Woman raped at knifepoint in Portugal gives
evidence in Christian Brückner trial
Main suspect in Madeleine McCann case in court in
Germany charged with three rapes and two indecent assaults
Kate
Connolly in Braunschweig
Wed 15 May
2024 16.10 CEST
A woman who
was raped at knifepoint by a masked man in Portugal 20 years ago has told a
German court trying the main suspect in the disappearance of Madeleine McCann
how she had feared for her life and had to shut down her emotions to deal with
the ordeal.
Hazel
Behan, 40, described how a man dressed in black had entered her holiday
apartment in Praia da Rocha in the Algarve at 3am on 16 June 2004, stood over
her bed and called her name before starting the hours-long attack. Delivering a
harrowing and graphic account through an interpreter for more than 80 minutes,
Behan had to pause several times as she became emotional, describing the
incident, which occurred when she was 20 and working as a holiday
representative.
She was
giving evidence at the trial in Braunschweig, northern Germany, of Christian
Brückner, 47, who is accused of three rapes and two indecent assaults in
incidents all alleged to have taken place in Portugal between December 2000 and
June 2017. The incidents involve five women and girls aged between 10 and 80
years old.
Behan came
forward to offer the account of her ordeal to British police in 2020 after
learning of Brückner’s conviction in 2019 for the rape of an elderly American
tourist after noticing striking similarities in the method of the attack.
A year
later German authorities declared Brückner the main suspect in the 2007
disappearance of Madeleine. “I felt a fear that I could never have thought
possible,” she told the court, describing the moment she realised she was being
attacked.
“The blood
rushed from my body. I felt it would last for ever. I was just trying to
figure, how am I going to get out of this?”
She
described how she was repeatedly raped, whipped and tied up in her apartment,
with the attacker filming her on a camera he had set up on the television in
her room. “I thought: why would you want a video of this?”
She coped
with the ordeal by trying to close down her feelings, she said. “There are
moments where you have to completely shut off and that was the moment in which
I shut off,” she said.
After she
was dragged to a bathroom, she watched from under a sheet as her attacker
retreated backwards out of the apartment through the balcony door, slipped into
his shoes, which he had left there, and fled.
Behan was
due to continue giving evidence on Wednesday afternoon.
Brückner,
who denies the sexual assault charges and also denies involvement in
Madeleine’s disappearance, sat metres away from Behan, wearing the same grey
linen jacket with elbow pads and open necked shirt he has worn throughout the
trial. He appeared to listen to her account, his chin resting on the fingers of
his left hand for the majority of it, but showed no reaction.
Brückner is
currently in prison for the rape of the American tourist and is due for release
next year.
German
police first began focusing on Brückner in 2013, asking him to speak with them
in relation to the disappearance of Madeleine. Although he was named as their
main suspect in her disappearance, they have not been explicit as to their
reasons for saying so. They have continued to pursue the case, going so far as
to say they did not believe Madeleine was alive any more.
Wednesday’s
hearing was delayed for more than an hour after Brückner’s defence lawyer,
Friedrich Fülscher, lodged an objection to the official translation of Behan’s
2020 interview with Germany’s criminal police, the BKA. He claimed that the
police officer who had interviewed her had not been qualified to do so, thus
rendering the interview null and void.
The judge,
Uta Engemann, rejected the objection, paving the way for Behan to give her
evidence. More than 40 witnesses are due to take the stand in the case, which
is expected to run until October.
German
prosecutors have rejected protestations from Brückner’s lawyers that he will
not get a fair trial because of the connection prosecutors have long since made
between him and the McCann case.
The court
case is being overseen by a judge and two lay judges, but no jury is involved.
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