A Danish man convicted of raping his 14-year-old
daughter has avoided jail after a sleeping judge prompted a retrial. The result
of an initial trial was quashed on Tuesday after two prison guards spotted one
of three lay judges snoozing during an important witness testimony.
“The day when the most important witness was
examined, he was sleeping,” said the man’s lawyer Henrik Stagetorn.
The father, who cannot be named for legal reasons,
was sentenced to five years in prison by the Eastern High Court in Copenhagen
in November last year. But the Supreme Court ordered a retrial in September
after one of three lay judges was allegedly sleeping during the initial trial. The
incident took place when the lights were switched off and the curtains drawn so
that the court could view video interrogations of the man's three children. Danish
high court cases that can lead to prison sentences are decided by three lay
judges and three professional legal judges.
The Danish man was previously convicted by four
votes to two, but on Tuesday after the retrial, was acquitted of raping his
daughter by five votes to one. "There was also some other information,”
added Mr Stagetorn. “Something had happened to the main witness that could
weaken her credibility.” The case was held behind locked doors, meaning some
information was withheld from the public.
The man was however sentenced to 10 months in prison
for using violence against two of his other children, but because he had
already been in custody for 28 months, was released
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