A former surgeon who admitted sexually abusing hundreds of children in France has been sentenced to 20 years in prison.
Joel Le Scouarnec, 74, was found guilty of raping and sexually assaulting 299 children in one of France‘s largest-ever child sex abuse cases.
Most of the victims were abused while under anaesthesia or waking up from operations, with an almost equal number of boys and girls.
He was accused of 300 separate offences – 111 rapes and 189 sexual assaults – in more than a dozen hospitals between 1989 and 2014.
Prosecutors described Le Scouarnec as “a devil in a white coat” and requested the maximum sentence of 20 years in prison.
“I’m aware that the harm I’ve caused is beyond repair,” Le Scouarnec said at the opening of his trial in February.
“I owe it to all these people and their loved ones to admit my actions and their consequences, which they’ve endured and will keep having to endure all their lives.”
The criminal court ordered Le Scouarnec should serve at least two-thirds of the sentence before he can be eligible for release.
Presiding Judge Aude Buresi said Le Scouarnec had preyed on victims when they were at their most vulnerable.
“Your acts were a blind spot in the medical world, to the extent that your colleagues, the medical authorities, were incapable of stopping your actions,” the judge told Le Scouarnec.
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Le Scouarnec has confessed to all the sexual abuse alleged by the 299 civil parties, as well as to other assaults that are now beyond the statute of limitations.
He kept detailed records of the abuse he inflicted in notebooks and diaries and some only became aware they had been abused when contacted by investigators after their names appeared in his journals.
Others only realised they had been hospitalised at the time by checking their medical journals. Two victims took their own lives years before the trial.
“I didn’t see them as people,” he told the court during the trial.
“They were the destination of my fantasies. As the trial went on, I began to see them as individuals, with emotions, anger, suffering and distress.”
Le Scouarnec was never investigated during his career, despite being sentenced in 2005 for owning child sexual abuse images.
He was only apprehended after he retired in 2017 when his six-year-old neighbour told her mother he had sexually abused her while she was playing in the garden of her home.
When the police searched Le Scouarnec’s house they found 300,000 indecent photos and videos of children, 70 child-sized dolls and hundreds of notebooks and diaries detailing his acts of abuse.
Le Scouarnec is already serving a 15-year prison sentence for a 2020 conviction for the rape and sexual assault of four children, including two nieces.
Dozens of victims and rights campaigners gathered outside the courthouse in Brittany ahead of the verdict with a banner made of hundreds of pieces of white paper with black silhouettes – one for each victim. Some papers featured a first name and age, while others referred to the victim as “Anonymous”.
The local prosecutor has opened a separate investigation to ascertain if there was any criminal liability by agencies or individuals who could have prevented the abuse.
“This trial, which could have served as an open-air laboratory to expose the serious failings of our institutions, seems to leave no mark on the government, the medical community, or society at large,” a group of victims said in a statement before the verdict.
Another trial is expected in the future after the emergence of new allegations during Le Scouarnec’s trial, including further abuse involving his granddaughter.
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