France’s top court rules interior minister cannot be prosecuted over alleged rape

France’s top court rules interior minister cannot be prosecuted over alleged rape

Gerald Darmanin was accused of coercing a woman into sex in 2009 for helping to clear her criminal record.

The decision removes a major threat to the position of French interior minister Gerald Darmanin, one of President Emmanuel Macron’s most senior allies. (Pool/AP pic)
PARIS:
France’s interior minister Gerald Darmanin cannot be prosecuted for accusations of rape made by a woman for years, France’s highest court ruled today, definitively dismissing the case and ending a seven-year legal battle.

A lower court was right to reject the complaint without starting a formal investigation due to a lack of evidence, the Cour de Cassation ruled.

The decision removed a major threat to the position of Darmanin, a former conservative who is one of President Emmanuel Macron’s most senior allies and seeks to be regarded as “France’s No 1 cop” through law-and-order politics and a tough stance on immigration.

Darmanin, who will be in charge of security during the forthcoming Paris Olympic Summer Games, repeatedly denied the allegation that he coerced a woman into having sex in 2009 when she sought his help in having her criminal record cleared.

But the back-and-forth between the woman and French authorities weighed on Darmanin throughout his career in government and earned him the ire of feminists who protested against his appointment as a minister.

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