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The New German Law on Sexual Assault and Sexual Harassment

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 March 2019

Abstract

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In 2016, the German parliament changed the law on sexual assault and rape (Sect. 177 StGB). The new law assumes a “no-means-no”-model, while the old law required coercion as a necessary feature of rape and other forms of sexual assaults. In addition, two new offense descriptions were introduced: sexual harassment (Sect. 184i StGB) and offenses out of groups (Sect. 184j StGB). In this Article, I describe the deficiencies of the old law, the process of law reform, and the newly enacted prohibitions.

Type
German Jurisprudence
Copyright
Copyright © 2017 by German Law Journal, Inc. 

References

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2 For a much more comprehensive example of reform, see the English Sexual Offences Act 2003, c. 42 (Eng.).Google Scholar

3 Offense descriptions in the Strafgesetzbuch [StGB] [Penal Code] either prescribe lower and upper limits for sentencing ranges or set a lower limit. In the latter case, the upper limit is always the general maximum of fifteen years imprisonment. See Strafgesetzbuch [StGB] [Penal Code] § 38 (2). Life sentences are rare in the StGB—they are only applicable if the victim is killed. For sexual offenses, see Strafgesetzbuch [StGB] [Penal Code] §§ 176b, 178 (Austria).Google Scholar

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33 His ex-girlfriend accused him of rape, but the suspicion arose that she had inflicted the bruises on herself. Kachelmann was acquitted. He is now busy waging a war of revenge—by means of civil suits—against the media and his ex-girlfriend. See Jörg Kachelmann, Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jörg_Kachelmann (last visited Oct. 10, 2017).Google Scholar

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39 As a rule, see infra Sections II—IV (showing exemptions to the rule).Google Scholar

40 Hörnle, supra note 19, at 17; Hörnle, supra note 20, Goltdammer's Archiv [GA] 326.Google Scholar

41 Bundesrat Drucksachen [BR] 162/16, 2 (Ger.).Google Scholar

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44 Judgment of June 2, 1982 at 2264; Judgment of Nov. 8, 2011 at 268.Google Scholar

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48 But see also infra Section II (discussing StGB, § 177 (2), No. 2).Google Scholar

49 For the upper limit, see Strafgesetzbuch [StGB] [Penal Code] § 38 (2) (Austria).Google Scholar

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54 § 240 (IV) old law.Google Scholar

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61 Under circumstances exactly like the Judgment of June 2, 1982, the use of the pistol would considerably raise the punishment for the sexual assault. See Strafgesetzbuch [StGB] [Penal Code] § 177 (8), No. 4 (Austria). In this provision, the law does not demand that the weapon is used against the victim. If, however, the offender beats a person close to the victim with his fists, such an outburst of violence could only be considered as an implicit threat to injure the victim. See id. at No. 2. But this will not always be the case; in Judgment of June 2, 1982, the offender began talking about his continuing love to the victim.Google Scholar

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74 See Plenarprotokoll [Parliament, Protocols of Plenary Sessions], Deutscher Bundestag: Drucksachen [BT], 18/183, 18024. Another point of controversy were additions in the laws on asylum and residence which, following the extension of Sect. 177 StGB, make extradition possible if offenders have been convicted of sexual assault. This is mainly a symbolic change as the vast majority of extradition orders are not enforced in real life. But because symbolic gestures are becoming increasingly important in the contemporary German political climate, this point was strongly contested by the Opposition.Google Scholar

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78 The sentence range in Section 231 varies from a fine to imprisonment up to three years.Google Scholar