French ex-President Sarkozy stands trial for corruption
 
 
Former French President Nicolas Sarkozy goes on
trial Monday on charges of corruption and influence peddling in a phone-tapping
scandal, a first for the 65-year-old politician who has faced several other
judicial investigations since leaving office in 2012.
Sarkozy is being accused of having tried to
illegally obtain information from a magistrate about an investigation involving
him in 2014.
He stands trial in a Paris court along with his
lawyer Thierry Herzog, 65, and the magistrate, Gilbert Azibert, 73. They face a
prison sentence of up to 10 years and a maximum fine of 1 million euros ($1.2
million). They deny any wrongdoing.
Hearings are scheduled until Dec. 10.
Sarkozy and Herzog are suspected of promising
Azibert a job in Monaco in exchange for leaking information about an
investigation into suspected illegal financing of the 2007 presidential
campaign by France’s richest woman, L’Oreal heiress Liliane Bettencourt.
In 2014, Sarkozy and Herzog used secret mobile
phones — registered to the alias name of “Paul Bismuth” — to be be able to have
private talks as they feared their conversations were being tapped.
Sarkozy and Herzog explained that they bought the
phones to avoid being targeted by illegal phone tapping. Investigative judges,
however, suspect they actually wanted to avoid being tapped by investigators.
Judges have found that discussions between Sarkozy
and his lawyer suggested they had knowledge that judicial investigators at the
time tapped their conversations on their official phones — they mentioned
“judges listening.”
Sarkozy argued that he never intervened to help
Azibert, who never got the job and retired in 2014.
Investigative judges consider that as soon as a deal
has been offered, it constitutes a criminal offence even if the promises
haven’t been fulfilled.
Legal proceedings against Sarkozy have been dropped
in the Bettencourt case.
Sarkozy pointed at judicial harassment, accusing
judges of breaching lawyer-client privilege via wiretapping.
“I don’t want things that I didn’t do to be held
against me. The French need to know... that I’m not a rotten person,” he told
news broadcaster BFM earlier this month.
He said he was facing the trial in a “combative”
mood.
Sarkozy’s predecessor, Jacques Chirac, was found
guilty in 2011 of misuse of public money, breach of trust and conflict of
interest and given a two-year suspended prison sentence for actions during his
time as Paris mayor, before he was president from 1995 to 2007.
Sarkozy’s name has appeared for years in several
other judicial investigations.
Allegations, which include illegal financing of his
2007 campaign by then-Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi, cast a shadow over
Sarkozy’s comeback attempt for the 2017 presidential election.
After failing to be chosen as candidate by his
conservative party, he withdrew from active politics.
Sarkozy remained the most popular figure amid French
right-wing voters in recent years. His memoirs published this summer, “The Time
of Storms,” was a bestseller for weeks.
Sarkozy was handled preliminary charges including
“illegal campaign financing” in the Libyan investigation, which has been
underway since 2013 — and prompted the wiretapping of his phones.
Earlier this month, French-Lebanese businessman Ziad
Takieddine retracted his previous statements that he delivered suitcases from
Libya containing 5 million euros ($5.9 million) in cash to Sarkozy and his
former chief of staff, Claude Gueant.
Instead, he told news broadcaster BFM and magazine
Paris-Match that there were “no Libyan financing.”
Sarkozy said that the truth “finally comes out.”
Meanwhile, the former president will stand another
trial in spring 2021 along with 13 other people on charges of illegal financing
of his 2012 presidential campaign.
His conservative party and a company named Bygmalion
are accused of using a special invoice system to conceal unauthorized
overspending.
They are suspected of having spent 42.8 million
euros ($50.7 million), almost twice the maximum authorized, to finance the
campaign, which ended up in victory for Socialist rival Francois Hollande.
 
          
     
                                
 
 


