French prosecutors seek jail in Sarkozy corruption trial
French prosecutors have requested two years of prison and a two-year suspended sentence for former President Nicolas Sarkozy in a landmark corruption and influence peddling trial in Paris
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Your support makes all the difference.French prosecutors on Tuesday requested two years of prison and a two-year suspended sentence for former President Nicolas Sarkozy in a landmark corruption and influence peddling trial in Paris
The 65-year-old Sarkozy is accused of having tried to illegally obtain information from a senior magistrate in 2014 about an investigation involving him.
Prosecutors requested the same sentence for Sarkozy's codefendants — his lawyer and friend Thierry Herzog and magistrate Gilbert Azibert. All three denied wrongdoing.
Defense lawyers will speak on Wednesday and Thursday. The verdict is expected at a later date.
It’s the first time Sarkozy, president from 2007-2012, is facing trial, though the conservative politician is the target of multiple investigations.
Sarkozy and Herzog are suspected of promising Azibert a job in Monaco in exchange for leaking confidential information about an investigation into suspected illegal financing in the 2007 presidential campaign.
The trial is focusing on wiretapped phone conversations held in February 2014 by Sarkozy and Herzog, who were communicating via secret mobile phones registered to the alias name of “Paul Bismuth.”
“I’ll help him,” Sarkozy could be heard saying in one of those discussions about Azibert.
The magistrate never got the job and retired later that year.
“I have has never committed any act of corruption — never," Sarkozy told the court Monday. He acknowledged giving “a little help” to many people as part as his political career without malicious intent.
Prosecutors argued that a “corruption pact” had been reached. Under French law, as soon as a deal has been offered, it constitutes a criminal offence even if the promises haven’t been fulfilled.
Sarkozy withdrew from active politics after failing to be chosen as his conservative party’s presidential candidate for France’s 2017 election, won by Emmanuel Macron.
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