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25 Feb 2025 17:12
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  •   Home > News > Law and Order

    Former French surgeon on trial for allegedly sexually assaulting 299 patients

    Joel Le Scouarnec faces charges of aggravated rape and sexual assault against hundreds of victims, most of them children at the time of the alleged offence. WARNING: This story contains distressing details.


    WARNING: This story contains disturbing details of sexual abuse

    A former surgeon accused of raping or sexually assaulting hundreds of young patients, some while they were under anaesthetic, has gone on trial in France's largest-ever child sexual abuse case.

    Joel Le Scouarnec, 74, faces charges of aggravated rape and sexual assault against 299 victims, most of them children at the time.

    Dr Le Scouarnec was handed a suspended four-month jail sentence for possessing child abuse material in 2005, but managed to secure a job as a surgeon at a public hospital in Quimperle, western France, the following year.

    He continued to work in public hospitals until his re-arrest in 2017 on suspicion of raping his six-year-old neighbour. 

    Police investigators searching his home found a cache of dolls, wigs and child abuse material. They also discovered electronic diaries that appeared to detail his sexual assaults on scores of patients in hospitals across the region.

    In 2020, Dr Le Scouarnec was found guilty of the rape and sexual assault of his child neighbour, as well as two of his nieces and a four-year-old patient, and sentenced to 15 years in jail.

    Following further investigations into the alleged victims logged on his files, prosecutors eventually charged Dr Le Scouarnec with the aggravated rape and sexual assault of 299 people.

    Prosecutors say Dr Le Scouarnec has admitted to investigators many of the accusations he faces. 

    "The defendant admits responsibility for a vast majority of the acts [for which he has been charged]," his lawyer Maxime Tessier said on the first day of the four-month trial.

    Dr Le Scouarnec told the court "I've done hideous things". 

    He said he was "perfectly aware that these wounds cannot be erased or healed" and that he was ready to "take responsibility" for his actions.

    The trial takes place in Vannes, a small town in Brittany.

    Francois, who was 12 when Dr Le Scouarnec allegedly abused him, said he hoped the case would provide much-needed answers.

    "I feel betrayed by authorities," said Francois, who asked to be identified only by this name. 

    "Why did nobody stop this surgeon from working with children?"

    The health ministry did not respond to requests for comment from Reuters news agency.

    The proceedings come just two months after Dominique Pelicot was convicted of enlisting dozens of strangers to rape his heavily sedated wife Gisele Pelicot, who has since divorced him and become a feminist hero.

    Warnings ignored

    Soon after Dr Le Scouarnec secured a job at the Quimperle public hospital in 2006, a psychiatrist at the hospital alerted management to their concerns about the surgeon's behaviour, a court document showed.

    Dr Le Scouarnec continued to work with children.

    The Quimperle hospital did not respond to requests for comment on why Dr Le Scouarnec was hired after being convicted of holding child abuse images and why he was able to keep working after the psychiatrist raised their concerns.

    The Lorient prosecutor Stephane Kellenberger, whose office led the investigation into Dr Le Scouarnec's alleged crimes, has opened a separate probe into the possible criminal liability of other public bodies or individuals who could have prevented the abuse.

    The health ministry did not respond to a request for comment. 

    The National Council of the Order of Physicians (CNOM), which oversees adherence to doctors' code of ethics in France and has the power to discipline medics, declined to comment. 

    CNOM's local branch in the Finistere administrative department, which court documents show was aware of Dr Le Scouarnec's 2005 conviction, did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

    Reuters/AFP/ABC


    ABC




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