Volleyball player convicted of rape set for Olympics - A beach volleyball player who was jailed for raping a 12-year-old British girl is set to represent the Netherlands at the Paris Olympics.


A beach volleyball player who was jailed for raping a 12-year-old British girl is set to represent the Netherlands at the Paris Olympics.

Steven van de Velde, now 29, was sentenced to four years in prison in 2016 after admitting three counts of rape against a child, which took place in August 2014.

Van de Velde, who met his victim on Facebook, travelled from Amsterdam to the UK and raped the girl at an address in Milton Keynes.

He was allowed to serve his sentence in the Netherlands but was released after just 12 months.

Van de Velde subsequently resumed his volleyball career and has competed in international tournaments since 2018 "following an intensive, professionally supervised trajectory" the Dutch Olympic Committee (NOC) said.

He has qualified for the Olympics in his national pair with partner Matthew Immers.

The Dutch Olympic Committee (NOC) told BBC Sport: "After his release, Van de Velde sought and received professional counselling. He demonstrated to those around him - privately and professionally - self-insight and reflection."

The NOC says Van de Velde's return to the sport met guidelines set by the Dutch Volleyball Federation (NeVoBo) in the organisation's "Guidelines Integrity Record", which sets out conditions for athletes to resume competing after conviction.

It says he has met "all qualification criteria for the Olympic Games".

In interviews with Dutch media previously Van de Velde said: "I can't reverse it, so will have to bear the consequences. It has been the biggest mistake of my life."

In a statement provided by the NOC, Van de Velde said: "In 2016 and afterwards, several Dutch media also paid attention to the story. I understand that in the run-up to the biggest sporting event in the world, this can attract the attention of international media."

The International Olympic Committee (IOC), the Dutch Volleyball Federation and the International Volleyball Federation have been contacted for comment.
He confessed to drugging and raping a 12-year-old girl. He was convicted in England for four years and then extradited back to the Netherlands, where they released him pretty much straight away and put him on the volleyball team.

He feels absolutely no remorse whatsoever and claims that he has been unfairly victimized.

Oh, and the Netherlands also has a law that makes it illegal to be mean to pedophiles after they've served their sentence. Yes, really.
 
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I'm surprised he's white. Which means I am officially racist, I guess.

In the U.S. he'd have gotten well over a decade at minimum.

In the U.K. four years.

In the Netherlands, one.
 
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Isn't this a plot on some anime game where he goes and becomes a gym teacher in japan or some shit? Persona, one of those?
 
I don’t think many dutch people are aware that this happened, haven’t heard it mentioned anywhere except here.

But, the dutch olympic committee is blocking emails mentioning his name or the things he did. Same result if you call them.
 
Isn't this a plot on some anime game where he goes and becomes a gym teacher in japan or some shit? Persona, one of those?
Almost. This plot is the other way around though: he is a rapist before he even becomes a Olypmic participant. Someone should sneak the Paris commentators a note when the Netherlands play "And here we have the Netherlands who's most famous player is a convicted child rapist. Applaus everyone!"
 
If you post something bigoted on social media, however, you will get a MUCH longer sentence under Dutch law. People in Europe are regularly sentenced to 10+ years in prison for bigoted online posts, while rapists and child molesters are given slaps on the wrists.
are you actually retarded? or is this just a gross exaggeration like a fucking child trying to make a point, how embarrasing.

Europe had gone to fucking soft on criminals.
agreed, part of what makes prison time a punishment is the concequences of being convicted, you loose your house, friends, often family anf other social support. people are ofvours shunned by society after conviction and righty so. thats perhaps the most effective part of the punishment not as much the time spend behind bars.

This however is a bit moot if you then send the guy to the olympics. i dont fucking know why anyone would even consider this.
 
are you actually retarded? or is this just a gross exaggeration like a fucking child trying to make a point, how embarrasing.
Go to some shithole like Germany and start tweeting shit like shitskin immigrant mudslimes should be deported back there and see how well that'll turn out for you.
 
Genuine question: why is Europe soft on any crime except invented hate crimes and bad opinions? I get that the regime must exert control over narrative and thought so I understand the coming-down-hard on thought crimes, but this Hollander isn’t even a token negroid, so what gives?
Because they can't fit all the criminals. They don't build new prisons because they need to be held at a higher comfort standard than educational institutions. That's the practical stand point.
There is also Humanism a pervasive train of thought that has infected most of Europe and most of it's institutions. You can't kill repeat offenders, because killing someone is the worst thing you could do to them, because you don't believe in an afterlife. You can't torture or beat them because physical harm is worse than psychological harm.
Incarceration has a few basic goals in principle: Protecting the general population from criminals, maintaining the rule of law, getting justice for the victims and finally rehabilitation. In Europe all that matters is number 4. So if you just release criminals really early and hope they don't commit another crime then you have done your job.
There is some hope. The current system is so broken and stupid that it's very easy to argue against it. I foresee by the end of the century the death penalty coming back.
 
I remember a big documentary series on Youtube that went into the Netherland's child trafficking issue. Shame it got deleted years ago.
I'd be interested in seeing that, if you remember the name
I know the Netherlands does host a lot of CP and is insanely easy on child molesters, but I have not heard of any direct child trafficking problems.
 
Holy shit the Netherlands Volleyball Association is so fucked. Get a load of this

They’re recontextualising it as “consensual sex with a minor” and omitting that he drugged and fucked a 12 year old. He should be under the fucking ground.

Steven van de Velde is facing his debut at the Olympics. Especially abroad, reason to revive the 29-year-old beach volleyball player's past. Van de Velde feels strengthened by the support of the Dutch volleyball federation and the National Olympic Committee (NOC*NSF).
Both organizations rely on the opinions of experts who consider the chance of recidivism nil. After his conviction and sentence, Steven van de Velde returned to the highest level of sport step by step under the expert guidance of probation and coaching, among others. He has been participating in international tournaments again since 2017.
Van de Velde himself always reckoned that this black period in his life would be revived but is obviously not happy about it. "That’s obvious, but I also understand that this is just part of it. In 2016 and afterwards, several Dutch media also paid attention to the story. I understand that in the run-up to the biggest sporting event in the world, this can attract the attention of international media."

Conviction
In 2016, Van de Velde was convicted in England of having sex with an underage girl, which is rape under English law and fornication under Dutch law. Statutory rape is defined in England as unforced sexual activity where one of the individuals is younger than the age required to consent to the behaviour.

Van de Velde was sentenced to four years in prison and, after serving part of his sentence in England, was transferred to the Netherlands under a treaty between the two countries. In the process, the sentence was also adjusted to the standards of Dutch law. After his release, Van de Velde sought and received professional counseling. He has demonstrated to those around him - privately and professionally - self-insight and reflection.

Van de Velde told his side of the story in various Dutch media, stressing that he took the blame in everything. "I cannot reverse it, so I will have to bear the consequences. It has been the biggest mistake of my life."

Watch the interview Van der Velde gave to NOS in 2018 here.


Second chance
"When I watch the footage of the interview again, a great sense of gratitude prevails. Because of the second chance I got from my parents, my friends, acquaintances and colleagues, who accepted me again after the biggest misstep of my then young life. I am also grateful to the Dutch volleyball federation, because they offered me, with clear conditions and agreements, a future in this beautiful sport again. But I also think back to the teenager I was, who was insecure, not ready for a life as a top class athlete and unhappy inside, because I didn't know who I was and what I wanted."

When Van de Velde looks in the mirror now, he sees a mature and happy man, married and father of a beautiful son. "Someone with the ability to perform at the Olympics and willing to do and leave a lot for that. But also, someone who wants to perform in ordinary life, in which we are all involved. In my role as father and husband, in my role as colleague and neighbor."

Support
The Dutch volleyball federation (Nevobo) supports Van de Velde's participation in Paris. "We know Steven's history. Before he expressed his desire to return to beach volleyball at the time, we spoke extensively with him but also with NOC*NSF, among others," says Michel Everaert, general director at Nevobo. "He was convicted at the time according to English law and he has served his sentence. From then on, we have been in constant contact with Steven, who has now been fully reintegrated into the Dutch volleyball community. He is proving to be an exemplary professional and human being and there has been no reason to doubt him since his return. We fully support him and his participation in Paris, which he and Matthew have earned."

NOC*NSF also stands behind Van de Velde's qualification: "Already since 2017, Steven van de Velde - after an intensive professionally supervised process with, among others, the probation service - is once again participating in international beach volleyball tournaments. At the time, the considerations and conditions for return to top-level sports were determined by both Nevobo and NOC*NSF partly on the basis of the Guideline Integrity History of NOC*NSF, which sets out, among other things, the conditions under which athletes in top-level sports can return after a conviction. Van de Velde now meets all the qualification requirements for the Olympic Games and is therefore part of the team.”


 
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