
Man convicted of domestic abuse changes sex in registry to evade justice
A woman classified as having extreme risk of murder in the Spanish police system watches as her abuser, convicted of domestic violence, attempts to evade justice through a sex change in the Civil Registry. Most striking: he himself confessed to the Civil Guard that he did it to "shield himself" against complaints.
A case that reveals a legal fraud strategy
The Provincial Court of Zaragoza has ordered an investigation after detecting evidence that the aggressor made the registry change not for reasons of gender identity, but as a legal defence mechanism. The man changed his sex in the Civil Registry on 6 August 2025, and months later, on 17 May 2026, during an interrogation with the Civil Guard, he spontaneously admitted to the officer that he had made that change "with the sole purpose of shielding myself against this type of complaints, because I feel in a position of unequal rights with women".
According to El País, the registry sex change would have allowed the defendant to sidestep the Courts for Violence Against Women, specialised tribunals with more forceful legal tools to protect victims of gender-based violence.
A victim at the highest level of danger
The assaulted woman is registered in the Spanish police system at extreme risk level, the highest category used by the State Security Forces and Bodies. This level is reserved exclusively for victims suspected of running an "imminent danger of being murdered". Currently, only 28 women in Spain have this classification, which gives an idea of the seriousness of the case.
The aggressor has several previous criminal convictions also for acts of violence against her, which reinforces the extreme risk assessment. Despite this, when her latest complaint reached the Court for Violence Against Women Number 1 in Zaragoza last May, the judge recused himself in favour of a section of ordinary instruction, arguing that since she was now registered as a woman in the Registry, he could no longer be tried by a specialised court for gender-based violence.
Justice detects legal fraud
The decision of the initial court was premature, as the Provincial Court has now determined after reviewing the case "in detail". The judges have found well-founded evidence of legal fraud, a figure explicitly contemplated in article 6.4 of the Civil Code, which prohibits "acts carried out under cover of the text of a rule that pursue a result prohibited by the legal system".
The key lies in intention. If the sex change was made "to evade the application of specific gender-based violence regulations" rather than responding to a "free development of sexual identity", then it constitutes legal fraud. The spontaneous confession to the Civil Guard strengthens this interpretation in an "even more" forceful way, as the Court emphasises in its ruling.
What happens now?
The Provincial Court has ordered the judge for Violence Against Women to communicate the situation to the person in charge of the Civil Registry so that it can investigate whether there was fraud in the registry change. So far, it has not emerged whether a specific criminal procedure will be opened against the aggressor for this conduct, or what the next procedural step will be in the domestic violence case that led to the initial complaint.
What has become clear is that Spanish justice does not turn a blind eye to attempts to evade enhanced protection for victims of gender-based violence, even through nominally legal channels.
Source: elpais.com


