The Scotsman

French prosecutor asks for Sarkozy to face a criminal trial

● Ex-president is accused of illegal overspendi­ng in 2012 campaign

- By PHILIPPE SOTTO

0 Nicolas Sarkozy announced his bid for next year’s presidenti­al election last month. A Paris prosecutor has requested a criminal trial for former French president Nicolas Sarkozy over suspected illegal overspendi­ng on his failed 2012 re-election campaign.

The Paris prosecutor’s office said yesterday it had asked investigat­ing judges to send Sarkozy and 13 others to court in the case. It’s now up to the judges to decide whether Sarkozy must stand trial.

Sarkozy announced his bid for next year’s presidenti­al election last month and faces a primary in November against a dozen other conservati­ve candidates.

If the investigat­ing judges decide to send Sarkozy to court, it’s unlikely any trial could be held before the Aprilmay presidenti­al election. If Sarkozy was elected next year, he would be granted immunity as president and would not be able to stand trial before the end of the five-year term.

In February, judges handed Sarkozy preliminar­y charges of alleged illegal campaign financing over an invoice system his party and a company named Bygmalion allegedly used to conceal unauthoris­ed overspendi­ng.

France had a ceiling on presidenti­al campaign funding in 2012 of 22.5 million euros. The conservati­ve Sarkozy, who was president from 2007-2012 and lost that year’s election to Socialist Francois Hollande, is accused of spending 17 million euros over that limit.

Sarkozy’s party was then called UMP but has since renamed itself the Republican­s. He quit as party leader when he announced his bid two weeks ago.

Several people close to Sarkozy are among those requested to stand trial in the case. The former president has already paid back 364,000 euros for overspendi­ng in the campaign.

“We are absolutely serene about the fact that all this will end up in a dismissed case,” said Daniel Fasquelle, the treasurer of the Republican­s. “I’m also surprised that this news is being announced today... as Nicolas Sarkozy just started his campaign.”

The so-called “Bygmalion case” is one of several legal cases in which his name has surfaced. In a separate case, Sarkozy has been given preliminar­y charges of corruption and influence-peddling based on informatio­n gleaned from phone taps.

Magistrate­s are investigat­ing before deciding whether to send suspects to trial. Sarkozy has not been convicted of any wrongdoing or gone to trial.

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