Monday, December 23, 2024

French husband kept meticulous records of wife’s alleged rapists, court told

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An investigator leading the probe into a French man accused of orchestrating multiple rapes of his wife told a court on Wednesday of painstaking efforts to identify the perpetrators via the husband’s detailed records of the assaults.

Dominique P, a 71-year-old retiree, had abused his wife between 2011 and 2020, drugging her with sleeping pills and then recruiting dozens of strangers to rape her.

He documented the decade-long abuse of his wife, Gisele P, with meticulous precision, allowing French police to track down more than 50 men suspected of raping her while she was drugged.

On the third day of the trial in the southern city of Avignon, the commissioner in charge of the inquiry said investigators sifted through numerous telephone bills, pictures and videos and used facial recognition software to identify the suspects, all of them men.

“I chose to put together a very tight team of four investigators,” Jeremie Bosse Platiere, director of the Hautes-Alpes interdepartmental police force, told the court. “And I chose people who had the stomach to face the images.”

He said they had drawn up a list of 72 individuals suspected of abusing Gisele P, 72.

The investigators counted around 200 instances of rape, most of them by Dominique P and over 90 by strangers enlisted through an adult website. The assaults took place between July 2011 and October 2020, mainly in the couple’s home in Mazan, a village of 6,000 people in the southern region of Provence.

Given the sheer number of suspects, police had to carry out arrests in five waves between late 2020 and September 2021.

Apart from the husband, only 50 suspects, aged between 26 and 74, have so far been identified and tracked down. Most of them face up to 20 years in jail for aggravated rape if convicted. Eighteen of the 51 accused, including Dominique P, are in custody, while 32 other defendants are attending the trial as free men.

The last one, still at large, will be judged in absentia.

Investigators initially identified 54 suspects, but one has since died and two others have been excluded for lack of evidence.

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