Spain's Supreme Court to settle Wolf Pack sex abuse case

Spains Supreme Court to settle Wolf Pack sex abuse case
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Highlights

Spain's Supreme Court considered on Friday whether to uphold a ruling that cleared five young men of gang-raping a teenager at a bull-running festival, concluding a case that triggered mass protests and calls to change the law.

Spain's Supreme Court considered on Friday whether to uphold a ruling that cleared five young men of gang-raping a teenager at a bull-running festival, concluding a case that triggered mass protests and calls to change the law.

The woman, who was 18 at the time, and the men, who called themselves the "Wolf Pack", have both appealed to Spain's highest court after a regional court sentenced the gang to nine years each over the lesser charge of sexual abuse.

The woman's lawyer, who says she was raped in a doorway in the early hours of the morning at the 2016 San Fermin festival, called for 15-year sentences, plus two years and nine months for robbery with intimidation for each of the accused and a further 250,000 euro ($226,000) compensation for the plaintiff.

The Supreme Court, whose proceedings were broadcast live on national TV, was initially expected to reach a verdict later on Friday although a court official said that this could potentially be delayed.

Fragments of video from the men's mobile phones taken at the scene were used as evidence in the original trial, alongside biological tests.

The regional court heard they had shared videos of the incident in a WhatsApp group and joked about it shortly afterwards. The teenager was found crying on a bench by a couple who rang the police when she said she had been attacked.

The defendants' lawyers say sex was consensual. "The victim could have said 'No'," lawyer Agustin Martinez said.

However, the woman's lawyers say she was raped and had not fought against the men due to the shock and fear she experienced. "Nobody can grab, throw or push anyone without applying force.

They applied enough force to bend the will of the victim," a lawyer for the city of Pamplona, Victor Sarasa, told the court on Friday.

A rape charge in Spain requires a plaintiff to present evidence of intimidation or specific violence such as being threatened with a knife or dealt physical blows.

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