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Spain: 'Wolf Pack' rapists in court again

John Silk with AP
November 18, 2019

Four men who were found guilty of raping a teenager at the San Fermin Festival have now been accused of a separate crime. The new trial began with the prosecution alleging the group sexually abused an unconscious woman.

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Spanish court in Cordoba
Image: imago images/Agencia EFE/R. Alcaide

Four men who were convicted of raping an 18-year-old woman during Spain's San Fermin festival in Pamplona pleaded not guilty on Monday in a separate case of sexual abuse.

The men, who had a WhatsApp group named "La Manada," which translates to "The Animal Pack" or "The Wolf Pack," are currently serving 15-year sentences given to them by the Supreme Court for a rape which occurred during the famous bull-running festival in July 2016.

Read more: Spain's Pamplona launches app to stop sexual assaults at bull-running festival

In the new case, Spanish daily El Pais reported the group are accused of sexually assaulting a 21-year-old woman after a night out in the Spanish province of Cordoba, just weeks before the crime in northern Spain.

Men plead not guilty, won't testify

The incident occurred in the early hours of May 1, 2016, when the victim got into the car of the four men, after having met them in a tent at an annual fair in Torrecampo. In the car, she fell unconscious on the way to her hometown, Pozoblanco. This is when the alleged crime occurred and was recorded on one of the defendant's cell phones and later distributed in two chat groups.

Members of the group known as La Manada The Wolfpack, appear before the judges during the first session of their trial at the court in Cordoba
The men are already in prison for raping a teenagerImage: imago images/Agencia EFE/R. Alcaide

However, the lawyer of the accused said these videos cannot be considered as they were obtained in violation of the right to effective judicial protection and the right to privacy of communications.

The men pleaded not guilty and exercised their right not to testify.

The Pamplona rape verdict earned notoriety across Spain as the men were convicted of a lesser charge, prompting mass nationwide protests in April 2018. However, in June this year the Supreme Court increased the initial sentence from 9 to 15 years for the crime of gang raping the woman.

The case may yet have further ramifications with pressure on the Spanish government to implement legal reform over its rape laws.

Protests erupt after 'wolf pack' sex gang acquitted of rape

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John Silk Editor and writer for English news, as well as the Culture and Asia Desks.@JSilk