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Dani Alves' sexual assault trial set for Feb. 5 in Barcelona

Former Brazil defender Dani Alves will face trial from Feb. 5-7, 2024 for alleged sexual assault of a woman in a nightclub in 2022, a Spanish court confirmed on Wednesday.

In November, the Barcelona-based court said "there was enough evidence to open the trial" considering the statements given to court and the evidence presented in the investigation phase.

The 40-year-old Alves has been in pre-trial jail since January when he was arrested for allegedly assaulting the woman at a nightclub in Barcelona on Dec. 30, 2022. He was indicted by an investigative judge in August.

In an order, Section 21 of Barcelona's high court confirmed Alves' prosecution, concluding that the victim's and witnesses' statements as well as expert corroboration provide enough evidence to try him for sexual assault.

The former Barcelona and Paris Saint-Germain star was detained in January after being accused of raping a young woman in the bathroom of a nightclub in Barcelona on Dec. 30 of last year.

Alves, 40, has since been held in custody without bail in a jail in Barcelona and his requests to be freed were denied by the court because he is considered a flight risk.

When the allegations first emerged, Alves denied in a television interview that he knew the woman involved. He later said that sex with the accuser was consensual.

Alves' contract with Liga MX club Pumas UNAM, the club he joined after leaving Barcelona in June 2022, was terminated on Jan. 20.

State prosecutors are seeking a nine-year prison sentence. The lawyers representing the alleged victim want him to spend 12 years behind bars. They also seek restraining orders for Alves following the jail term and for him to pay damages worth €150,000 ($163,605) to the woman.

Under Spain's sexual consent law passed last year, the charge of sexual assault takes in a wide array of crimes from online abuse and groping to rape, each with different possible punishments. A case of rape can carry a maximum sentence of 15 years.

ESPN's Adriana García in Spain contributed to this report.