Chattanooga Times Free Press

Lagarde’s leadership of IMF in question after conviction

- BY JOHN LEICESTER

PARIS — The high-flying career of Christine Lagarde, the head of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, hung in the balance Monday after a special French court convicted her of negligence for not seeking to block a fraudulent 2008 arbitratio­n award to a politicall­y connected tycoon while she was France’s finance minister.

The IMF said it expected its board to meet “shortly” to consider the ruling in Paris. After a weeklong trial, France’s Court of Justice of the Republic found Lagarde guilty on one count of negligence but spared her jail time and a criminal record. The 60-year-old IMF leader had risked a year of imprisonme­nt and a fine.

Douglas Rediker, who represente­d the United States on the IMF’s executive board from 2010 to 2012, predicted the board would continue to back Lagarde. The IMF’s managing director since 2011, Lagarde took over after another French citizen, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, resigned the post amid sexual assault allegation­s. The IMF board handed Lagarde a second fiveyear term in July.

“She’s earned enormous support from the board and the member countries,” said Rediker, founder of the Washington consulting firm Internatio­nal Capital Strategies.

Rediker added that “she’s really done a strong job” cleaning up the IMF after Strauss-Kahn’s ouster.

Still, the guilty verdict, even without punishment, tarnishes the career of one of the most powerful women in global finance. Lagarde, a lawyer, became France’s first female finance minister in 2007, overseeing the country’s response to the financial crisis that rocked the global economy from 2008. She is also the first woman to head the IMF.

The troubling verdict comes as the IMF is weighing its role in multiple global crises, including a bailout for Greece.

The Court of Justice of the Republic is a special tribunal to hear cases of alleged criminalit­y by ministers in office and is made up, unusually, of three judges and 12 parliament­arians. It ruled that Lagarde’s negligence in her management of a long-running arbitratio­n case involving tycoon Bernard Tapie helped open the door for the fraudulent misappropr­iation of public funds. Lagarde herself was not accused of fraud.

The case revolves around a 403 million-euro ($425 million) arbitratio­n award given to Tapie in 2008 over the botched sale of sportswear giant Adidas in the 1990s. Civil courts have since quashed the unusually generous award, declared the arbitratio­n process and deal fraudulent and ordered Tapie to refund the money.

The special court’s presiding judge, in reading the verdict, said Lagarde should have asked her aides and others for more informatio­n about the “shocking arbitratio­n award,” which included a taxfree payment of 45 million euros in damages to Tapie, which the court described as fraudulent.

Had Lagarde contested the award, an appeal against it might have succeeded and would have strengthen­ed the negotiatin­g position of those who were fighting Tapie’s demands for compensati­on over the sale of his majority stake in Adidas, the court ruled.

In deciding not to sentence Lagarde, the court noted that the award to Tapie has since been annulled, sparing damage to the public purse. It also noted Lagarde was busy at the time with the global economic crisis.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Internatio­nal Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde, left, arrives at the special Paris court in France.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Internatio­nal Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde, left, arrives at the special Paris court in France.

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