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“Mazan rape” trial suspended until Monday, possible postponement

Photo: Christophe Simon Agence France-Presse Gisèle Pelicot with her lawyer Stéphane Babonneau, Wednesday

Philippe Siuberski – Agence France-Presse in Avignon

Published at 7:12 p.m.

  • Europe

The sensational trial of a decade of rapes in France has been officially suspended until Monday, pending the return of the main accused Dominique Pelicot, who is ill, a French court announced Thursday, even considering a pure and simple postponement of this case if Dominique Pelicot is “permanently unavailable.”

“Either Pelicot is there [Monday], and we continue. “If he is not here for one, two or three days, we will extend the suspension,” declared the president of the criminal court of Vaucluse (south) Roger Arata.

“But if he is permanently unavailable, the case will be postponed,” he continued, causing confusion among the defense lawyers and the civil parties, while the initial schedule for this case, which began on September 2 and was supposed to be judged until December 20, had already been significantly delayed.

“Understand who can,” reacted Me Antoine Camus, one of the two lawyers for the civil parties, Gisèle Pelicot, the main victim in this case, and the couple's three children.

If it is a postponement, then “everything has to be re-established, a schedule, the availability of the room, the court, etc. And what about those who are in detention ? Because at that point, I can assume that there will be requests for release,” assured Me Béatrice Zavarro, Dominique Pelicot’s lawyer.

This septuagenarian is being tried for having, for ten years, drugged his wife with anxiolytics and then raped her and had her raped by dozens of men recruited on the Internet.

Questioned by AFP, the Avignon prosecutor’s office confirmed that in the event of a postponement, “a new hearing” of the trial would be required at a later date.

Alongside Dominique Pelicot, 50 men, aged 26 to 74, are being tried in Avignon, most of them prosecuted for rape aggravated, facts for which they face 20 years of criminal imprisonment.

Eighteen of these accused, including Dominique Pelicot, appear in custody. Thirty-two others appear free, the last one, on the run, being tried in absentia.

Everything is now suspended on the state of health of the main accused, 71 years old, visibly suffering since the beginning of the week and exempted from hearings for four days now.

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“Shame changes sides”

In less than two weeks, the trial had already accumulated delays. While the daughter and two daughters-in-law of the main accused, also victims—their father and stepfather had photographed them naked, without their knowledge, and had posted pornographic photomontages of them on social media—had already been heard, his two sons had not been able to speak.

Similarly, Gisèle Pelicot, now the accused's ex-wife, had to continue her testimony.

In announcing the suspension of the trial, President Arata specified that if the proceedings resumed on Monday, the couple's children would be heard first, then Mrs. Pelicot again. It would then be the turn of Pierre P., the couple's son-in-law, and finally of Joël Pelicot, the accused's brother.

Which would postpone the first speech by Dominique Pelicot himself until Tuesday.

Until then, he had only been heard on September 2, at the opening of the trial, to say that he acknowledged the facts and that his home was now the prison.

In the following days, the court could then move on to examining the facts concerning a first group of four co-accused, Jean-Pierre M., 63, Jacques C., 72, Lionel R., 44, and Cyrille D., 54.

The “group 2” of seven other co-accused, which was scheduled to start on Monday, i.e. week 38, will be postponed to week 46, starting on Tuesday, November 12, Mr. Arata has already warned.

On Thursday, the debates resumed in Avignon, in the absence of Dominique Pelicot and his family, represented only by their lawyers. And it was Annabelle Montagne, a psychological expert, who took the stand to complete the psychological portrait of the first four co-accused.

The facts targeting Mrs. Pelicot, at the couple's home in Mazan (Vaucluse), had come to light after her husband had been arrested filming up the skirts of three women in a shopping center in Carpentras (Vaucluse, south).

By searching his computer, investigators had discovered this decade of rapes, photographed, filmed and meticulously captioned and archived by the accused.

Covered by media around the world, having become the symbol of the issue of rape under chemical submission, this trial is also taken as an example by feminist movements to relaunch the debate on the issue of consent.

And Ms. Pelicot, who herself refused to have this case tried behind closed doors, is becoming a figure in the fight against sexual violence.

Her stylized face, with the slogan “Shame changes sides,” is thus used for a call to demonstrate on Friday at 1 p.m. in Avignon, “against rape culture.” Many calls for demonstrations have also been launched for Saturday across France, in support of Gisèle Pelicot and all rape victims.

Teilor Stone

By Teilor Stone

Teilor Stone has been a reporter on the news desk since 2013. Before that she wrote about young adolescence and family dynamics for Styles and was the legal affairs correspondent for the Metro desk. Before joining Thesaxon , Teilor Stone worked as a staff writer at the Village Voice and a freelancer for Newsday, The Wall Street Journal, GQ and Mirabella. To get in touch, contact me through my teilor@nizhtimes.com 1-800-268-7116