Politics
Corrupt ex-French President Sarkozy vows to go ‘all the way’ to clear his name after he’s convicted of bribing judge
NICOLAS Sarkozy has vowed to “go all the way” to clear his name after he was convicted of a “corruption pact” to bribe a judge.
The former French President, 66, was earlier this week convicted of “corruption and influence peddling” after a three-week trial in Paris.
Sarkozy in the studio set of French television channel TF1’s evening news[/caption]
Sarkozy will likely serve his one year term at the home of his third wife Carla Bruni[/caption]
Carla owns a lavish £2.5million apartment in the exclusive Villa Montmorency building[/caption]
Last night, he said: “I never betrayed the trust of the French people.”
He told TF1 channel in a primetime interview that the French court had convicted him of corruption despite concluding that “not a cent” had changed hands and that no favours had been granted.
In an interview with Le Figaro daily Sarkozy, a trained lawyer, said the ruling was “riddled with inconsistencies” and was based on “a bunch of circumstantial evidence”.
“Perhaps it will be necessary to take this battle to the (Strasbourg-based) European Court of Human Rights,” he said.
“It would be painful for me to have my own country condemned, but I am ready because that would be the price of democracy.”
He was sentenced to three years, two of which are suspended – yet Judge Christine Mée said he could serve his one year term at home wearing an electronic tag.
And it is believed that Sarkozy will spend 12 months living in the lavish Paris apartment of his wife Carla, 53, a multi-millionaire singer, model and actress.
Carla owns a £2.5million home in Villa Montmorency – an exclusive 19th century building in the French capital.
The glamorous pop star has her own recording studio in the three-bedroom mansion.
Les Miserables writer Victor Hugo and actor Gérard Depardieu have previously owned homes in the building.
Sarkozy will also remain a free man while his lawyer appeals the verdict – a process which could take years.
Nicolas Sarkozy, wearing a protective face mask, leaves after the verdict[/caption]
The last French head of state to go to prison was Marshal Philippe Pétain, the wartime Nazi collaborator.
Sarkozy, wearing a dark suit and tie with a white shirt, bowed his head, but otherwise remained motionless as the verdict was read out.
He was accused of trying to glean confidential information from a judge by using a so-called ‘burner’ mobile phone and a false name – ‘Paul Bismuth’.
Sarkozy had risked up to a decade in prison and a fine approaching the equivalent of £1million.
Also found guilty with him were his lawyer, Thierry Herzog, 65, and Gilbert Azibert, the 73-year-old retired judge who was said to have been bribed.
They were sentenced to the same punishment and all are likely to be able to spend their prison time at home with an electronic tag.
France’s National Financial Prosecutors’ Office, the PNF, had accused the three defendants of working out “a corruption pact” to advance their careers.
‘CORRUPTION PACT’
In turn, Sarkozy, who led France for a single five-year term up from 2007 to 2012, told the court he “never committed the slightest act of corruption” and vowed to go “all the way” to clear his name.
During his testimony, Sarkozy said he was the victim of lies and denied ever committing an act of corruption.
He told the court in December: “Never. Never abused my influence, alleged or real. What right do they have to drag me through the mud like this for six years? Is there no rule of law?”
Among those in court during the trial was his third wife Carla.
The former first lady of France had described the charges as ‘a scandal’ and ‘disgusting lies’, adding that the prosecution had “no clue of any type, with no reason, with no proof.”
The Paris home Sarkozy shares with Ms Bruni was raided by fraud squad officers within two days of him losing his presidential immunity from prosecution in 2012.
He has since been indicted on numerous allegations, including that he accepted millions in illegal funding from the late Libyan dictator Colonel Gaddafi.
The verdict related to the so-called ‘wiretapping affair’, which saw police investigators placing wiretaps on phones belonging to Sarkozy and Herzog, his lawyer.
Sarkozy is appealing the verdict[/caption]
Carla Bruni was among those in court during the trial[/caption]
French Lawyer Paul-Albert Iweins, left, walks in front of his client lawyer Thierry Herzog[/caption]
French judge Gilbert Azibert was said to have been bribed[/caption]
The wiretaps picked up Sarkozy and Herzog discussing ways of obtaining confidential information about other enquiries that were being handled by judges at the Court of Cassation in Paris.
Prosecutors said Sarkozy aimed to obtain information from Azibert, including by getting him a prestigious job in the Mediterranean tax haven of Monaco.
Azibert did not take up the post, but under French law prosecutors do not have to prove that anybody benefitted from a corrupt deal to secure a conviction.
Defence barristers argued throughout the trial that the recorded conversations between Sarkozy and Herzog was violation of lawyer-client confidentiality.
Sarkozy is back in court on March 17, accused of illegal financing in the so-called Bygmalion Affair.
Bygmalion was the PR firm which handled Sarkozy’s appearances during his failed 2012 re-election campaign, many of them made with Carla Bruni.
The company is said to have used a vast system of false accounting to conceal an alleged explosion of undercover funding for his campaign.
Sarkozy arriving at the Paris court house[/caption]
In 2011, Sarkozy’s one-time political mentor and predecessor as president, the late Jacques Chirac, was convicted of embezzlement and misusing public funds.
He was tried in absentia, however, because of his alleged poor health at the time.
Chirac’s crimes related to his time as Paris Mayor, and he was given a two-year suspended prison sentence.
Before that, Marshal Philippe Pétain, France’s wartime leader, was found guilty of collaborating with the Nazis.
He was given a death sentence, but because of his age and First World War record this was later reduced to prison.
Sarkozy’s appearance in the dock comes as France drops the convention that the country’s executive is in a ‘sacred’position, and so above the law.
Instead, there is growing frustration at the way politicians have used public funds for their own benefit.
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In June last year, Sarkozy’s former Prime Minister François Fillon and his British wife, Penelope Fillon, were given prison sentences after being found guilty of fraud.
Judges sitting at the Paris Correctional Court ruled that the couple had created fake jobs that paid Mrs Fillon the equivalent of close to £1million in public funds.
Fillon, 66, was given a five-year sentence, with three years suspended, while his 65-year-old wife received a three-year suspended sentence. Both have appealed the sentence.
Jacques Chirac was convicted of embezzlement and misusing public funds in 2011[/caption]
The last French head of state to go to prison was Marshal Philippe Pétain[/caption]