Yorkshire Post

Sarkozy goes on trial over illegal election spending

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THE TRIAL of former French president Nicolas Sarkozy on charges that his unsuccessf­ul 2012 re-election bid was illegally financed has formally started.

Sarkozy, 66, is facing allegation­s that he spent almost twice the maximum legal amount of €22.5m (£19.41m) on the presidenti­al race he lost to Socialist Francois Hollande. He has denied wrongdoing.

Sarkozy, inset, was not present at the Paris court, where he was represente­d by his lawyers. The trial is scheduled to last until June 22.

Sarkozy, who was president from 2007 to 2012, faces up to one year in prison and a fine of €3,750 (£3,235), if found guilty.

The proceeding­s got under way less than three months after Sarkozy was convicted of corruption and influence peddling in another case. He has appealed against that verdict.

Following several scandals, French law since 1990 has strictly limited political campaign spending.

According to the judicial investigat­ion in his case, Sarkozy “indisputab­ly benefited from fraud that allowed him to have, during his 2012 campaign, resources much superior to what the law authorised”.

An investigat­ive magistrate concluded that Sarkozy and his close entourage decided to hold “spectacula­r and expensive rallies”. The campaign’s total cost allegedly reached at least €42.8m (£36.9m).

The investigat­ion did not establish whether Sarkozy allegedly participat­ed in trying to cover up the overspendi­ng, which included forging invoices, or ordered fraudulent actions himself. In addition to the former president, 12 other people and the company in charge of organising the campaign rallies are facing trial on charges that include forgery, breach of trust, fraud and complicity in illegal campaign financing.

During the judicial investigat­ion, some of them admitted wrongdoing.

Former deputy campaign director Jerome Lavrilleux described on national television in 2014 a system of fake invoices that allegedly allowed the conservati­ve party, then named UMP, to pay for the campaign rallies, with the alleged complicity of public relation firm Bygmalion.

The scandal prompted a destructiv­e battle within the party as its leaders blamed each other.

Sarkozy has denied that illegal money financed his campaign.

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