The Niezalezna.pl portal has obtained new information about the crime committed by Marcin J., suspected of raping a young policewoman who was his subordinate. We have decided to disclose these details due to an important public interest. We have received reports that a false narrative is being circulated among police officers, claiming that the victim voluntarily went to the room and even consented to sexual intercourse. This is an outright lie. Marcin J. used violence against her and even strangled the woman.
The shocking events took place at the Warsaw Police Preventive Unit, in the barracks in Piaseczno, where a young policewoman was raped. The crime occurred in the early hours of Saturday, January 3. Neither the prosecution nor the police want to disclose the details of this brutal offense.
The Niezalezna.pl portal has learned new facts about the crime against the young officer, whose privacy we will protect. However, due to the important public interest, we decided to reveal the information we obtained. We learned that a version is being circulated among police officers suggesting that the victim voluntarily went to the room where Marcin J. was staying and may even have consented to sexual intercourse. This is a blatant lie.
In the middle of the night, the policewoman was summoned by her superior. When she entered the room, he locked the door from the inside. Using violence and strangling the woman, despite her unequivocal resistance, he committed a brutal crime.
Marcin J. has been charged under Article 197, paragraphs 1 and 2, of the Criminal Code.
Article 197
§ 1. Whoever forces another person to engage in sexual intercourse by violence, unlawful threat, deception, or in any other manner despite the lack of consent, shall be subject to imprisonment for a term of 2 to 15 years.
The detention hearing took place on January 5 at the District Court in Piaseczno (case no. IIKp 2/26), and the panel was presided over by Judge Karolina Mirska-Cieśla. The hearing was attended by Prosecutor Tomasz Rybak from the District Prosecutor’s Office in Piaseczno. The investigation was initiated there but was later taken over by the District Prosecutor’s Office in Warsaw.
We also refute the claim that other police officers—reacting to the victim’s screams—forced the door open. Indeed, they heard her calls for help, but limited their response to knocking on the door and demanding that it be opened. They did not take more decisive action. They allowed Marcin J. to leave the barracks and return home. He was arrested several hours later.
