The air in the courtroom felt thick, as though each breath weighed heavier than the last, when Dominique Pelicot, a 71-year-old man, confessed all. He admitted to crimes that seemed too horrid to fathom— drugging his wife for over a decade and allowing others to assault her while she was unconscious. “I am a rapist like the others in this room,” he said, his voice carrying a blunt, and uncommon tone. Those words echoed in the room, pressing against everyone who heard them, marking the moment not as one of revelation, but as the start of something darker unraveling.
🇫🇷🧑⚖️ “I am a rapist,” Dominique Pelicot, a 71-year-old Frenchman accused of drugging his wife so he and scores of strangers could assault her, told a court Tuesday.@FRANCE24‘s @DelanoDSouza tells us more about the notorious trial ⤵️ pic.twitter.com/kL4nv8rQhX
— FRANCE 24 English (@France24_en) September 17, 2024
Gisèle, his now ex-wife, sat listening in disbelief. For 50 years, she had been by his side, never suspecting the man she trusted could orchestrate such horrible deeds. “I lived with him for five decades, never thinking this was possible,” she said, her voice faltering under the weight of betrayal, yet firm in her decision to make the trial public. Gisèle’s choice to waive her anonymity wasn’t just an act of courage— it was a clear attempt to push the burden of shame off her shoulders and return it to those who deserved it.
As the courtroom took a recess, applause greeted her outside— applause not for survival alone but for the raw strength it takes to stand tall in the aftermath. In recent weeks, Gisèle had become a symbol, her story sparking protests and conversations across France about consent, marital rape, and the sinister quiet of chemical submission. She had chosen to face her truth in full view, where so many before her had been silenced or forced to hide such things.
“Je suis un violeur” : Dominique Pelicot a reconnu les faits dont il est accusé et demande pardon. Il nie cependant avoir drogué et violé sa fille Caroline. #JT20H #Mazan pic.twitter.com/xG3vULNGMy
— Info France 2 (@infofrance2) September 17, 2024
Meanwhile, Pelicot painted a twisted picture of how he got to this point. He spoke of a troubled childhood—abuse he suffered at the hands of a male nurse when he was just nine years old. He spoke of despair and thoughts of suicide when he found out Gisèle had been unfaithful. But none of those confessions could explain away what followed. “I loved her for 40 years and hurt her for 10,” he said, reducing a decade of abuse to a tragic imbalance of love and harm, as though those years of torment could somehow balance out.
The most chilling detail was Pelicot’s admission that he had filmed numerous persons abusing his unconscious wife— not just for his own pleasure, but as “insurance.” His lawyer, Béatrice Zavarro, noted that Pelicot was “sharing his truth,” but the truth he laid bare was devastating. He claimed the other men involved had known what they were doing— he pointed to the tripod, to the camera that recorded everything, saying they could see it as soon as they stepped into the room.
‘I am a rapist just like all the others in this room,’ says Frenchman accused of mass rape of wife.
Dominique Pelicot, a Frenchman accused of drugging his wife and orchestrating her rape by dozens of strangers over a decade, admitted to the charges in court. pic.twitter.com/1UYtLCP8Zt
— Evoclique (@Evoclique_) September 17, 2024
As Pelicot continues to testify, the trial digs deeper into dark questions— ones about control, betrayal, and complicity. His confession, though necessary, doesn’t heal the wounds he left on Gisèle. Knowledge alone won’t erase the years of suffering she endured. What the court learns about Dominique Pelicot may bring more clarity, but it can never recover the damage done. It can only remind us how far-reaching the consequences of one man’s actions can be, and how many lives can be distorted along the way.
Major Points
- Dominique Pelicot, 71, confessed to drugging his wife for over a decade, allowing others to assault her while unconscious.
- Gisèle, his ex-wife, bravely chose to waive her anonymity and make the trial public, becoming a symbol of resilience.
- Pelicot claimed his actions stemmed from his troubled past and personal pain, but his excuses failed to justify the horrors he inflicted.
- He filmed the assaults, using the recordings as “insurance,” revealing the extent of his betrayal and control.
- Gisèle’s courage has sparked national conversations about consent, marital abuse, and the silent suffering of victims.
Susan Guglielmo – Reprinted with permission of Whatfinger News