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Pelicot’s Daughter Pursues Conviction That He Raped Her, Too

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The Unimaginable Betrayal: Caroline Darian’s Fight for Justice and Healing

The day her father, Dominique Pelicot, and 50 other men were convicted of raping her mother, Gisèle Pelicot, in a high-profile trial in France, Caroline Darian felt anything but relief. For Caroline, the verdict marked not just the end of a grueling legal battle but also the start of a painful journey to seek justice for her own unresolved trauma. As she left the Avignon courthouse, she was met with a sea of women cheering and chanting support for her and her mother, who had become a symbol of resilience and courage in France for her refusal to remain silent about the horrors she endured. Yet, amidst the cacophony of solidarity, Caroline felt only overwhelming despair. The trial, which had laid bare the brutal crimes committed against her mother, had left her with unanswered questions and unacknowledged pain. Her father, she believes, had not only abused her mother but also drugged and raped her—a truth she felt was marginalized during the proceedings.

A Daughter’s Unheard Suffering

The trial had meticulously examined the decade-long abuse Gisèle Pelicot suffered at the hands of her husband, Dominique. He had drugged her with sleeping pills and anti-anxiety medication, raped her while she was unconscious, and even invited strangers to participate, documenting the atrocities through photos and videos. Yet, Caroline’s own allegations of abuse—her suspicions that she, too, had been drugged and assaulted by her father—were barely addressed. To her, it felt as though her case did not matter, as though her trauma was invisible. “My case, in that court, it was like it didn’t exist,” she later recounted. This erasure has left her with deep emotional wounds, a sense of betrayal that lingers long after the trial concluded.

Caroline’s allegations are supported by disturbing evidence: two intimate photos of her sleeping, retrieved from her father’s electronics, showed her in a state of vulnerability. The underwear she wore in the photos, she claimed, was not hers, and she had no memory of the pictures being taken—a detail that strengthens her belief that she was drugged. Investigators also uncovered a folder titled “My naked daughter” and photo collages of Caroline and her mother, shared online with strangers. These findings, paired with her father’s cryptic Skype exchanges—where he referred to his “trapped daughter”—paint a chilling picture of exploitation. Still, during the trial, Dominique Pelicot was only convicted of taking the photos without Caroline’s consent, a charge that fell far short of acknowledging the severity of the crimes she believed he committed.

A Fight for the Truth and Justice

Determined to uncover the truth, Caroline filed her own police complaint against her father earlier this month, accusing him of rape and sexual assault. This move coincided with the publication of her second book, which details the crimes committed by her father and the devastating impact they have had on her life. Her first book, a raw and deeply personal account of the year following her father’s arrest, is set to be released in the United States under the title “I’ll Never Call Him Dad Again.” In it, she chronicles her struggle to come to terms with the shattered image of her father and the fractured relationship with her mother, who has become a feminist icon but remains ambivalent about Caroline’s allegations.

For Caroline, the fight for justice is not just about legal accountability but also about claiming her truth in a world that often silences victims of abuse. “He owed me the truth,” she said of her father. “I am not just any victim. I was his daughter.” Her 30-page police complaint includes evidence uncovered by investigators, such as transcripts of her father’s Skype conversations, where he Decompartmentalized about offering his daughter to strangers over the course of eight years. These details, though not adequately addressed during the trial, form the basis of her case. Yet, her father’s lawyer maintains that there is insufficient evidence to prosecute him for the crimes Caroline alleges, leaving her in a limbo of uncertainty and pain.

A Family Torn Apart by Betrayal

The trial has left Caroline’s family in shambles. Her parents, who had been together for 50 years and had appeared to have a happy marriage, are now at the center of a nightmare. Caroline’s mother, Gisèle, has refused to speak publicly about the case, and the two are no longer in contact. For Caroline, this silence feels like abandonment. “My relationship with my mother will never be the same again,” she said. Her younger brother, Florian Pelicot, has also been deeply affected by the revelations, his 18-year marriage ending in the aftermath of the trial. He believes their mother’s strength in confronting the crimes committed against her has come at a cost, as acknowledging Caroline’s accusations may have been too much for her to bear. “You can’t save yourself and rebuild yourself and also help your children to rebuild themselves too,” he said.

Caroline’s eldest nephew has also filed a police complaint, accusing Dominique of sexual abuse, while her father has been linked to two cold cases involving young women in the 1990s—one of whom was raped and murdered. These developments have only deepened Caroline’s resolve to see her father held fully accountable for his actions. In a final, desperate attempt to confront him during the trial, Caroline approached her father in the courtroom and told him their relationship was over but that her pursuit of the truth was not. “I’ll go all the way for my personal dignity,” she said. “Because I know I’m not wrong. I know that he must have done some very serious things. And I’ll get to the bottom of it.” For Caroline Darian, the fight for justice is far from over, but it is a fight she is determined to see through, no matter the cost.

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