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News item – The second line of Béziers, Hans Nkinsi, sentenced to 18 months in prison including 6 months closed for domestic violence

News item – The second line of Béziers, Hans Nkinsi, sentenced to 18 months in prison including 6 months closed for domestic violence
News item – The second line of Béziers, Hans Nkinsi, sentenced to 18 months in prison including 6 months closed for domestic violence

Hans Nkinsi, the second line of the ASBH, appeared before the Béziers criminal court for acts of domestic violence this Monday, December 16 for which he was accused. The Biterrois resident was sentenced to 18 months in prison, including 6 months. Being a repeat offender, the Frenchman received, in total, a sentence of one year in prison, without a committal warrant. He walked out of court free.

The verdict is in concerning Hans Nkinsi. While the second line of the ASBH had until now been placed under judicial supervision since November 4 and a complaint for domestic violence filed by his former partner, the Biterrois was prosecuted for “habitual violence by a repeat spouse” this Monday 16 December. The Frenchman was sentenced to 18 months in prison, 6 of which were suspended and 12 of which were suspended.

Already sentenced in April 2023 to 10 months of suspended prison time when he played in , for facts dating back to 2021, this new conviction revokes his suspended sentence. In total, and this is the information to remember, Nkinsi receives one year in prison without a committal warrant. The player therefore walked free from the court. He must now appear before a sentence enforcement judge (JAP), who will decide on the adjustment of his sentence and a possible electronic bracelet to wear. On this subject, the judge did not summon the Biterrois.

The Béziers player was laid off by the ASBH club while awaiting his trial

This follows another member of the club who was in the sights of justice. The Taleta Tupuola center, sentenced to 14 months in prison with suspended probation by the Béziers criminal court on November 13. He has since returned to the professional workforce and must evade an obligation to provide care and serve, outside of his working hours, an organization helping people in precarious situations, particularly female victims. of domestic violence.

Morocco

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