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Christine Lagarde convicted: IMF head found guilty of criminal charges over massive government payout | Christine Lagarde convicted: IMF head found guilty of criminal charges over massive government payout |
(35 minutes later) | |
International Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde has been convicted over her role in a controversial €400m (£355m) payment to a businessman. | |
French judges found Ms Lagarde guilty of negligence for failing to challenge the state arbitration payout to the friend of former French President Nicolas Sarkozy. | |
The 60-year-old, following a week-long trial in Paris, was not given any sentence and will not be punished. | |
The Court of Justice of the Republic, a special tribunal for ministers, could have given her up to one-year in prison and a €13,000 fine. | |
The ruling however risks triggering a new leadership crisis at the IMF after Ms Lagarde's predecessor Dominique Strauss Khan resigned in 2011 over a sex assault scandal. | The ruling however risks triggering a new leadership crisis at the IMF after Ms Lagarde's predecessor Dominique Strauss Khan resigned in 2011 over a sex assault scandal. |
Ms Lagarde, who was French finance minister at the time of the payment in 2008, has denied the negligence charges. | Ms Lagarde, who was French finance minister at the time of the payment in 2008, has denied the negligence charges. |
Her lawyer said immediately after the ruling that his team would look into appealing the decision. | Her lawyer said immediately after the ruling that his team would look into appealing the decision. |
On Friday she told the court: "These five days [of trial] put an end to a five-year ordeal for my partner, my sons, my brothers, who are hear in this courtroom. | |
"In this case, like in all the other cases, I acted with trust and with a clear conscience with the only intention of defending the public interest." | |
The case surrounded the decision to allow a dispute over Bernard Tapie's sale of Adidas to Credit Lyonnais bank to be resolved by a rarely-used private arbitration panel - instead of the courts. | |
Investigators suspected the payment to 73-year-old Mr Tapie was the result of a behind closed doors agreement with then-President Mr Sakozy in return for election support. | |
IMf managing director Lagarde was suspected of rubber stamping a deal to effectively buy off the business magnate with taxpayers' money. | |
Civil courts have since quashed the unusually generous award, declared the arbitration process and deal fraudulent, and ordered Mr Tapie to pay the money back. | |
Today's result was unexpected. | |
Even the trial's chief prosecutor Jean-Claude Marin said the accusation was "very weak" and warned of confusion between "criminal negligence" and a "bad political decision". | |
At the start of proceedings, the £355,000-a-year boss, of the global Washington-based institution, said: “I would like to show you that I am in no way guilty of negligence, but rather that I acted in good faith with only the public interest in mind. | |
“Was I negligent? No. And I will strive to convince you allegation by allegation." | |
Her lawyer Patrick Maisonneuve said on Europe-1 radio that Ms Lagarde was just following instructions from her administration and did not have time to read all 15 years of legal files on the case. | |
Ms Lagarde was only the fifth to be held before the Cour de Justice de la Republique since its inception in 1993. | |
IMF spokesman Gerry Rice said after Monday's verdict that its executive board would meet soon "to consider the most recent developments". | |
Another former IMF head, Rodrigo Rato of Spain, is standing trial on charges of misusing funds when he was boss of the Spanish lender Bankia. | |
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