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Spanish court overturns football player Dani Alves' rape conviction on appeal

Spanish court overturns football player Dani Alves' rape conviction on appeal

Euronews29-03-2025

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Brazilian soccer player Dani Alves has won his appeal against a sexual assault conviction as a Spanish court overturned the ruling in a case that lasted more than three years and saw the former Barcelona defender spend 14 months in jail.
Alves was found guilty in February 2024 of raping a woman in a nightclub in December 2022 and sentenced to four years, six months in prison.
Alves denied wrongdoing during the three-day trial.
That court ruled that there was 'insufficient evidence' to rule out Alves' presumption of innocence.
'Dani Alves is innocent and that has been proven,' his defence lawyer Inés Guardiola told Catalan radio RAC1. 'Justice has finally been served.'
The Alves trial was the first high-profile case since Spain overhauled its laws in 2022 to make consent central to defining a sex crime in response to an upswell of protests after a gang-rape case during the San Fermin bull-running festival in Pamplona in 2016.
Brazilian football player Dani Alves leaves Brians 2 penitentiary in Sant Esteve Sesrovires near Barcelona, 25 March, 2024
AP Photo
The legislation popularly known as the 'only yes means yes' law defines consent as an explicit expression of a person's will, making it clear that silence or passivity do not equal consent.
But the four judges of a Barcelona-based appeals court ruled unanimously to overturn the conviction after reviewing the evidence and testimonies given to the lower court.
In their ruling, they wrote that the testimony of the plaintiff 'differed notably' from evidence of video footage taken before the woman and Alves entered the bathroom where she said he forced her to have sex without her consent.
Alves, now 41, was kept in jail from January 2023 until March 2024 until he was released after paying €1 million for bail while awaiting his appeal.
He also handed over his passports, with prosecutors having argued against releasing him on bail because of a possible flight risk.
Prosecutors wanted his prison sentence increased to nine years while the victim's lawyer wanted him to stay behind bars for 12 years.
This decision could be appealed to the Spanish supreme court in Madrid.

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