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Sarkozy judge bribery case to go ahead after phone taps ruled legal

Former French president has failed in his legal challenge against phone tap evidence in which he discussed judge prid-pro-quo deal with lawyer.

La rédaction de Mediapart

This article is freely available.

Former President Nicolas Sarkozy’s plans for a political come-back have suffered a serious legal blow, reports The Independent.

The Paris appeal court ruled that a formal accusation of corruption against Mr Sarkozy for allegedly trying to bribe a senior judge could go ahead.

The former President had challenged the accusation on the grounds that investigating magistrates had broken the law when they tapped his telephone and that of his lawyer in 2013.

The appeal court ruled this morning that the phone taps were justified and legal. A criminal investigation of Mr Sarkozy for “corruption” and “influence peddling”, suspended last October, should resume, the court said.

Mr Sarkozy immediately announced that he would appeal to the highest French court, the Cour de Cassation.

Of the tangle of half a dozen investigations in which Mr Sarkozy’s name has appeared since he lost office in 2012, the “bribery” allegation now seems the most likely to lead to criminal charges.

The transcripts of his bugged phone calls have been, widely leaked to the press. They include passages in which Mr Sarkozy and his lawyer, Thierry Harzog, appear to discuss ways of rewarding a senior judge for providing information and influence on other cases against the former president.

One of the mobile phones tapped by the investigating magistrates was obtained by Mr Sarkozy under a false name, 'Paul Bismuth', because, it is alleged, he knew that his other phone was being bugged.

Soon after the formal accusation of corruption was made last July, Mr Sarkozy abandoned his official retirement from politics and ran successfully for the vacant leaderhip of the main French centre-right party. He has asked members to vote later this month to change the party’s name from the Union pour un Mouvement Populaire (UMP) to Les Républicains .

He is favourite to win an open primary of centre-right voters in November next year to choose the main challenger to President François Hollande in the 2017 presidental election. A continuing investigation on the bribery allegations could seriously undermine his support among moderate centre-right voters.

At a hearing before the Paris appeal court in March, Mr Sarkozy’s lawyers said that the whole investigation was politically motivated. They argued that formal accusation of “corruption”  brought against Mr Sarkozy in July last year was null and void on on two grounds.

Firstly, the phone taps breached the principle of a confidential relationship between a lawyer and his client, they said. Secondly, the taps had been authorised as part of an investigation into allegations that Mr Sarkozy’s successful 2007 presidential campaign had been financed by the former Libyan dictator, Moammar Gaddafi. 

It was irregular, Mr Sarkozy’s lawyers claimed, to use information uncovered by phone taps authorised for one investigation to launch a completely separate case.

These arguments were dismissed by the Paris appeal court today.

Read more of this report from The Independent.