The Columbus Dispatch

Spanish judges on defensive after sex-assault ruling protests

- By Raphael Minder

MADRID — Judges in Spain defended the country’s judicial system after mass protests extended into the weekend in Pamplona, Spain, against what many saw as a light sentence in a sexual assault case.

On Saturday, more than 35,000 people gathered in Pamplona to protest a court sentence that found five men guilty of sexually abusing a woman in 2016, during the city’s bull-running festival, but not of raping her.

Enormous protests also took place in Madrid and other cities after Thursday’s ruling, which has been seen as a landmark case about women’s rights in Spain.

The prosecutio­n had sought a nearly 23-year sentence for gang rape and other charges. Instead, the five men, who called themselves the wolf pack, were each given nine years in prison for sex abuse.

Under Spain’s criminal code, rape must involve violence or intimidati­on, and the woman was portrayed during the trial as having consented to unprotecte­d sex. That led protesters to denounce what they called a patriarcha­l judiciary amid signs reading, “Do we have to die to prove rape?”

On Saturday, an associatio­n of Spanish judges issued a statement calling for the resignatio­n of Rafael Catala, the Spanish justice minister, for making “unacceptab­le declaratio­ns” that they said undermined the independen­ce of the judiciary. Catala initially called for “respect toward legal sentences,” but following the protests, he questioned the handling of the case.

After Thursday’s verdict, the Spanish government said it planned to review how sex assault is defined in Spain’s criminal code, which dates from 1995.

The justice minister urged Spain’s judicial watchdog to review the stance of one of the three judges who ruled in Pamplona, after he called for the five men to be absolved.

But the head of that watchdog group, Carlos Lesmes, a justice on the Supreme Court, firmly rejected such criticism as an unjustifie­d attempt to discredit the judiciary.

While allowing that “every legal decision is without a doubt subject to public criticism,” Lesmes said that “when the criticisms are dismissive and come from people who hold public responsibi­lities, that seriously undermines the trust that our judicial system deserves to receive from citizens.”

The judges also noted that Spain’s legal system allowed the victim, whose name has not been disclosed, to appeal the ruling before a regional court and, if she wishes, to Spain’s Supreme Court.

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