Gisèle Pelicot’s husband found guilty, sentenced to 20 years in prison

A French court today delivered guilty verdicts against more than 40 men involved in the horrific sexual assault and rape of Gisèle Pelicot.

GettyImages-2177454195.jpgGisele Pelicot has become a figure of hope for abuse victims. Credit: Arnold Jerocki / Getty

The trial, which has been ongoing for more than three months, has sent shockwaves across the nation and sparked widespread condemnation.

At the center of this disturbing saga is Dominique Pelicot, Gisèle’s ex-husband. He was found guilty of aggravated rape, attempted rape of the wife of a co-accused, and possessing indecent images of his own daughter and daughters-in-law.

Pelicot displayed no emotion as the judge read the verdict, per BBC News.

On the morning of Thursday (December 19), Pelicot was also sentenced to 20 years in prison.

Gisèle’s harrowing testimony revealed a life of unimaginable betrayal. For years, her husband surreptitiously drugged her, rendering her unconscious, and then invited strangers he met online to participate in the abuse. He meticulously documented these heinous acts with thousands of photographs and videos.

Gisèle only learned about the years of abuse after her then-husband was caught taking photos of women’s crotches in a supermarket in late 2020.

A subsequent police search of his electronic devices led to more than 20,000 photos and videos being discovered.

In the videos, investigators counted 72 different abusers. Unfortunately, not all of them could be identified.

Jean-Pierre Marechal, another key figure in the case, was also convicted of aggravated rape and drugging his own wife. He admitted to following Pelicot’s lead, subjecting his wife to repeated sexual assaults and even inviting Pelicot to participate.

The court also found the following individuals guilty of aggravated rape:

  • Charly Arbo
  • Christian Lescole
  • Cyrille Delville
  • Florian Rocca
  • Jacques Cubeau
  • Nicolas Francois
  • Simoné Mekenese
  • Thierry Parisis
  • Patrice Nicolle
  • Nizar Hamida
  • Boris Moulin
  • Dominique Davies
  • Jerome Vilela
  • Didier Sambuchi
  • Cyprien Culieras
  • Mathieu Dartus
  • Quentin Hennebert
  • Cyril Beaubis
  • Philippe Leleu
  • Jean-Luc LA
  • Fabien Sotton
  • Karim Sebaoui
  • Redouane Azougagh
  • Joan Kawai
  • Jean-Marc LeLoup
  • Vincent Coullet
  • Adrien Longeron
  • Ahmed Tbarik
  • Paul-Koikoi Grovogui
  • Omar Douiri
  • Husamettin Dogan
  • Romain Vandevelde
  • Hassan Ouamou
  • Redouane El Farihi
  • Jean Tirano
  • Mohamed Rafaa
  • Ludovick Blemeur
  • Patrick Aron
  • Abdelali Dallal
  • Grégory Serviol

Andy Rodriguez was found guilty of attempted rape and aggravating factors, while Hughes Malago was convicted of attempted rape and two aggravating factors. Saifeddine Ghabi was acquitted of rape and attempted rape but found guilty of sexual assault.

Joseph Cocco was found guilty of aggravated sexual assault.

Nicolas Francois and Karim Sebaoui were also convicted of possessing child abuse imagery.

The three-month trial captivated the nation, prompting widespread public outrage and renewed calls for stricter measures to combat sexual violence. Gisèle, now 72, has been praised for her courageous testimony, which has transformed her into a symbol of resilience and a beacon of hope for victims of sexual assault.

A man who has been dubbed the “world’s smartest man” has given a pretty definitive answer on whether god exists.

Chris Langan is widely regarded as one of the most intelligent people in the world with an IQ estimated between 190 and 210.

Best known for his Cognitive-Theoretic Model of the Universe (CTMU), the genius discussed the idea of God in recent interviews, providing insights into his complex worldview.

Langan, whose CTMU theory links reality and consciousness in a structure that explains existence, stated unequivocally that he believes in the existence of God.

GettyImages-538211484.jpgThe debate about whether God exists has been going on for centuries. Credit: Fred de Noyelle/Getty

Speaking on CTMU Radio, he said: “Yes. Yes, the reality has an identity. The identity is that as which something exists. Matter of fact, when you say the word reality, you’re naming an identity. You’re identifying something.”

Langan elaborated on how his theory supports the idea of a divine presence, explaining that the properties of reality correspond with those traditionally attributed to God.

“That’s what the CTMU says. It just comes up, with a mathematical structure that you need to build a reality out of that,” he said.

Langan continued: “So, you come up with that identity and then you search it for its properties. Once you’ve built the preliminary framework, you start deducing the properties of this identity and you find out that those properties match those of God, as described in most of the world’s major religions.”

Langan’s perspective reframes God not as a personified being but as the identity underlying the interconnected properties of reality.

In a separate appearance on the Theories of Everything podcast with Curt Jaimungal, Langan shared his beliefs about death and what follows.

He described death as the end of one’s relationship with their physical body, but not the end of existence itself.

“That’s the termination of your relationship with your particular physical body that you have at this present time,” he said.

“When you are retracted from this reality, you go back up toward the origin of reality. You can be provided with a substitute body, another kind of terminal body that allows you to keep on existing.”

GettyImages-1309914466.jpgReligion has inspired some of the greatest art in the world. Credit: Heritage Images/Getty

According to Langan, the essence of consciousness continues beyond physical death, returning to what he calls the “origin of reality.” This, however, does not align with traditional notions of an afterlife.

He likened the post-death state to meditation, explaining: “Now you’re basically meditating, seeing everything change. However, you exist that way right now.

“Arguably, all of your lifetimes, if you were to be reincarnated again and again and again, all of those reincarnations are meta-simultaneous. There is a sense in which they all occur at once in the non-terminal domain.”

 

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