On Tuesday a decision is made to release or sentence Danny Alves

Danny Alves is counting hours until tomorrow. Barcelona's Appeal Court will announce this Tuesday if the Brazilian defender can leave prison where he is suffering a month today for a suspected sexual assault. He's a prison named Brians 2. The footballer is convinced that he will be given [...]
He's a prison named Brians 2. The footballer is convinced he will be given four-month measures proposed in the appeal against the detention measure.
The defender, who has changed his version of the events several times, is accused of sexually assaulting a 23-year-old woman at a Sutton nightclub in Barcelona on 30 December.
The judge, having received statements from the parties, ordered Alves to be kept in outright custody, among other things, due to the high risk of escape due to his high economic capacity and because Spain does not have an extradition treaty with Brazil.
Precautions:
Alves' lawyer, Cristobal Martwell, filed an appeal a few days ago at the Barcelona Court of Appeals, hoping that he would be admitted and that the footballer could get out of prison and protect his innocence from bars.
The defender claims that relations were consensual. If the player left Brians 2 on Tuesday, the prosecution would be held and he would have to accept some precautionary measures, such as paying the bail, removing the passport, using the telematic bracelet, or presenting it to court every day.
He too would not be able to maintain any kind of contact with the victim.
Both sides have presented their arguments for release at last Thursday's session, and the court has taken several days to analyse them.
The prosecution representing the victim has also stated they oppose the release of Alves from prison because, among other things, they claim the same conditions remain as when the judge ordered his outright provisional detention.
Brazil, which has been visited by some of its family members, claims that it is innocent and that relations have been consensual.
But at last week's session, the prosecution thought there were numerous evidence opposing the latest version of Alves. The court will announce the verdict Tuesday.












