French court jails 3 rugby players for 12 to 14 years over rape

A French court Friday jailed three rugby players formerly with French side Grenoble for 12 to 14 years over the 2017 rape of a student after a drunken night out. (X/@lequipe)
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Updated 14 December 2024
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French court jails 3 rugby players for 12 to 14 years over rape

  • It sentenced Irishman Denis Coulson, 30, and Frenchman Loick Jammes, 30, to 14 years behind bars, and New Zealander Rory Grice, 34, to 12 years in jail
  • None of the three had been in detention until now

BORDEAUX: A French court Friday jailed three rugby players formerly with French side Grenoble for 12 to 14 years over the 2017 rape of a student after a drunken night out.
It sentenced Irishman Denis Coulson, 30, and Frenchman Loick Jammes, 30, to 14 years behind bars, and New Zealander Rory Grice, 34, to 12 years in jail.
None of the three had been in detention until now.
Coulson had stopped playing rugby and was working in construction, while Jammes and Grice have been playing for Provence Rugby and Oyonnax, two French clubs in second division.
Gaessy Gros, one of the lawyers representing the victim, said the ruling “gave a very strong signal to men in this country, to the rugby world, and to women.”
Coulson’s lawyer Corinne Dreyfus-Schmidt said she was “extremely shocked” by the verdict.
She and attorneys for Jammes and Grice said they would appeal.
The court in the southwestern city of Bordeaux also handed a four-year sentence, including two years suspended, to ex-Ireland international 31-year-old Chris Farrel over failure to prevent the crime.
Farrel, who has also been playing for Oyonnax, was to serve his two years under house arrest with an electronic bracelet.
New Zealander Dylan Hayes, now 30 and unemployed, received a two-year suspended sentence, also for not intervening to stop the rape.
In the small hours of March 12, 2017, the student, identified only as V., was in tears as she left a hotel on the outskirts of Bordeaux, where the Grenoble team spent the night after losing a Top 14 encounter against local side Bordeaux-Begles.
V. filed a complaint with police, saying she had met the players in a bar together with two friends and accompanied them to a nightclub where all of them drank heavily.
The student said she had no recollection of how she got from the club to the hotel where she woke up, undressed on a bed and abused.
She saw two undressed men in the room and others fully dressed.
Coulson, Jammes and Grice stated they had an encounter with V. but claimed it was consensual and the student had been pro-active in bringing it about.
On the basis of statements from the accused and witnesses, as well as a video shot by Coulson, investigators have concluded there were several incidents of abuse.
CCTV footage showed her having difficulty standing up as she arrived at the hotel and being propped up by a player.
Gros argued during the trial V. was “in no state to give her consent as these men who carried her, who were with her, know perfectly well.”
Coulson’s lawyer, Dreyfus-Schmidt on Wednesday said her client had apologized to the victim and his teammates too “because he feels responsible as it was him who led the young woman into the room.”
Rape accusations have shaken the world of international rugby recently.
An Argentine court on Tuesday dismissed rape charges against two French international rugby players accused of assaulting a woman after playing a match in the country in July.
Hugo Auradou and Oscar Jegou, both aged 21, were held for weeks in Argentina after the alleged July assault.
A 39-year-old woman, whom they met in a nightclub accused them of a vicious assault in a hotel room.
A judge in Mendoza dismissed the case on the advice of the prosecution, which called for the charges to be dropped over inconsistencies in the woman’s version of events. Her lawyer too is planning to appeal.


FIA’s United Against Online Abuse campaign welcomes Palestinian student

Updated 08 December 2025
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FIA’s United Against Online Abuse campaign welcomes Palestinian student

  • Ghada Ashour, 24, who grew up in Gaza, becomes fifth scholar selected for FIA’s flagship scholarship initiative

DUBAI: The FIA’s United Against Online Abuse campaign has welcomed Ghada Ashour, a 24-year-old student from Palestine, to its flagship scholarship program, created to empower the next generation of researchers in the fight against online abuse in sport.

Ashour grew up in Gaza where she had been studying remotely until gaining a place on the UAOA scholarship, which brought her to Dublin City University, Ireland.

Becoming the fifth scholar to join the program, she was selected based on her interests in social media, and passion for advancing insights in this area for the benefit of sportspeople.

Launched in 2023, the program offers talented students and young professionals from diverse backgrounds the chance to engage in research on the impact, prevalence, and prevention of online abuse in sport.

Funded by the FIA Foundation, the UAOA scholars have been selected to undertake research dedicated to positive social change.

Ashour’s thesis, which will be printed in English and Arabic, will focus specifically on the relationship between athlete activism and online abuse.

Athletes increasingly speak out on war, conflict, and social and environmental issues. Although the attention such athletes bring can be positive, research indicates it can lead to significant abuse.

FIA President Mohammed Ben Sulayem, founder of the UAOA campaign, said: “The FIA is committed to extending opportunities across the world while inspiring and developing the next generation.

“Education lies at the core of this mission, and I am pleased to welcome Ghada as the latest student in the UAOA Scholarship Programme.

“Her experience and research will help broaden the international perspective on this critical issue. This pioneering research program will help ensure we safeguard the future of sport for generations to come.”

Ashour said she was “truly grateful” to the FIA leader: “It is a dream come true to study the subject I am passionate about at a leading institution in this field.

“I am so excited to advance the field of research in online abuse in sport and to contribute to this prevalent topic which is impacting so many people’s lives on a daily basis.”

The UAOA’s 2025 Barometer Report found that 75 percent of sports federations report continued threats against competitors and their families, and that 90 percent believe abuse could force athletes to leave their sport.

Dublin City University is a leading academic institution in the study of online abuse.

Each scholar is fully funded and mentored by leading experts in the field. They are able to attend UAOA events, where they can share their findings with a global audience of policymakers, sports federations, and digital platforms.

The inaugural cohort of four UAOA scholars included participants from Italy, South Africa, the UK, and Mexico.