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Gérard Depardieu found guilty of sexual assault of two women

French actor Gérard Depardieu has been handed an 18-month jail sentence after a Paris court found him guilty of groping two women during the shooting of a film in 2021, after which his lawyer announced he would appeal the verdict.

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French film star Gérard Depardieu has been found guilty of sexually assaulting two women on a film set at a trial in Paris and given a suspended jail term of 18 months, reports BBC News.

The 76-year-old actor was accused by the two women of groping them during work on a film in 2021. Depardieu had denied the allegations against him and his lawyer said he would appeal.

The court in Paris found that one of the women, a set dresser named Amélie, had given consistent evidence while the actor's accounts had changed over time.

She told reporters afterwards she was "very moved" and satisfied with the verdict, which for her was "a victory, a major step forward".

Depardieu was also convicted of assaulting an assistant director called Sarah, which was not her real name.

The actor was not in court to hear the verdict but was instead working on a film set in the Azores.

Carine Durrieu-Diebolt, the lawyer acting for the two women, said she hoped the verdict marked the end of impunity for an artist in the film industry.

"It's a victory for two women on a film set but it's a victory for all the women behind this case and I'm thinking of all of Depardieu's other victims," she told reporters.

The lawyer also noted the case had come to an end hours before the Cannes film festival was due to start.

The judge said there was no reason to doubt the word of the two women victims, who had told the court how Depardieu had touched them on intimate parts of the body, using lewd language.

He placed Depardieu on a list of sex offenders and ordered him to pay compensation of €1,000 (£840) each to Amélie and Sarah for "secondary victimisation", a recent innovation covering the additional suffering for the women from the trial itself.

Depardieu's lawyer Jérémie Assous had accused the women of lying during their evidence.

Read more of this report from BBC News.