A Berlin court has convicted Zhiting S., a 32-year-old Chinese-born physician who formerly worked at the Charité hospital (one of Europe's largest university hospitals), for his role in a network of men who sedated and sexually abused Chinese women in Germany. The defendant had drugged and filmed his own fiancée during assaults in China, and later joined an encrypted chat group called "Driving School for Experts in Germany," where members used coded language — referring to women as "cars" and sedated victims as "dead pigs" — to share advice on drugs, dosages, and recordings of their crimes. The case has sparked a wave of feminist outrage among Chinese communities both in Germany and online in China, drawing tens of thousands of readers and prompting petitions demanding harsher sentences for perpetrators of sexual violence.