Johan Derksen confesses childhood sin: ‘Candle in unconscious woman’

Johan Derksen has in the past once put a large candle in the vagina of an unconscious woman. “When I think back, Wilfred: you are ashamed,” said the football expert.

© Today Inside

It could well be that Johnny de Mol actually misbehaved, but in fact everyone has committed childhood sins, says Johan Derksen in his talk show Today Inside. He also admits that he sometimes misbehaved. “When I think back, Wilfred: you’re ashamed of yourself.”

candle in woman

Then Johan starts his story. “Look, it’s a very dirty story, but things like that happen: I was out with the keeper of Veendam with two ladies and we became debauched. We’re out and drinking and we’re going to that house and those ladies are so drunk, they’re puking all over us.”

And then? “I remember then – and I’m not proud of it, but things like that happen when you’re young: we left and that lady was lying unconscious on one of those couches and there was this big candle and we got it put it in and then we left.”

‘No no!’

Table guest Steven Brunswijk can’t believe it at first. “No no!”

Colleague René van der Gijp: “Have you put it on yet?”

Johan: “You would now be jailed for that.”

Wilfred: “In your case it has long since expired, but this is a bit of a separate story.”

Johan: “But things like that have happened and we all have our childhood sins, don’t we? I also think that this kind of accusation goes way back. There is a big difference whether you are 73 or 22.”

baseball bat

René laughing: “She was lucky, huh? For the same money, there is a baseball bat in the corner. Then she is further from home, hahaha.”

Steven: “I wonder: how big was that candle?”

Johan: “It was a big candle.”

Wilfred: “Anyway, you still had the feeling that it was by mutual consent. You had all been drinking. Apart from that candle.”

Rape

Johan: “Yes, but technically a prosecutor will be able to explain it as rape.”

Wilfred: “Yes.”

Johan: “But I think everyone has had those kinds of adventures, which you later say: well.”

He points out that he grew up in the 1960s and 1970s. “We were all much more open-minded back then. A lot was allowed back then, wasn’t it? Then you laughed at someone if someone reported it.”

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