Saturday, December 20, 2025 - A German court has found a man guilty of repeatedly drugging, raping and filming his wife over several years, before sharing the videos online without her knowledge. The case has drawn comparisons to the high-profile Dominique Pelicot trial in France and has reignited debate around consent laws and online sexual violence in Europe.
The defendant, identified as Fernando P., a 61-year-old
school janitor, was convicted by a court in Aachen, western Germany. The court
found that he secretly sedated his wife in their marital home, sexually abused
her while she was unconscious, recorded the assaults and distributed the
footage on internet platforms and in group chats.
He was sentenced to eight years and six months in prison. The
court said an appeal could be filed within one week.
In its ruling, the court stated that the man violated “the
most intimate sphere of private life and personal rights” in 34 cases,
including four instances involving aggravated rape and dangerous bodily harm.
He was also convicted of aggravated sexual coercion and sexual assault. Some
additional charges were dismissed, though details were not made public.
The crimes were found to have taken place between 2018 and
2024, though prosecutors had alleged abuse spanning nearly 15 years.
The verdict comes exactly one year after Frenchman Dominique
Pelicot was convicted of aggravated rape for orchestrating the abuse of his
former wife by dozens of men over nearly a decade. That case shocked the world
and triggered widespread debate in France over misogyny and gender-based
violence.
Campaigners in Germany have described the Aachen case as
highly significant. Advocacy group Nur Ja Heisst Ja (“Only Yes Means Yes”) said
it exposes serious gaps in Germany’s sexual violence laws, particularly in
cases involving drugged victims who are unable to give or withhold consent.
Under German law, consent has traditionally been interpreted
through a “no means no” standard. Campaigners argue this framework fails
victims who are unconscious or incapacitated and are pushing for a “yes means
yes” model that requires explicit consent.
Activists have also highlighted another legal gap: the
possession of rape videos is currently not illegal in Germany. The Aachen case
has intensified calls for reform, with some regional justice officials already
pushing for legislation to criminalize possession of such material.
Beyond Germany, lawmakers and advocates across Europe say the
case reflects a wider problem fuelled by online platforms. They warn that
websites and chatrooms hosting abusive content function as spaces where
perpetrators share methods, normalize violence and encourage one another.
Campaigners argue that stronger laws, stricter online
regulation and greater accountability are urgently needed to combat what they
describe as an ecosystem that enables sexual violence to thrive

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