentence was read out.
https://p.dw.com/p/4oLpM
December 19, 2024
Marechal also found guilty
Jean-Pierre Marechal, 63, has been found guilty of the aggravated rape and attempted rape of his wife.
Investigators said that Marechal was coached by Pelicot as to how to drug his wife and assault her.
Marechal did so for over five years, and invited Pelicot to visit them and do the same.
During the trial, Marechal called his actions “atrocious.”
He was sentenced to 12 years in prison. Prosecutors had asked for 17.
https://p.dw.com/p/4oLlf
December 19, 2024
Pelicot found guilty
Dominque Pelicot has been found guilty of raping his wife and recruiting others to do so by the five-judge panel in Avignon.
He was also found guilty of taking indecent pictures of his daughter Caroline, and his daughters-in-law Aurore and Celine without their knowledge.
The judges also found him guilty of raping the wife of his co-accused, Jean-Pierre Marechal.
Reporters inside the court, where cameras are not allowed, said that Dominique showed no emotion as the verdict was read out. His ex-wife and her children were watching the defendants quietly, they said.
https://p.dw.com/p/4oLaA
December 19, 2024
Seen outside the courtroom in Avignon
https://p.dw.com/p/4oLih
December 19, 2024
Activists push for tougher sentences
Campaigners against sexual violence are hoping for exemplary prison terms and view the trial as a possible turning point in the fight against rape culture and the use of drugs to subdue victims. DW’s Lisa Louis met with activists inspired by her example.
https://p.dw.com/p/4oLRt
December 19, 2024
Trial sparks debate on updating France’s rape law
The Pelicot trial has prompted soul-searching in France about updating the existing definition of rape, which does not include verbal consent.
Some 35 of the 51 defendants have argued that Dominique Pelicot tricked them by insinuating that his wife knew what would happen and was in on the plan.
President Emmanuel Macron has said he is in favor of updating the law, even though France rejected a proposed EU directive that would have included consent in rape statutes in 2023.
According to French pollsters, the public overwhelmingly supported the directive.
French law stipulates that rape is a sexual act committed on someone using “violence, coercion, threat or surprise.” With no mention of a partner’s consent, the law puts the burden on prosecutors to prove a suspect’s intentions.
There is currently a bill before the French parliament to change the law, which its supporters are hopeful will pass in 2025.
https://p.dw.com/p/4oLNS
December 19, 2024
New Paris helpline launched amid mass rape trial
In Paris, a new helpline has been launched to address the growing concerns over drug-facilitated sexual assault.
The Reference Centre on Drug-Facilitated Sexual Assault, or CRAFS, its acronym in French, coincided with the Pelicot rape trial.
This trial has increased awareness regarding the role of drugs in sexual abuse cases.
Since its inception, CRAFS has received numerous calls from both victims and healthcare professionals seeking guidance on recognizing and responding to drug-related abuse, said Leila Chaouachi, a doctor who founded the service.
What are the warning signs? They feel they don’t have enough training,” she said.
The helpline offers essential information on symptoms like drowsiness, nausea, and amnesia and provides guidance on the next steps, including the use of drug detection kits.
https://p.dw.com/p/4oG4Q
December 19, 2024
Timeline of the Gisele Pelicot trial
- 1973 The Pelicots marry
- 2011 to 2020 Dominique Pelicot and men he recruited online rape Gisele Pelicot multiple times
- September 2020 Pelicot is arrested after a security guard catches him filming up the skirts of women.
- November 2020 Investigators tell Gisele Pelicot about the videos they have found on her husband’s electronics
- Early September 2024: The trial begins in Avignon, France.
- September 2024: Dominique Pelicot, now Gisele’s ex-husband, confesses to the crime of drugging and raping Gisele over a nine-year period.
- September 2024: Gisele Pelicot gives her first testimony, describing the abuse and calling for societal change.
- November 2024: Gisele Pelicot delivers her final statement, condemning the “cowardice” of the accused and calling for a change in society’s attitude towards rape.
- November 2024: The trial continues with final arguments from prosecutors and defense teams.
- December 19, 2024: The verdict is expected to be delivered.
Gisele Pelicot has become a feminist icon for speaking out and rejecting the idea that rape victims should be ashamed. The trial has sparked widespread debate and protests about sexual violence in French society.
https://p.dw.com/p/4nEpS
December 19, 2024
What are Dominique Pelicot and his 51 co-defendants accused of?
Gisele Pelicot, 72, met her husband as a teenager and they married in 1973. They divorced briefly in the early 2000s for financial reasons, but remained living together and remarried after a few years.
Investigators have presented evidence that he took advantage of anti-anxiety and sleeping pills that he and his wife were prescribed to start drugging her and raping her himself, while they were still living in Paris before retirement.
In 2011, the couple retired to the village of Mazan in southeastern France. Pelicot began actively recruiting other men online to come to his home and rape his wife. His footage of the crimes was found when police arrested him for an upskirting incident in 2020.
During the abuse, the effects of the repeated drugging prompted Gisele to assume she had a serious health issue, as she was constantly tired and her hair was falling out. Her husband accompanied her to numerous doctors appointments as she sought answers to the mysterious illness.
Pelicot’s co-defendants come from all variations of middle- and working-class backgrounds, and many of them have wives and partners. They include truck drivers, an IT specialist, and a journalist. One of them is accused not of assaulting Gisele Pelicot, but of having followed Dominique Pelicot’s advice for raping his own wife, whom Pelicot also assaulted. A 52nd defendant died of cancer before the trial’s completion. Some 20 further suspects were not able to be identified by police by the start of the trial.
Pelicot has confessed to the crimes. Many of his co-defendants have argued that they were under the impression that they were indulging in the couple’s sexual fantasy or that they did not know she was unconscious. The accused face up to 20 years in prison.
https://p.dw.com/p/4oLIr
December 19, 2024
The men accused in mass rape of Gisele Pelicot
https://p.dw.com/p/4oG66
December 19, 2024
Why we are publishing disturbing content from the Pelicot trial
DW does not usually publish the names of victims but is doing so in this instance at Gisele Pelicot’s request to raise awareness about sexual abuse.
Our decision to publish disturbing content from the Pelicot rape trial comes after extensive deliberation by the journalists and editors in our newsroom. It follows Pelicot’s lead.
She decided to keep the trial open to the public despite the court’s suggestion to hold it in private. She allowed journalists to use her full name and permitted the court to display explicit videos recorded by her husband.
“I wanted all women victims of rape – not just when they have been drugged, rape exists at all levels, I want those women to say: Mrs. Pelicot did it, we can do it too,” she testified to the court.
“When you’re raped, there is shame, and it’s not for us to have shame, it’s for them,” she said about the accused.
es/lo (AFP, AP, dpa, Reuters)