Dani Alves’ trial for rape begins in Spanish court
The former Barcelona and Brazil player Dani Alves went on trial on Monday, a year after he was arrested for allegedly raping a woman at a nightclub.
The 40-year-old has been in pre-trial custody for more than a year since he was detained for allegedly sexually assaulting the woman in Barcelona on the night of 31 December 2022. He denies any wrongdoing. State prosecutors are seeking a nine-year prison sentence for Alves if convicted while the lawyers representing his accuser want 12 years.
Dressed in a white dress shirt and jeans, Alves took a seat in the courtroom after arriving in a police van. His mother was also present at the Barcelona court. After a short recess when the courtroom was emptied, Alves’s mother blew her son a kiss and made a heart-shaped gesture as Alves was escorted in handcuffs back inside.
The court ordered the accuser’s testimony on Monday be behind closed doors with no media access and no image of her can be taken to protect her identity. That decision came after a video emerged on social media last month that allegedly identified the woman. A screen was placed between the accuser and Alves when she testified and the court ordered the video recording of her testimony be pixelated and her voice distorted as preventive measures to ensure her privacy in case of a leak.
In testimony given to state prosecutors last year, the woman said she met Alves late at the Sutton nightclub in one of Barcelona’s upscale neighbourhoods after midnight. She accompanied him into a VIP area and into a private bathroom where he allegedly slapped her, used insulting language and raped her, according to her testimony given to prosecutors.
“My client has finally been able to testify and put an end to this,” the woman’s lawyer, Ester García, told reporters outside the court afterwards. “She has been very brave to get this far.” García added that an attempt by Alves’s legal team to reach a deal so he could avoid the trial had not prospered since her client “did not agree with the sentence” proposed for the player. She refused to reveal the details of what Alves’s team offered.
Two women, a friend and a cousin, who accompanied the woman to the nightclub testified that when she exited the bathroom she was distraught and told them that Alves had “hurt her badly”. Workers at the nightclub also gave testimony.
Alves will testify on Wednesday, the trial’s last day. Before he was indicted by an investigative judge in August, Alves’s lawyers tried unsuccessfully to discredit testimony by his accuser and other witnesses by presenting security camera footage from the nightclub. The court has said that any alleged flirting should not “in any way justify an eventual sexual assault”.
Alves has modified his defence several times. At first, he denied having ever seen the woman when he went dancing on the night in question. Upon his arrest, he denied any sexual contact with her, only to admit three months later to a sexual encounter that he said was consented to by the woman. He said he had been trying to save his marriage by not admitting to the sexual encounter initially.
In the only interview Alves has given since his arrest, he told the Spanish newspaper La Vanguardia in June that “my conscience is clear about what happened that early morning … what happened and what did not happen. And what did not happen is that I forced that woman to do what we did.”
Alves, whose legal name is Daniel Alves, has changed attorneys three times. At the trial he is represented by Inés Guardiola, who was hired in October.
Alves was arrested on 20 January 2023 after answering a police summons during a visit to Spain. A court ordered him to be jailed after analysing the initial police investigation and hearing testimony from the alleged victim, witnesses and the player himself. Three days after his arrest, Alves was transferred by officials for safety reasons about 45 minutes north-west of Barcelona. He has been there since.
Alves’s requests for bail were denied because the court considered him a flight risk, despite his offer to hand over his passport and wear a tracking device. Brazil does not extradite its own citizens when they are sentenced in other countries. The trial is before a three-judge panel presided over by the magistrate Isabel Delgado. Twenty-two witnesses, including those called by the defence, are scheduled for Tuesday before the court hears Alves, along with experts, on Wednesday.
Under Spanish law, the crime of sexual assault takes in a wide array of crimes from online abuse and groping to rape, each with different possible punishments. A case of rape can carry a maximum sentence of 15 years. Alves has been ordered to set aside €150,000 to pay his alleged victim if he is found guilty and ordered to pay damages.
In his football career, Alves won major titles with Barcelona, Juventus and Paris Saint-Germain. He also helped Brazil to win two Copa América trophies and an Olympic gold medal. He played at his third World Cup, the only major title he has not won, in 2022. The right-back was a key part of Barcelona’s golden years while playing from 2008 to 2016. He won the Champions League three times with the club, which he briefly rejoined in 2022. Alves’s contract with the Mexican club Pumas UNAM was terminated immediately after his arrest.
Source: The Guardian/AP