Accused Aggravated Pimp DSK stands trial

88m3

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DSK's enduring legacy won't be libertinism
As French politician stands trial for 'pimping', his disciples implement his economic policies.
11 Feb 2015 06:02 GMT | Europe, France, Politics

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  • ABOUT THE AUTHOR
    Remi Piet
    Remi Piet is assistant professor of public policy, diplomacy and international political economy at Qatar University.

    @RemiPiet

    Dominique Strauss-Kahn, once considered one of the world's most powerful men, regularly praised for his intelligence and his leadership, was questioned on Tuesday in a courthouse in northern France over his alleged participation in a prostitution ring.

    The former International Monetary Fund director and front runner for the 2012 French presidential elections, was charged with "aggravated pimping" after his alleged participation in sex parties was confirmed by wiretaps.

    This trial represents the last phase of the disgraced politician's brutal descent into hell which started with his indictment in May 2011 for sexually assaulting a New York hotel housekeeper, Nafissatou Diallo. If the events for which Strauss-Kahn is on trial today pre-date the New York aggression, they still paint a disturbing picture of the collusion between power and sex, which had so far been incarnated by Italy's Silvio Berlusconi.

    A libertine gathering

    Strauss-Kahn claims he never knew that the women were paid and that he believed he was participating in a libertine gathering of consenting adults. Still, even if France is known for its liberal stance and open-mindedness, this will most likely seal his political coffin. If French citizens have regularly accepted - or turned a blind eye to - their leaders' libertine lifestyle, they strongly abhor the abuse of women - whether by assault or prostitution.

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    Inside Story - DSK: The case and the chaos
    The New York trial had left France in shock as Strauss-Kahn was then widely viewed as the likely successor to Nicolas Sarkozy, thrashing him by 30 percent in second round polls. The left wing political leader was, until then, able to boast an impressive record at the helm of the IMF.

    He had contributed to curbing a global financial crisis and had successfully initiated the reform of the international organisation. For the first time under his leadership, the IMF was promoting a less dogmatic approach - calling for more sustainable development and inclusive economic growth.

    These achievements - together with a successive spell as finance and economy minister at the turn of the century, when France experienced its highest economic growth in recent years - have been brutally overshadowed by a string of sensational sex scandals and the indelible image of his perp walk in Manhattan in handcuffs.

    Unlikely to play another role

    Yet, even if Strauss-Kahn is unlikely to have another leadership role in French politics, his influence and public support for his economic and political views cannot be understated. An opinion poll conducted last year revealed that the French continue to have a high regard for the economic policies promoted by Strauss-Kahn. He ranked first in a list of personalities that would "achieve better results than Francois Hollande". This is ahead of any other political leader - whether from the right (Sarkozy and Juppe) or the left (Valls).

    In effect, the very political reforms advocated by Strauss-Kahn are now being implemented by the French government. Hollande, whom many only saw as a candidate by default stepping in Strauss-Kahn's shoes, attempted to follow his own economic agenda, with very bleak economic results.

    The very political reforms advocated by Strauss-Kahn are now being implemented by the French government.



    Acknowledging the failure of his radical socialist approach, the French president had no other option but to implement a sharp turn in his economic agenda towards social liberalism, becoming the advocate of the very "socialism of production", coined by Strauss-Kahn, more than 10 years ago.

    Strauss-Kahn's influence on French politics and the French economy can also be seen in the presence of his political allies in key positions at the helm of the French state. This was symbolised by the replacement of the prime minister last March - from Hollande's close friend Jean Marc Ayrault to Manuel Valls, who always pitted himself as a social liberal.

    In search of lost time

    Jean Claude Cambadelis, another Strauss-Kahn partisan, currently runs the majority party while several of his supporters are members of the government; such as Jean Marie Le Guen, Matthias Fekl, Marisol Touraine and even current Economy Minister Emmanuel Macron.

    His former right-hand man, Pierre Moscovici, is now in charge of the European budget at the European Commission.

    After having been a collateral victim of the implosion of their political mentor in New York, this new generation of political leaders, most in their 30s or 40s, are now poised to implement what Strauss-Kahn had prepared for his run for the 2012 elections.

    Two years have passed and been lost, two years during which the French economy flirted with recession.

    Two years during which the extreme right flourished on the succession of faux pas and the perceived amateurism of the government. Two years during which the results of Sarkozy's short-sighted economic policies, that led France to a series of imbalances, were not corrected.

    The current trial of Strauss-Kahn will mark the downfall of an outstanding brain betrayed by the weakness of his flesh and the shadiness of his values.

    His closest disciples will most likely welcome the verdict as the official end to their own political exile, and ruminate over the time lost.

    Remi Piet is assistant professor of public policy, diplomacy and international political economy at Qatar University.

    The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's editorial policy.
http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/op...g-legacy-won-libertinism-150211060034205.html
 

88m3

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Even fellow French jews stopped defending this fool:mjcry:


A couple of the accusers backed out over the weekend. I have a feeling he's toast though. The whole thing seems like a political hit job start to finish.

I can't be mad at the guy for being a libertine.


:manny:
 

superunknown23

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His political career ended long ago.

The prosecutor is dropping the case anyway.
He can resume his orgies with prostitutes again:lolbron:
 

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The flawed case against 'libertine' Strauss-Kahn

Text by Tony TODD

Latest update : 2015-02-18

Few eyebrows were raised when prosecutors in Lille decided Tuesday to recommend a “pure and simple” acquittal of Dominique Strauss-Kahn on “aggravated pimping” charges – not least his own.
Indeed, the 65-year-old former International Monetary Fund (IMF) chief has been cocky and confident throughout a two week trial that has delved deeply and disturbingly into his often extreme sexual proclivities.

Calling for an acquittal halfway through the trial, prosecutors lamented that while his inclusion in the investigation had been manna for the media, they doubted justice had been served by prosecuting him in a case that had grabbed the world’s attention for all the wrong reasons.

Sex ring

Strauss-Kahn, once tipped as odds-on favourite to beat former French president Nicolas Sarkozy in the 2012 presidential election, is no stranger to the courts, having been forced to withdraw from the 2012 presidential battle following allegations that he had sexually assaulted hotel maid Nafissatou Diallo at the Sofitel New York Hotel in May 2011.

Known in France by his initials DSK, he is one of 14 defendants in the so-called "Carlton Affair" trial, named after the Lille hotel in northern France where alleged prostitution and pimping sparked the investigation into a possible sex ring.

Specifically, Strauss-Kahn is accused of “aggravated pimping”, in that he was aware that the women who attended orgies with him between 2009 and 2011 were prostitutes and that this would constitute organising the activities of sex workers, which is a crime in France.

His defence has been one of absolute denial: he had no idea any of the women were paid, and assumed that they were “throwing themselves at him” because of his power and status.

DSK the ‘libertine’

Under questioning Strauss-Kahn openly described himself in court as a "libertine" (as did three of his co-defendants), and many of the details of his regular orgies could have come straight from the pages of a novel by the Marquis de Sade, the notorious 18th-century French philosopher and pornographer who made liberal use of the term.

But enjoying (often brutal and deliberately humiliating) group sex is not a criminal offence in France.

For a conviction, the court needed to prove that Strauss-Kahn knew the women involved were prostitutes and that he had organised orgies knowing that they were paid to attend.

It was always going to be an uphill struggle and Strauss-Kahn knew it, giving confident responses – often with a humourous twinkle in his eye – under cross-examinations that included the most lurid and damaging of details.

Co-defendants stammering and intimidated

His professional coolness – possibly the result of a long and successful political career – put him in stark contrast to three of his co-accused: friends (including a senior police officer) who shared his taste for group sex and stammered their responses, often visibly intimidated by the proceedings.

One even told the court he had been “crying for three years” since the investigation began.

By the time the trial was in motion, the prosecution knew full well that convicting DSK was going to be a near-impossible task.

On the day when the most crucial evidence against him was read to the court – intercepted SMS messages that detailed enthusiastic planning for sex parties in Paris, Washington and Brussels – aggressive deputy prosecutor Aline Clérot, who had grilled DSK’s co-defendants with merciless sarcasm and disdain, didn’t ask him a single question.

‘Pure and simple’

The following week, plaintiffs including former prostitutes and one association, who had claimed DSK knew perfectly well that he was involved in an illegal prostitution ring, announced they were no longer pursuing charges against him.

Other defendants, notably Dominique Alderweireld (nicknamed Dodo the Pimp) who is accused of shipping prostitutes from his Belgian brothels to the northern French city of Lille where the investigation began, face prison sentences of up to 10 years for procurement of prostitutes.

But for Strauss-Kahn, the prosecution on Tuesday raised its hands in defeat and told judges it was seeking an acquittal, “pure and simple”.

Lille prosecutor Frédéric Fèvre told the court that “just because a man is powerful, it does not make him automatically guilty”.

“The inclusion of Mr Strauss-Kahn has given this case over-inflated political, media and moral dimensions,” he said. “Without him, it would have been concluded long ago without any of the public attention.”

"A trial can only convict where there is proof, not on the benefit of a doubt," he added. "I have heard nothing in these proceedings that proves Dominique Strauss-Kahn is guilty."

http://www.france24.com/en/20150218-strauss-kahn-flawed-case-libertine/

can't keep a good man down :heh:
 
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