Her Husband Allegedly Drugged Her So More Than 80 Men Could Rape Her. Today, She Faced Him In Court.

Gisèle Pélicot, 72, requested that the trial be held in open court as she seeks justice and hopes to raise awareness about date rape drugs.
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A woman whose husband is accused of drugging her and recruiting dozens of men online to rape her while she was unconscious gave powerful testimony against him in a French court on Thursday, as she seeks a public reckoning for his alleged crimes.

Gisèle Pélicot, 72, stood before her now-ex-husband, Dominique Pélicot, and some of the 50 other men charged with raping her.

During an unrelated investigation in 2020, police retrieved photographs and video of Pélicot being raped from her husband’s laptop and other devices. Pélicot said she had been unaware of the near-decade of alleged abuse until police showed her the images.

“I only wanted one thing and that was to disappear,” Pélicot testified about that moment, The Times reported.

Gisele Pelicot speaks to media as she leaves an Avignon, France, courthouse, Sept. 5, 2024. Her ex-husband admitted to repeatedly drugging her and inviting at least 80 men to rape her while she was unconscious between 2011 and 2020.
Gisele Pelicot speaks to media as she leaves an Avignon, France, courthouse, Sept. 5, 2024. Her ex-husband admitted to repeatedly drugging her and inviting at least 80 men to rape her while she was unconscious between 2011 and 2020.
AP Photo/Lewis Joly

But now, four years after the abuse, Pélicot wants the world to know what happened to her. She objected to a request by the prosecutor and the defendants’ lawyers to hold the trial behind closed doors, The Guardian reported.

Pélicot hopes to raise awareness about date rape drugs and to shift the blame and shame from survivors to their attackers, her lawyers say.

“[She] believes that she has no reason to hide,” attorney Stéphane Babonneau said in a hearing Monday. “No one can imagine that my client will find any satisfaction in exposing what she has suffered. She wants this hearing to be open so that justice can be done in public.”

The case has drawn international media coverage, and one French reporter in the courtroom who sketched Pélicot on Thursday described her “incredible dignity and strength.”

Dominique Pélicot admitted that he drugged his wife with powerful tranquilizers and used a messaging website to invite at least 80 men to rape her between 2011 and 2020, The Times reported. He had the men wait nearby until his wife passed out before letting them inside, investigators said he told them, and instructed them to undress in the kitchen, according to The Washington Post. He told them not to use cologne or tobacco but did not require them to use condoms, he told investigators.

When asked earlier this week in court if he was guilty of the drugging and attacks, he replied, “Yes,” The Guardian reported.

Though Pélicot said she has no memory of any of the alleged assaults, she described suffering numerous symptoms, including unexplained blackouts, related to the sedatives her husband allegedly gave her. She said she consulted several doctors because she believed she might have Alzheimer’s disease, The Times and The Telegraph reported, but she was never diagnosed with an illness. She learned after her husband’s arrest that she had contracted four sexually transmitted infections.

Pélicot was sexually assaulted about 200 times — half of them by her husband — while she was unconscious, the BBC reported. The police obtained 20,000 photos and videos of the alleged rapes on a USB drive belonging to Dominique Pélicot, according to The Guardian.

The footage was discovered during a police raid of the Pélicots’ home after he was caught filming women under their skirts at a local supermarket.

Investigators said they also found nude images of the Pélicots’ daughter, now 45, that her father had taken in 2013 while she slept at the family’s home, The Times reported.

She and her two brothers sat with their mother during the trial, which is expected to last until mid-December.

Pélicot and the other men face up to 20 years in prison if they are found guilty of aggravated rape.

Gisèle Pélicot said that despite her calm demeanor, she is anguished by the ordeal, The Telegraph reported.

“When people see me, they say: ‘She’s a strong woman.’ The facade looks solid, but inside, it’s a pile of ruins. Everything needs to be rebuilt.”

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