Man who drugged wife in French mass rape case told: You'll die alone
Vocabulary: 436, Words: 1135
1Tensions at the French mass rape trial burst into the open on Wednesday when Dominique Pelicot’s daughter Caroline shouted at her father from across the courtroom that he would “die alone like a dog”.
2Caroline Darian, 45, has repeatedly said she is convinced her father drugged and abused her after semi-naked photos of her asleep were found on his laptop.
3He has denied abusing her but has admitted drugging his wife Gisèle for a decade and recruiting men online to rape her in their home when she was unconscious.
4Dominique Pelicot and 50 other men have been on trial since September, and a verdict is expected on 20 December.
5During an emotional day in court in Avignon, Gisèle Pelicot's lawyers gave their closing arguments, describing the historic nature of the trial and paying tribute to her courage in waiving her anonymity to bring the mass rape trial into the open.
6In her statements to the court Caroline spoke of her anguish at what she says are persistent lies by her father.
7Earlier this week, with a voice full of emotion, she told the court her life had “stopped” when police first showed her photos from her father's laptop in 2020.
8On Wednesday, Dominique Pelicot was given a chance to address his daughter while taking the stand for the final time in this trial.
9The main defendant said he most wished he still had Caroline's support.
10“Some may laugh but it’s my daughter I wish I could look at in the face. 11It hurts to see her like this,” he said, sitting in a glass box only metres away from his daughter and the rest of his family.
12“I would love to see her, I would love to talk to her,” he added. 13As his voice faltered, Caroline’s rose: “I will never come see you. 14Never. 15You will die alone like a dog,” she shouted.
16“We all die alone,” he replied. 17“You especially,” she hit back.
18It was the last public exchange between a father and daughter who by all accounts had had, for many years, a loving and close relationship.
19Mr Pelicot recalled visiting her in hospital when she was recovering from surgery as a child so he could hold her and comfort her, and shared memories of her teenage years.
20When he repeated that he would always love her even if she had stopped loving him, she looked ahead silently, tears streaming down her face – but did not respond.
21It was only later, when the session ended, that she approached the box her father sat in and shouted: “You had two months [to tell the truth]!”
22During questioning, Mr Pelicot also stated that he was a sex addict and that getting found out by police in November 2020 had “unburdened him”.
23He denied that his crimes against his wife had been sparked by an inferiority complex or by a desire for revenge for an affair she had in the 1980s.
24Asked what he thought about chemical submission - drugging someone for the purposes of coercion or assault - he answered: “It’s crap. 25It annihilates everything. 26It should never be done.”
27Mr Pelicot’s statements were followed by closing arguments from Gisèle Pelicot’s legal team.
28Lawyers for the 50 other defendants will give their own closing arguments from next week. 29They are expected to explore more deeply the defence that many of the men cannot be guilty because they did not realise Ms Pelicot was unconscious and therefore did not "know" they were raping her.
30Over almost three hours Ms Pelicot's lawyers, Antoine Camus and Stéphane Babonneau, retold the horrific story of Dominique Pelicot’s crimes, peppering their account with literary references.
31"Everyone contributed to this monstrosity on their own level, and allowed a woman's ordeal to go on. 32It's the banality of evil of [philosopher] Hannah Arendt," said Mr Camus.
33They pleaded with the judges to hand down sentences that reflected the extent of the suffering of Gisèle Pelicot and her family.
34Mr Camus said he was aware of the “expectations and hopes in this room and beyond” for the trial, which he said he described as historic, because “we badly, urgently want and need it to be".
35Leaning heavily on the notion of free will, he dismissed the defence’s argument that many of the men who allegedly raped Ms Pelicot did so because they were intimidated, manipulated or tricked by her husband. 36"Manipulation is not hypnosis," he said.
37The fact they were all aware that Mr Pelicot was “recruiting” many other men too should be taken into account by the judges, he added.
38“Everyone who came into that house of horrors knew that others had come before him and others would follow,” Mr Camus said.
39His colleague painted a devastating picture of Ms Pelicot’s life since her husband’s crimes had become known.
40Stéphane Babonneau then described what had led Ms Pelicot – who by then was living in a small village under her maiden name – to give up her anonymity and open the trial to the public and the media.
41It was in 2023, he said, when French media began reporting on the Pelicot case using pseudonyms that “a feeling of rebellion started to take hold of Gisèle Pelicot".
42"She decided to take back control of her life. 43The moment had come for shame to change sides.”
44The will to stop hiding had awoken in her, he said, because she hadn’t done anything wrong. 45And she thought the details of her case and the videos of the alleged assaults would help expose the reality of rape.
46“For her story to be useful and to help other women she understood she had to give up the anonymity that had served her for years,” Mr Babonneau explained. 47“She had to accept she would forever be the victim of the Mazan rapes.”
48The lawyer also urged judges not to accept that the defendants had made a “mistake” when – as some have said – they raped Ms Pelicot involuntarily or “out of stupidity or ignorance”.
49“If you accept the right to make a mistake, what will stop another man tomorrow from saying that when a woman told him ‘no’ he actually understood ‘yes’? 50That he also made a mistake?”
51“I ask you to reject the right to make mistakes which would put society in danger – and at the risk of seeing more Gisèle Pelicots,” Mr Babonneau said.
52He ended by paying tribute to Ms Pelicot and said the trial would be a “legacy” for future generations: “They will hear the name Gisèle Pelicot, they will hear about her courage and about the price she paid.”
53Turning to look at Ms Pelicot, he said: “You did your job. 54You went beyond what was expected of you.”
55“Now, pass on the torch to the others to carry on the fight you never chose.”
56Gisèle Pelicot, to his right, wiped her eyes.
from BBC