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December 13, 2016

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IMF chief goes on trial over former adidas owner’s payout

IMF chief Christine Lagarde went on trial in France yesterday over a massive state payout to a flamboyant tycoon when she was finance minister in a case that risks tarnishing her stellar career.

Lagarde denies the charges of negligence, arguing she was acting “in the state’s interest” in making the payment to Bernard Tapie, former owner of sportswear giant adidas and the Olympique Marseille football club.

If found guilty, the 60-year-old could receive a one-year prison sentence and a 15,000- euro (US$15,900) fine.

In a documentary aired on French television on Sunday, Lagarde said she was “confident and determined” ahead of the trial.

“I tried to do my work the best I could within the limits of what I knew,” she told France 2. “Negligence is an unintentional offence. I think all of us have been a little bit negligent at some stage of our lives.”

Lagarde’s case was being heard by the Court of Justice of the Republic, a tribunal that hears cases against ministers accused of wrongdoing in the discharge of their duties.

Whatever the outcome, the case risks damaging the image of the former corporate lawyer who progressed through the finance ministry to become one of the world’s most powerful women.

It also threatens the credibility of the International Monetary Fund, as Lagarde is the third IMF chief to face trial.

The IMF has given its full backing to its managing director, who began her second term in the post in July.

Lagarde’s lawyer Patrick Maisonneuve dismissed speculation about what the IMF would do if she lost the case.

“She will be cleared so the question hasn’t even arisen,” he told Europe 1 radio.

The accusations stem from Lagarde’s handling of a dispute with Tapie, a former government minister who claimed a state bank had defrauded him in its sale of adidas.

Tapie, now 73, owned the firm between 1990 and 1993 but lost control of it when he went bankrupt. He sold it to state-owned bank Credit Lyonnais for 315.5 million euros in February 1993.

The bank sold it again the year after at 701 million euros, leading Tapie to claim he had been cheated.

Lagarde, finance minister in 2007 under newly elected President Nicolas Sarkozy, ordered that Tapie’s long-running battle with the state be resolved by arbitration.

The decision was hugely costly, with Tapie initially walking away with a staggering 404 million euros in compensation in 2008. After a lengthy court battle, he was ordered to repay the money.

Investigators suspect the arbitration process was rigged in favor of Tapie, who had supported Sarkozy in his election campaign. One of the arbitrators had links to the businessman.

Lagarde has always insisted she acted in France’s best interest. Although not accused of personally profiting, she has been criticized for failing to challenge the award.




 

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