Alves Granted €1m Bail After Sexual Assault

Dani Alves

 

Former Brazil footballer Dani Alves has been granted release on bail for €1 million ($1.1m) upon appeal, a court in Barcelona, Spain, announced on Wednesday.

Alves, 40, was convicted of sexual assault last month and sentenced to four and a half years in prison, of which he had already served over a year.

His lawyer, Inés Guardiola, fought the ruling and, following a hearing on Tuesday, Alves has been released pending a final resolution in the appeal.

Alves’ release is also dependent on handing in his Spanish and Brazilian passports, remaining in Spain and agreeing to weekly court check-ins.

He also must adhere to a restraining order that prevents him from going within 1,000 metres of his victim, her home, her place of work or any other place she is known to frequent.

All parties involved — the defence, the victim’s legal team and the prosecution — have three days to appeal Wednesday’s ruling.

Ester García, the victim’s lawyer, expressed her disappointment with the ruling to Spanish outlet RAC1 after leaving the court.

“I am really dissatisfied with this decision,” she said. “We will file an appeal because we believe it is not in accordance with the law.

“Justice is being done for the rich. It is scandalous that they free someone because they can get €1 million in no time.”

On Tuesday, Guardiola argued that there was no risk of Alves fleeing the country or destroying evidence, while the former Barcelona player appeared via video link and insisted he was not a flight risk and was prepared to hand in his passports.

The prosecution, meanwhile, demanded a sentence of nine years, complaining that February’s four and a half year conviction was not sufficient punishment for the crime committed.

Alves was found guilty of sexually assaulting a woman in a Barcelona nightclub in 2022 following a 13-month investigation — during which time Alves remained in preventative pretrial prison — and a three-day trial last month.

Over the course of the trial, evidence was heard from the victim’s friend and cousin, Alves’ friend whom he was with the night of the crime, police officers who attended to the woman and a forensic psychologist who examined her.

Police said the victim was greatly shaken and told them she had been sexually assaulted by Alves, while the psychologist testified that she was suffering from post-traumatic symptoms, a conclusion that was disputed by an outside expert called by the defence.