Dani Alves, sentenced last February to four and a half years in prison for sexually assaulting a woman in the bathrooms of the Sutton nightclub in Barcelona in December 2022, could be released from prison on bail of one million euros imposed this week by the Barcelona Court, after 14 months in preventive detention.
A decision that the mother of his two children, Dinorah Santana, would not agree with. Shortly after hearing the news, the Brazilian turned to her Instagram Stories and made it clear with a forceful message what she thought of the judicial decision.
Sharing a message in Portuguese, the Brazilian expresses: “There are times when you will have to share the table with Judas, without that taking away your peace.” Next to the text, Santana gives a final stitch, writing: “Well, me today”, making a clear allusion to the relative news of her with her ex-husband and father of her children.
An attitude that corresponds to the one she has been maintaining for a few months, because although at first the mother of the former footballer’s children assured that she “believed 100% in his innocence”, she soon changed her mind, ensuring that she felt ” used”.
In a matter of months, Santana not only decided to withdraw his support against Alves, but also took legal action against him. Apparently, it all came when the Brazilian tried to move with her children to Spain to be closer to the soccer player, even trying to send them to school.
However, Santana assures that Alves only tried to use them to try to obtain parole through alleged family ties. “His children have not seen him since May 6, since then he has not wanted to know anything about us, and they are his children,” she lamented in November, in an interview with journalist José Antonio Leiras for the Fiesta program .
“I intended to get conditional release. They told me what I had to say through a WhatsApp group,” the Brazilian denounced on television, assuring that for her Alves had “died.”
“The sooner I get out of jail, the better my children will be; it is very difficult for them to accept that their father could be a rapist.”