GUILTY France, Dominique Pélicot, drugged wife of 50 years nightly, filmed rape by at least 51 men, 2011-2020

  • #581
I kinda dont think ,you understand some stuff's.
Like local street merits , prison points ,and o so much more. NOI ..IMO..
No I don't, I'm happy to say.
 
  • #582
No I don't, I'm happy to say.
Sometime the horror of it makes me feel a different kinda way . Hug the babies ,every day.
 
  • #583
"Dominique will not be joining the 17 of his fellow 50 defendants who are appealing their sentences.

Through his lawyer,
he hit out at his fellow defendants for doing so,
claiming it would be a 'new ordeal' for his ex-wife.

'He decided not to appeal,
because he says it would be a new ordeal and new confrontations for his wife,
who he always said in the debates was not his adversary,'
Dominique Pelicot's lawyer Beatrice Zavarro said on FranceInfo Radio."

 
  • #584
Nice try at redemption Monsieur Pelicot...

I give you an F for failure.
 
  • #585
Nice try at redemption Monsieur Pelicot...

I give you an F for failure.

I somewhat disagree here. Yes, he is a monster. Yes, he is horrible. However, he isn't as bad as others what we witness day after day here on WS. At least he plead guilty. At least he acknowledged his wrong. At least he ISN'T appealing his sentence and putting his now ex-wife through more. At least he acknowledged that and helped to put the others behind bars. He is still horrible, and he is now convicted and locked up. But, I honestly hate those that never admit their wrong doings, never lead us to the dead, and even those with the highest amount of evidence against them that put forth a strong defense that deny, deny, deny. JMO on this one. I want her to be able to move forward with the grace that she has exhibited. The ones that are appealing are just as horrible as he because they KNEW that she was there unconscious and they still think they did nothing wrong.
 
  • #586
I somewhat disagree here. Yes, he is a monster. Yes, he is horrible. However, he isn't as bad as others what we witness day after day here on WS. At least he plead guilty. At least he acknowledged his wrong. At least he ISN'T appealing his sentence and putting his now ex-wife through more. At least he acknowledged that and helped to put the others behind bars. He is still horrible, and he is now convicted and locked up. But, I honestly hate those that never admit their wrong doings, never lead us to the dead, and even those with the highest amount of evidence against them that put forth a strong defense that deny, deny, deny. JMO on this one. I want her to be able to move forward with the grace that she has exhibited. The ones that are appealing are just as horrible as he because they KNEW that she was there unconscious and they still think they did nothing wrong.

Human nature is very complex.
I guess his perversions turned into some kind of addiction he was unable to battle.
I'm honestly amazed he was into them being over 70.
A grandfather "up skirting" girls in a shopping centre :rolleyes:

Sorry, you just couldn't make it up :oops:

JMO
 
  • #587
Geez, what a great guy!
 
  • #588
I don't believe he is sorry for what he did.
I believe he is sorry for having been caught and is now in prison.
 
  • #589
DBM
 
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  • #590
I don't believe he is sorry for what he did.
I believe he is sorry for having been caught and is now in prison.
I suspect he know the right words to say and is a good actor, having played the part of a devoted husband during that awful decade when he solicited rapists for his unconscious wife.

JMO
 
  • #591
I suppose that it is faintly possible that having been in prison for years now, he has recovered from what may have become an addiction. Not sure I believe it though. What do you all think?
 
  • #592
I suppose that it is faintly possible that having been in prison for years now, he has recovered from what may have become an addiction. Not sure I believe it though. What do you all think?
I think he probably is not any better at all . He just got embarrassed from seeing his own crime on the TV.
That poor woman .
 
  • #593
I suspect he know the right words to say and is a good actor, having played the part of a devoted husband during that awful decade when he solicited rapists for his unconscious wife.

JMO
He even successfully played being a nice father and a great granddad. How little does it take to deceive others like that for many years?
 
  • #594
I think he changed his tune a bit when he realised that he might very likely go to prison.

Now he is working on repairing his reputation with the hope of possibly lessening his jail time, by becoming a very remorseful changed man and a model prisoner.

I would say that the statement he put out was all for his benefit, not his victims.
 
  • #595
There is nothing left to repair.
He brought shame and disgrace to family name in France and even in the world.
His children turned away from him.
He will probably die in prison.
He is a very sick person.
But he is human and even the most depraved people sometimes show humane reactions.

I'm not the one to judge.
He was tried in Court of Law and got his sentence which he didn't appeal.
That is all what matters to me.
Words of apology should always be appreciated IMO.
Who are we to decide whether they are sincere or not?

I wish Gisele and her family strength.
Let them heal.

JMO
 
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  • #596
The Gisele Pelicot case is, unfortunately, similar to a story described by Canadian writer Miriam Toews in "Voices of Women".

The events the writer described took place in Bolivia, in the Manitoba Mennonite community, between 2005 and 2009.

There were more or less over a hundred victims.

The perpetrators were nine men who broke into the bedrooms of women and girls at night
and used drugs to
anesthetize and put the cows to sleep.


"At least nine male members of the colony sprayed a veterinary sedative through window screens to render whole households unconscious.

They then entered homes and raped the residents, particularly women and girls
(but also small children).
The minimum number of known victims stands at 151.

Many victims were raped on multiple occasions.
The youngest victim was three years old, the oldest was 65.
Multiple victims were pregnant.

The perpetrators were in some cases blood relatives of the victims, the crimes thus including incestuous abuse."


" 'In the morning we couldn't get up because we were half anaesthetised',
he recalls.
'We couldn't move… We didn't know what happened, but we knew something had happened'.
'And it wasn't just once - they were here twice those men'.

While the whole family was drugged and incapacitated,
all his daughters were attacked by men who broke into their home.

'Due to their religious beliefs,
they thought something bad,
something evil was happening in the colony',
says Perez.

'In the morning they had headaches…
Women woke with semen on them,
and wondered why they were without underwear.
And they didn't discuss it with neighbours in case someone said,
'That house has the devil in it'.
Eventually, some women began to speak out.
And the stories multiplied."

:(


 
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  • #597
The Gisele Pelicot case is, unfortunately, similar to a story described by Canadian writer Miriam Toews in "Voices of Women".

The events the writer described took place in Bolivia, in the Manitoba Mennonite community, between 2005 and 2009.

There were more or less over a hundred victims.

The perpetrators were nine men who broke into the bedrooms of women and girls at night
and used drugs to
anesthetize and put the cows to sleep.


"At least nine male members of the colony sprayed a veterinary sedative through window screens to render whole households unconscious.

They then entered homes and raped the residents, particularly women and girls
(but also small children).
The minimum number of known victims stands at 151.

Many victims were raped on multiple occasions.
The youngest victim was three years old, the oldest was 65.
Multiple victims were pregnant.

The perpetrators were in some cases blood relatives of the victims, the crimes thus including incestuous abuse."


" 'In the morning we couldn't get up because we were half anaesthetised',
he recalls.
'We couldn't move… We didn't know what happened, but we knew something had happened'.
'And it wasn't just once - they were here twice those men'.

While the whole family was drugged and incapacitated,
all his daughters were attacked by men who broke into their home.

'Due to their religious beliefs,
they thought something bad,
something evil was happening in the colony',
says Perez.

'In the morning they had headaches…
Women woke with semen on them,
and wondered why they were without underwear.
And they didn't discuss it with neighbours in case someone said,
'That house has the devil in it'.
Eventually, some women began to speak out.
And the stories multiplied."

:(


I read the story at your link, thank you for sharing. Astounding story.
 
  • #598
"Founder of 'den of predators' chat room site
Dominique Pelicot used to recruit men for mass rape of his unconscious wife
is arrested in France.

Isaac Steidl, 44,
was called in by French authorities for questioning over claims his site,
Coco.fr,
facilitated 23,051 crimes, including murder, rape, and paedophilia.

1736424238522.jpeg

The site was free and used a simple interface,
allowing users to communicate anonymously, quickly turning it into a 'den of predators'."

 
  • #599
"Monster of Avignon Dominique Pelicot's daughter Caroline Darian
makes damning statement in first interview
since his conviction in France's biggest-ever rape trial.

1736621143087.jpeg

On Dominque's computer equipment which was confiscated after his arrest,
French authorities found a folder labelled
'my naked daughter'.

Within this secret file
there were two images of Caroline,
then aged in her 30s, sleeping in beige underwear.

When showed this by the police,
Darian claimed that she did not sleep in this position,
that she has never seen that specific pair of underwear before
and that she would never have gone to bed dressed like that.

Following on from this revelation
she told the court that she was convinced that she too had probably been raped and abused by Dominique."


" 'I can’t keep the unthinkable at bay –

did he abuse me?’:

an exclusive extract from the memoir of Dominique Pelicot’s daughter."


1736621640623.jpeg

 
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  • #600
I wonder if she was still living in their house when this pic was taken. Seems she must have been. And does she remember ever waking up feeling like she had been drugged, or like she was groggier than usual or anything like that? I certainly wouldn't put it past him to do this to her as well.
 

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