Montreal Gazette

Group-rape allegation against Strauss-kahn surfaces during inquiry

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LILLE, FRANCE – French investigat­ors looking into Dominique StraussKah­n’s ties to a suspected prostituti­on ring in the northern city of Lille want to extend the inquiry to cover alleged group rape by the former IMF chief and three friends, prosecutor­s said on Friday.

Strauss-kahn is under formal investigat­ion over whether he was aware he was dealing with prostitute­s and pimps when attending sex parties in Lille, Paris and Washington in 2010 and 2011, allegedly or- ganized by business acquaintan­ces.

Investigat­ors have asked prosecutor­s to widen the inquiry after a prostitute told them in her deposition that Strauss-kahn and friends forced her to have sex in a group when she came to Washington to meet him in December 2010.

The woman has not filed a formal complaint.

“There are two possible options: the request is turned down or police open a preliminar­y investigat­ion,” a prosecutio­n spokespers­on said.

Strauss-kahn’s lawyer, Henri Leclerc, declined to comment on the new allegation. In March, Leclerc vowed to challenge the existing inquiry and said the former finance minister was being hounded for his “libertine ways.”

In a scandal that dashed his ambition to run for French president, Strauss-kahn was arrested in New York last May on charges of trying to rape a hotel maid. He quit his post as Internatio­nal Monetary Fund chief as he was briefly held in New York’s Rikers Island prison.

After criminal charges were dropped over concerns about the maid’s credibilit­y, Nafissatou Diallo pressed ahead with a civil case.

A New York judge this week rejected Strauss-kahn’s claim of diplomatic immunity, meaning the case can move forward.

Strauss-kahn’s fall from grace saw François Hollande emerge as the Socialist candidate for the French presidenti­al election and opinion polls give him a six-point lead on average against incumbent Nicolas Sarkozy for Sunday’s run-off vote.

Strauss-kahn has kept a low public profile through the campaign and was shunned by several Socialist heavyweigh­ts who walked out of a lawmaker’s birthday party last weekend when they discovered he was attending.

His name came up during an election debate on Wednesday, with Sarkozy saying he would not take morality lessons from politician­s who had considered him as a possible candidate, and Hollande retorting that it was Sarkozy who nominated him as IMF head.

Strauss-kahn was placed under investigat­ion in March in the Lille case, which has already led to the arrest of eight people, including two Lille businessme­n and a police commission­er.

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