Welcome To aBlackWeb

Husband had his wife raped for years

loud-ninja

Here to point out the illogical


Gisèle Pelicot's ex-husband jailed for 20 years in mass rape trial​


Video caption,Gisèle Pelicot: 'I never regretted decision to make trial public'Article information
  • Author,Francesca Gillett
  • Role,BBC News
  • 19 December 2024, 12:41 GMT
    Updated 6 hours ago
French rape survivor Gisèle Pelicot's ex-husband has been jailed for 20 years after drugging and raping her, and inviting dozens of strangers to also abuse her over nearly a decade.
Dominique Pelicot, 72, was found guilty of all charges by a judge in Avignon, southern France, and cried in court as he was sentenced to the maximum term.
He was on trial with 50 other men, all of whom were found guilty of at least one charge, although their jail terms were less than what prosecutors had demanded.
Ms Pelicot and her children looked emotionless as the verdicts were read out, occasionally glancing at the defendants and resting their heads against the wall.


The convictions brought an end to France's largest ever rape trial, which over the course of three months has shocked the country and the world.
On Thursday morning, police shut the road opposite the courthouse to accommodate hundreds of people who turned up to offer their support to Ms Pelicot.
A large banner reading "Thank you Gisèle" was spread across a wall facing the entrance.
Underneath it, several members of the public chanted "rapist, we see you" as defendants trickled in ahead of the trial.
One of the defendants arrives at the court in Avignon, wearing a hood and a facemask to hide his identity

Image source,SYLVAIN THOMAS/AFP
Image caption,One of the defendants arrives at the court in Avignon, wearing a hood and a facemask to hide his identity
Speaking outside of the court following the verdicts, Ms Pelicot said the trial had been a "very difficult ordeal".
Her grandson, who is in his late teens, was standing next to her for the first time, his arm over her shoulder as she addressed the media.
Her voice faltered only once as said she "never regretted" her decision to make the trial public "so society could see what was happening".
The 72-year-old's decision to waive her automatic right to anonymity was highly unusual.
She attended almost every day of the trial, appearing in the same courtroom as her husband of 50 years, who she has now divorced.
French and global media followed the case with growing interest and hundreds of journalists were present in court on Thursday.
As Ms Pelicot spoke, hundreds of people chanted her name and sang feminist songs.
She gave her "profound" thanks to her supporters and said she had "confidence" in there being a "better future" where men and women can live in "mutual respect".
A group of people stand facing the camera. One at the front is colourfully dressed, and next to her a woman holds a sign in French that reads: Shame changes sides

Image source,Reuters
Image caption,Supporters gathered outside court holding signs that read "shame swaps sides" - alluding to something Gisèle said in court
Ms Pelicot's ex-husband Dominique Pelicot - who had already confessed to his crimes - was found guilty of aggravated rape.
He was also found guilty of the attempted aggravated rape of the wife of one of his co-accused, Jean-Pierre Maréchal.
Maréchal - who was described as Dominique's "disciple" as he drugged and raped his own wife for years and invited Dominque to do the same - was jailed for 12 years.
Dominique Pelicot was also found guilty of taking indecent images of his daughter, Caroline Darian, and his daughters-in-law, Aurore and Celine.
Caroline - who was in court on Thursday - previously told the trial she felt she was the "forgotten victim" as, unlike in her mother's case, there was no record of the abuse she is convinced was inflicted on her.
Dominique denied drugging and abusing his daughter.
"I will never come see you and you will die alone like a dog," she shouted at him in court in November.
After the verdict were delivered, Dominique Pelicot's lawyer said her client was "somewhat dazed" by his sentence and would consider whether to appeal. He has 10 days to decide whether to do so.
Dominique Pelicot stood accused alongside 50 other men, 46 of whom were found guilty of rape, two of attempted rape and two of sexual assault.
Several of them have already spent years in jail as they were arrested when police conducted their initial investigation in 2021, and will therefore be free relatively soon.
Most of the men on trial had denied that what they did was rape.
They argued they did not realise Ms Pelicot was unconscious and therefore did not "know" they were raping her. It is an argument that sparked a nationwide discussion about France's legal definition of rape.
The defendants' jail terms range from between three and 15 years.
In a statement to AFP news agency, the Pelicot children said they were "disappointed" by the "low sentences".
For almost a decade from 2011, Dominique Pelicot drugged his now ex-wife and raped her, and recruited dozens of men online to have sex with her while she was unconscious.
His crimes were discovered in 2020, when police arrested him over a separate charge of filming up the skirts of women in a supermarket.
Police seized his devices and found thousands of videos on his laptop, with evidence of around 200 rapes.
Investigators used the videos to track down his co-accused, although they were unable to identify an additional 21 men.
Dominique Pelicot admitted the charges in 2020.
Caroline Darian, wearing a cream coat, walks through a crowd, holding a brown envelope. She is followed by her brothers and there are cameras to her left.

Image source,Getty Images
Image caption,The couple's daughter Caroline Darian arriving at the courthouse, followed by her two brothers
The trial sparked a discussion about whether the issue of consent should be added to France's legal definition of rape, as it has been in other European countries.
Rape in France is currently defined as "any act of sexual penetration committed against another person by violence, constraint, threat or surprise", meaning prosecutors must prove intent to rape.
Many of the defendants argued they did not realise Ms Pelicot had not consented, claiming they were "tricked" by Dominique Pelicot, and believed they were going to the couple's house for a threesome involving a fantasy that the woman would be asleep.
The trial also shone a light on the issue of chemical submission, or drug-induced sexual assault.
Most of the 50 men came from towns and villages in a 50km (30 mile) radius of the Pelicots' home village of Mazan.
They included firefighters, lorry drivers, soldiers, a journalist and a DJ, and were been described by defence lawyers as being "ordinary people", earning them the nickname Monsieur-Tout-Le-Monde (Mr Everyman).
The trial also brought sexual violence against women into the spotlight in France, with many praising Ms Pelicot for her bravery in opening up the case to the public.
She previously said she was determined to make "shame change sides" from the victim to the rapist. It is a phrase that has been repeated by her supporters.
But Ms Pelicot has been clear that behind her facade of strength "lies a field of ruins" and despite the widespread acclaim for what she has done, she is a reluctant hero.
"She keeps repeating, 'I am normal' - she does not want to be considered as an icon," her lawyer Stéphane Babonneau told the BBC.
"Women generally have a strength in them that they can't even imagine and that they have to trust themselves. That's her message."
If you have been affected by the issues in this story, help and support is available via the BBC Action Line.

Related topics​

France

Related content​

 
This is wild , and to think this would have kept going if he didn't get caught filming women at the store

And the fact random men would come over and not realize she was clearly wasn't sleeping, just sick.

The , oh she didn't tell me no excuse, is so crazy 😒

I got so many questions ... did she know he was drugging her.

Like when she came out of the drugs and it's the next day did she know or suspect 🤔 anything
 
This is wild , and to think this would have kept going if he didn't get caught filming women at the store

And the fact random men would come over and not realize she was clearly wasn't sleeping, just sick.

The , oh she didn't tell me no excuse, is so crazy 😒

I got so many questions ... did she know he was drugging her.

Like when she came out of the drugs and it's the next day did she know or suspect 🤔 anything
There was another article I read before this one that has more details but I couldn't remember what site i read it from.

She didn't know she was being drugged.

She was prescribed Temesta. Her husband took advantage and also started adding sleeping pills to her food or drinks. She began to have memory lapse and got worried she was have alzheimers. Test came back negative for any disease or illness. At one point, she did ask him if he was drugging her. He denied it and she accepted it.
 
There was another article I read before this one that has more details but I couldn't remember what site i read it from.

She didn't know she was being drugged.

She was prescribed Temesta. Her husband took advantage and also started adding sleeping pills to her food or drinks. She began to have memory lapse and got worried she was have alzheimers. Test came back negative for any disease or illness. At one point, she did ask him if he was drugging her. He denied it and she accepted it.

Omg that's so diabolical. This old lady been traumatized and didn't even know it. Jesus lawd what possess someone to do that to someone over and over.
 
Damn, after reading some more, she actually saw some of the videos of her being raped when the trial started.

To think u have a medical issue to find out your husband is a sicko....see this why I don't trust nobody....

They got married in 1973!

She knew and been with this man for over 50 years .

Sheesh, the phrase you don't really know someone is an understatement.

I really wanna understand wtf makes someone do this. The sadistic nature of the human mind to do this to someone and then look them in the face afterwards as if everything is normal is so incomprehensible

The only thing I can think is if this type of behavior exist then the world has to have something beyond my limited imagination of "goodness" on the other side of this spectrum.

The other day I was watching a story about these African woman who got raped and maimed. I cried through the whole thing, just the torment and absolute horror these women described. It hurt more because these women look like me or my sister etc etc. This white woman while I feel for her, I really felt for these African women.

There was no protest or large press... I mean there's a document so people do care. And it's not a black/white thing. But To know that people live through shit or experience shit like this ugh. It does challenge all my spiritual and supernatural beliefs. What could she possibly gain from this experience or what happened to bring this into her current life.

Like is it really luck or fate that brings this type of shit to your life. Questions that won't ever get answered

All i know is, my ass wouldn't be on no TV , talking to the press, lol. Wouldn't be no documentary where I am telling my story nope... my ass would turn full on rouge vigilante. I wouldn't rest until everyone involved was dealt with. I would become a crazed hit woman avenging all woman, annialating every person involved and then go help others who needed it paid back in blood baby. Whoever said two wrongs don't make right was not speaking on these type situations lol.
 
Back
Top