Showing posts with label StraussKahn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label StraussKahn. Show all posts

Sunday, July 31, 2011

Analysis: Former prosecutors weigh in on Strauss-Kahn case (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Even by the standards of a salacious and unpredictable international scandal, it was a whirlwind week in the Dominique Strauss-Kahn sexual assault case.

On Sunday, Strauss-Kahn's accuser, Nafissatou Diallo, 32, broke her silence and anonymity, telling the world in televised and print interviews her version of the incident with the former International Monetary Fund chief. Diallo, a hotel maid, alleges Strauss-Kahn forced her to perform oral sex on him and attempted to rape her at an upscale Manhattan hotel on May 14.

Strauss-Kahn, 62, who had been seen as a possible French president, has denied any wrongdoing.

On Tuesday, prosecutors requested and received a second postponement of the next court date in the case, originally scheduled for July 16. It is now scheduled for August 23.

On Wednesday, Diallo met with prosecutors behind closed doors for more than eight hours.

The next day, a tearful Diallo appeared before a sea of cameras in a Brooklyn church, as her attorney accused prosecutors of abandoning her.

Yet through all the dizzying developments, the case remains in limbo. Despite speculation the prosecution would collapse after significant doubts arose regarding Diallo's credibility, a spokesperson for Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. insisted the office was still investigating.

Interviews with eight former Manhattan prosecutors found agreement the case was an uphill climb, but no clear consensus on whether Vance should -- or would -- continue to prosecute Strauss-Kahn.

"Every juror has to be convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that she's telling the truth," said Bennett Gershman, a former Manhattan prosecutor and a law professor at Pace University. "The burden is enormous on the prosecutor. Do they want to go ahead with a case that seems so difficult?"

'TREASURE TROVE' FOR DEFENSE

Several former prosecutors said the decision to allow Diallo to speak publicly about the incident could create inconsistencies the defense would try to exploit at trial. Her credibility is already under siege after prosecutors said she lied about her past and about the immediate aftermath of the alleged attack.

"You're creating a treasure trove of material for the defense to dig into," said Jeremy Saland, a defense lawyer who worked as a prosecutor under Vance's predecessor, Robert Morgenthau.

Others have suggested that the media appearances show that Diallo's attorney, Kenneth Thompson, no longer believes the criminal case will hold up. Thompson argued on Thursday that she was forced to come forward to counter "lies" about her, including a report in the New York Post claiming she worked as a prostitute. Diallo has sued the Post for libel over that report.

The publicity could also backfire if it appears to be an effort to extract money from Strauss-Kahn to settle a potential civil lawsuit. Thompson has said she will file a civil claim soon.

Thompson's comments seemed to reflect his own uncertainty over whether the criminal case will proceed.

On Wednesday, following Diallo's meeting with prosecutors, Thompson said the discussion "went well." When questioned on Thursday about that assessment, he appeared to backtrack.

"You know, yesterday when I said it went well, I think that you read too much into that," he said in response to a reporter's question. "It was a meeting, I got out of it, I came outside. I don't know what the district attorney will do."

'PRETTY IMPRESSIVE SHOW'

But some observers say the media blitz could succeed in bringing pressure to bear on Vance's office.

"My sense is that they want to be done with it and they want to dismiss it," said one former city prosecutor who did not want to be named. "But, having said that, the victim has put on a pretty impressive show this past week."

John Moscow, the former deputy chief of the district attorney's investigations division, said the physical evidence was strongly suggestive of a forced encounter. That could be enough to overcome doubts about her credibility, Moscow said.

"Here's how I look at it: if she were run over by a car, would you still have a case?" he said. "Yes, you would. I just don't see any reason at all not to go forward."

Matthew Galluzzo, a former Manhattan sex-crimes prosecutor, said Diallo's story about being gang-raped in her home country of Guinea, which she later admitted was inaccurate, could be devastating to the case.

But Daniel Bibb, another former prosecutor, said jurors could forgive her, since she apparently told it to gain political asylum and entry into the United States.

"In the average rape case, I would say that discovery of a prior false allegation of rape is fatal to the prosecution," he said. "In this case, I'm not so sure, simply because her motives in claiming rape were not malicious."

Even if Vance goes ahead with the prosecution, former prosecutors say a conviction of Strauss-Kahn will be hard to secure.

"If what I've read and seen is accurate, it appears to me that this case will ultimately be dismissed," Saland said.

But like most of the prosecutors interviewed, Bibb warned it was impossible to assess from the outside whether the case will continue.

"I don't know what the right decision is," he said. "I don't have all the facts."

(Reporting by Joseph Ax and Noeleen Walder; Editing by Jesse Wegman and Peter Cooney)


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Monday, July 18, 2011

Strauss-Kahn, wife take in the symphony: report (AFP)

WASHINGTON (AFP) – Former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn, battling attempted rape charges in New York, has attended two Boston Symphony Orchestra concerts at the Tanglewood Music Festival, The New York Times reported Saturday.

The first concert was a recital by Danish violinist Nikolaj Znaider on Thursday at Tanglewood, a famed estate that hosts one of the world's premier music festivals every summer in the Berkshire Hills of Massachusetts and located 150 miles (225 kilometers) from Manhattan.

On Friday Strauss-Kahn was back at the venue, the Boston Symphony's summer home, for a concert with conductor Kurt Masur and cellist Lynn Harrell, the paper reported.

Strauss-Kahn had orchestra seats with his wife, the former French television journalist Anne Sinclair, who celebrated her 63rd birthday on Friday.

The pair apparently declined to talk to reporters.

The Times published a photograph of the two seated at the venue that showed Strauss-Kahn with a blue sweater casually draped over his shoulders, and Sinclair wearing a white blouse.

Earlier this month Strauss-Kahn was released from house arrest, and the travel restrictions that confined him to a townhouse in New York were lifted, after US prosecutors raised concerns about the credibility of the New York hotel maid who accused him of sexual assault.

But the charges made by the Guinean woman have not been dismissed, and Strauss-Kahn is due back in court on August 1.


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Strauss-Kahn, wife attend concert in Massachusetts (AP)

NEW YORK – French politician Dominique Strauss-Kahn is venturing farther from New York City after his house arrest on an attempted rape charge was lifted.

Strauss-Kahn and his wife, Anne Sinclair, took in two concerts at the Tanglewood Music Festival in western Massachusetts, two officials with the festival said Saturday. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk about attendees.

The couple traveled to the Tanglewood Music Center in Lenox, Mass., about 130 miles northeast of New York, and attended a recital by violinist Nikolaj Znaider and pianist Saleem Abboud Ashkar on Thursday. They returned Friday for an orchestra concert conducted by Kurt Masur and featuring cellist Lynn Harrell.

The couple came alone and sat in the Koussevitsky Music Shed, the center's 5,000-seat amphitheater, the officials said. They did not appear to have any security guards with them, the officials said.

Tickets ranged from $18 to $52 for Thursday's performance and $19 to $91 for Friday's concert.

Prosecutors say Strauss-Kahn, a popular Socialist who had been a favorite to run for the French presidency, attempted to rape a hotel housekeeper during a visit to Manhattan on May 14.

He resigned his post as leader of the powerful International Monetary Fund a few days after his arrest.

A judge put Strauss-Kahn under house arrest at a rented townhouse in New York, but lifted it July 1 after prosecutors said they had concerns about the housekeeper's credibility. Strauss Kahn was allowed to travel freely within the United States, but cannot leave the country.

The trip to Massachusetts was first reported by the New York Times, which ran a photo Saturday of Strauss-Kahn and Sinclair in the audience at the Music Shed.

Strauss-Kahn wore a blue shirt and a navy blue sweater draped over his shoulders; Sinclair had a jacket and a purse in her lap.

Tanglewood, located in New England's Berkshire Mountains, is the summer home of the Boston Symphony Orchestra. It is about a three-hour drive from the townhouse in Manhattan's Tribeca neighborhood.


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Saturday, July 9, 2011

Paris prosecutor to look into new Strauss-Kahn case (Reuters)

PARIS/NEWYORK (Reuters) – The Paris prosecutor's office said on Friday it has opened a preliminary inquiry into a complaint filed by French writer Tristane Banon alleging an attempted rape by former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn.

The case throws up a new headache for the Frenchman, who is in New York fighting sex assault charges that brought his career at the IMF crashing to an end and have likely killed his chances of running for French president next year.

Strauss-Kahn is expected to counter claim against Banon -- a routine procedure in such a case in France. His lawyers declined to comment on Friday.

Banon, 32, filed her complaint earlier this week over an incident she alleges occurred in 2003 when she went to interview the former French finance minister in an otherwise empty Paris apartment when she was in her early twenties.

Her lawyer David Koubbi said on Thursday there was "physical" evidence to back up the case, although he declined to say if that included text messages or recordings.

Strauss-Kahn had been the favorite to unseat conservative President Nicolas Sarkozy by running for the Socialist Party in France's 2012 election until his arrest in New York in May threw his political future into question.

That case appeared to weaken last week when prosecutors said they had doubts about the credibility of the hotel chambermaid who has alleged Strauss-Kahn tried to rape her when she went in to clean his room.

A court released Strauss-Kahn from house arrest and signs that the case may be unraveling raised the prospect that he could return to France in the months ahead and take a role supporting the left's election campaign.

Yet a person close to the case told Reuters U.S. prosecutors have no current plans to drop the charges and want at least two or three more weeks to investigate Strauss-Kahn, 62, and his 32-year-old accuser. The source also said that no plea deal was sought in a meeting this week with Strauss-Kahn's lawyers.

FRANCE IN DISARRAY

Strauss-Kahn's arrest in New York sent shockwaves around the world and threw the French left into turmoil as it scrambled to come up with a Plan B strategy for winning the presidency after three terms in opposition.

The scandal has also set off a wave of soul-searching in France, where the media has kept quiet for years about a culture of flirting and extramarital affairs in political circles that critics say risks letting sexual predators go unnoticed.

Banon is a journalist and author of three books, including a novel that gives a fictionalized account of the alleged incident with Strauss-Kahn. She also gave a graphic account of the alleged assault in a televised talk show in 2007 with his name bleeped out, but had never taken legal action until this week.

Attempted rape carries a penalty of up to 15 years in France.

For Banon's case to stand up, it would need evidence of attempted rape rather than just sexual assault, given that in France attempted rape charges can be brought as long as 10 years after the event but assault charges expire after three years.

While Strauss-Kahn's allies have rallied round him from the day of his arrest, French voters no longer see him as presidential material -- even if many have decried the way he was paraded in front of U.S. cameras unshaven and handcuffed.

An opinion poll carried out in the wake of Banon's complaint this week found two thirds of respondents did not want Strauss-Kahn to be a candidate in the 2012 election and an even larger share did not believe he would now run.

In New York, a person familiar with Wednesday's talks between defense and prosecution lawyers told Reuters that while Strauss-Kahn and his team feel the "tide has turned" in their favor, his lawyers are not assuming the case is over.

The source said there was increasing suspicion on Strauss-Kahn's side that his accuser targeted him for some kind of scheme because his picture had been posted by hotel management to notify staff that a VIP was on the premises.

While investigating her story and background, prosecutors reportedly turned up a recorded conversation between the maid and a male friend detained in an Arizona jail in which she allegedly indicated that she knew what she was doing and that Strauss-Kahn was someone with a lot of money.

The maid has alleged that Strauss-Kahn forced himself on her violently as she entered his luxury suite to clean it, but her credibility was thrown into question when prosecutors said they believed she had told authorities numerous lies.

(Additional reporting by Mark Hosenball in New York; writing by Catherine Bremer; editing by Philippa Fletcher)


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Friday, July 8, 2011

For DA, Strauss-Kahn accuser, case of frayed trust (AP)

By JENNIFER PELTZ and COLLEEN LONG, Associated Press Jennifer Peltz And Colleen Long, Associated Press – Thu Jul 7, 11:04 pm ET

NEW YORK – When the sexual assault case against Dominique Strauss-Kahn began, his accuser and prosecutors were natural allies. Less than two months later, the relationship has crumbled into tension, with each side feeling betrayed.

Prosecutors have publicly said the woman has a history of lying that has seriously weakened the case. Her lawyer has called the district attorney lily-livered, says prosecutors have scurrilously discredited the woman and is calling for a special prosecutor.

As Manhattan prosecutors weigh whether to go ahead with the case, the broken trust between them and their key witness is a thorny problem amid a public debate over their handling of the case. Influential former DA Robert Morgenthau weighed in Thursday to praise successor Cyrus R. Vance Jr.'s stewardship of the case, while immigrants' and women's advocates gathered outside the courthouse to complain that prosecutors had forsaken an immigrant hotel maid who spoke out against a prominent man.

Prosecutors remained mum about their plans for the case as Strauss-Kahn lawyer Benjamin Brafman reiterated that the former International Monetary Fund leader had "no intention of agreeing to a plea deal."

Strauss-Kahn, 62, denies the sexual assault allegations. His lawyers want prosecutors to drop the case, which took a serious hit last week when prosecutors and a law enforcement official disclosed that the woman had lied about her background, misrepresented her actions immediately after the alleged attack and mentioned Strauss-Kahn's wealth to a friend, among other revelations.

While the woman's questionable credibility could make her a problematic witness, her fractured relationship with prosecutors could prove to be a still bigger hurdle in a case that would hang heavily on her cooperation, experts said.

"(Prosecuting) sex crimes is based on a rapport and trust" that needs to run both ways between victims and prosecutors, said Robin Sax, a former Los Angeles sex-crimes prosecutor now in private practice.

At the outset, that rapport was robust in the Strauss-Kahn case.

After the 32-year-old woman told authorities that Strauss-Kahn attacked her when she came to clean his hotel suite on May 14, prosecutors emphasized her "compelling" and "very powerful" account of a violent encounter. Concerned for her protection and privacy, they have provided her with housing, transportation and meals.

But the relationship began to fray in early June, when Strauss-Kahn's accuser told prosecutors she had lied about her experiences in her native Guinea — including a moving, made-up account of being gang-raped, they said later.

The woman's lawyer, Kenneth Thompson, has said she broached the subject voluntarily, and he cut off her interview with prosecutors after angry questioning brought her to tears.

The woman wouldn't meet with prosecutors again for about two weeks, the official said. When she did, she told them she'd gone on cleaning rooms before reporting the alleged assault, though she'd told a grand jury she fled to a hallway to wait for a supervisor, prosecutors have said.

Prosecutors had learned by then about tens of thousands of dollars' worth of poorly explained deposits others had made in her bank account, and they found out the next day about her remark about Strauss-Kahn's money, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss details not made public in court.

Two days later, a prosecutor told a judge on July 1 that "the strength of the case has been affected by the substantial credibility issues" surrounding the woman, though they noted there still was evidence to corroborate a sexual assault. Strauss-Kahn was freed from house arrest.

Moments later, a furious Thompson denounced the DA's office to a throng of reporters. The woman had made some mistakes but was being truthful about an attack supported by other evidence, he said.

And Vance, he said, was "too afraid" to try the case.

Days later, Thompson called on Vance to recuse his office from the case and arrange for a special prosecutor. In a letter Wednesday that a Thompson spokeswoman provided to reporters, he noted that one of Strauss-Kahn's lawyers is married to one of Vance's top assistant prosecutors; the DA's office says she has recused herself from the case. Thompson also accused the DA's office of leaking damaging information about the woman to the media "to undermine the veracity of the victim."

Vance's office bristled at Thompson's remarks and brushed off the recusal request as "wholly without merit."

Generally, special prosecutors are appointed in New York when a DA has a personal conflict of interest, such as having represented a defendant while in private practice, said Bennett L. Gershman, a Pace Law School professor who worked for a special state prosecutor investigating corruption in the 1970s. Gershman called Thompson's request "a stunt."

Thompson wasn't available Thursday for an interview.

As former assistant federal prosecutor, Thompson tried an infamous case surrounding a hideous attack on Haitian immigrant Abner Louima in a police station. One officer pleaded guilty mid-trial to sodomizing Louima with a broomstick; another was ultimately convicted of perjury; two others were convicted of obstruction of justice, but their convictions were overturned.

In private practice, Thompson has represented clients including people injured in a steampipe explosion near Grand Central station and a woman at the center of a domestic violence case involving a top aide to former Gov. David Paterson. The aide, David Johnson, pleaded guilty to harassment.

Thompson's firm, now Thompson Wigdor, was sanctioned $15,000 in May in a federal employment discrimination case. Manhattan federal Judge William Pauley found that a former partner in the firm, Scott Gilly, and an associate let a client testify falsely in a deposition to get a better settlement. Thompson, who wasn't involved in the suit, said the firm took steps to make sure such a problem wouldn't recur.

While it's unusual for an alleged crime victim's lawyer to call out a DA so aggressively during a case, an attorney's job is "zealously to represent the interest of his client," said Stephen Gillers, a New York University School of Law professor who specializes in regulation of the legal profession.

As for prosecutors, it's hardly ideal but not entirely surprising to find themselves at odds with an alleged crime victim, said Ellen Yaroshevsky, a legal ethicist and former criminal defense lawyer at Yeshiva University's Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law.

"Prosecutors are in a conflicted position to begin with," she said, "because they have an obligation to assess the credibility of a victim, and at the same time, they want to support her."

___

Associated Press writer Tom Hays and researcher Rhonda Shafner contributed to this report.

___

Jennifer Peltz can be reached at http://twitter.com/jennpeltz


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Monday, July 4, 2011

Strauss-Kahn leaves NYC house, returns hours later (AP)

NEW YORK – Former International Monetary Fund chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn spent his first day of freedom from house arrest in a sexual-assault case by ducking out of his rented townhouse with his wife on Saturday, returning a few hours later and heading quickly back inside.

Strauss-Kahn, whose house arrest was lifted Friday following concerns about the credibility of a hotel maid who accused him of trying to rape her, had left the house in Manhattan's Tribeca neighborhood with his wife, Anne Sinclair, just after 2 p.m. Saturday. They glanced at a crowd of reporters across the street, then climbed into the back seat of a black luxury sedan, which sped off down the cobblestoned street followed by a second black sedan. Their destination was unknown.

The couple returned about three hours later, stepping from a vehicle outside the home.

Strauss-Kahn has been accused by the maid of trying to rape her in May. Prosecutors told a judge on Friday they had discovered serious problems with the maid's credibility. The judge subsequently lifted his house arrest, allowing him to travel in the U.S. but not abroad.

In a dramatic turn of events, the Manhattan district attorney's office revealed that the 32-year-old hotel maid had committed a host of minor frauds to better her life in the U.S. since arriving in the country seven years ago, including lying on immigration paperwork, cheating on her taxes and misstating her income so she could live in an apartment reserved for the poor.

Days after Strauss-Kahn's arrest, the maid made a telephone call to a significant other who was incarcerated in Arizona, and that also raised suspicions, said a law enforcement official with knowledge of the investigation. The official spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the official was not authorized to speak publicly about the case.

In a letter to Strauss-Kahn's lawyers, prosecutors also said she had misrepresented what she did immediately after the time she claims Strauss-Kahn attacked her — instead of fleeing his luxury suite to a hallway and waiting for a supervisor, she went to clean another room and then returned to clean Strauss-Kahn's suite before reporting the encounter.

That change in her story, and the revelations about her past, weren't enough to kill the case entirely, but prosecutors acknowledged their position had been shaken and agreed to a defense request that Strauss-Kahn, often called DSK, be freed immediately from house arrest.

The revelations in a case once considered iron-clad came as a shock; prosecutors and police had said repeatedly that the hotel maid was found to be a credible witness.

Strauss-Kahn, who resigned his post at the powerful global lending organization, has denied the charges. He is due back in court on July 18. His attorney, Benjamin Brafman, said he believes his client will be vindicated.

Linda Fairstein, who oversaw the sex crimes prosecution unit in the Manhattan district attorney's office for 25 years, said rape cases are "especially difficult" to try.

"But they are nearly impossible to try when you find out the witness has already lied to you," she said. "The prosecutors and police, they took her word over the word of one of the most powerful men in the financial world."

Investigators have gathered forensic evidence in the case, including traces of Strauss-Kahn's semen found on the woman's work uniform, but that evidence alone isn't enough, said Fairstein, now a crime novelist.

"The DNA clearly suggests there was some kind of sexual exchange between DSK and the woman, but it tells you nothing about whether it was forcible," she said. "It can be deposited by consent or by force. Her credibility is the entire case. You have to believe her story."

But she also said that her transgressions don't mean her story is false.

"Bad people, people who lie, they're still sexually assaulted," she said. "So I think what everybody is trying to do now is bring her back again, and say `OK, you were dishonest about these things, now we have to figure out what really happened between you and this man.'"

At a minimum, questions about the woman's credibility could leave a jury doubtful that she was telling the truth about what happened. They also raise the possibility that the woman herself could be in legal trouble, if the government decides to seek punishment for her past fibs and fabrications.

Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance, Jr. said the charges will stand for now. But prosecutors had a legal duty to turn over the uncovered information to the defense, and they were continuing their investigation.

In a letter sent to Strauss-Kahn's lawyers, they disclosed several instances in which they believed the woman had lied about herself or the circumstances of her life. They said she'd made up being gang raped and beaten in her homeland, Guinea, to enhance her application for political asylum in 2004. She now says she was raped there, but not as she initially said.

U.S. officials are often presented with fabricated stories by people seeking refugee status in the country, and the nation's immigration courts are filled with instances of immigrants who have been caught embellishing personal histories to meet the strict conditions for being granted asylum.

Lori Adams, managing attorney of the legal aid group Human Rights First, said that if the woman's application was based on fraud, the Department of Justice could seek to reopen the case and have her thrown out of the country.

Her attorney Kenneth Thompson said she went to prosecutors to tell them the truth and she had initially feared she'd be deported if she told them why she really left: because she was a victim of genital mutilation and she didn't want her daughter, now 15, to be similarly affected.

Prosecutors said the woman had also been lying on her tax returns about how many dependents she had to increase her tax refund and had misstated her income to avoid losing her apartment reserved for low-income people.

While it wasn't detailed in the letter, prosecutors have also raised other questions about the woman's credibility.

Prosecutors located a recording of the woman, days after Strauss-Kahn's arrest, talking about the case and mentioning Strauss-Kahn's wealth in a phone call to a man incarcerated on a drug charge, the law enforcement official told the AP.

The woman also raised questions by saying she knew little about tens of thousands of dollars others have deposited in bank accounts in her name, the official said. Authorities suspect the money might be drug-related, the official said.

Thompson acknowledged the recording but said any suggestion his client was involved with a known dealer or money launderer was a lie.

"I have not heard that tape," Thompson said.

But he said that when he discussed the recording with prosecutors, "I said, `Did she change her story to this guy in prison?' ... They told me no."

He said that since the start of the case, the woman has been consistent in the most important part of her story, saying that as she began cleaning Strauss-Kahn's suite he grabbed her breast, violently knocked her down and forced her to perform oral sex. He said she suffered bruises and torn ligaments.

If the case against Strauss-Kahn collapses, it could again shake up the race for the French presidency. Before the scandal, Strauss-Kahn, a prominent Socialist, had been seen as a leading potential challenger to conservative President Nicolas Sarkozy.

Former French government minister Jack Lang said he spoke with Sinclair to offer the couple moral support. Lang, who has known Strauss-Kahn since the 1970s, urged him to go back to France and join the 2012 presidential race.

"He could be a good candidate" Lang said.

___

Associated Press writers Matt Moore in Philadelphia and Verena Dobnik, David B. Caruso, Jennifer Peltz, Tom Hays and Chris Hawley in New York contributed to this report.


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Sunday, July 3, 2011

New York DA suffers new setback with Strauss-Kahn (AP)

NEW YORK – It was a sensational caseload that would put any prosecutor's office on the map — or on the spot.

There was a prominent French politician accused of sexually assaulting a hotel housekeeper; two police officers charged with the on-duty rape of a young woman; and two men caught in an alleged scheme to blow up city synagogues.

But what began as a promising, headline-grabbing summer for the Manhattan district attorney's office has been clouded by a dizzying series of setbacks inside the courthouse.

The latest setback came Friday, when prosecutors conceded the accuser in the attempted rape case against former IMF leader and potential French presidential contender Dominique Strauss-Kahn had credibility problems. The issues were serious enough that they agreed to allow a judge to lift his bail and free him from house arrest.

District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance Jr. — six weeks after he was put in the international spotlight by announcing charges against Strauss-Kahn — kept things brief when he again faced cameras outside the courthouse to deliver a prepared statement about the unfortunate turn his biggest case yet.

"As prosecutors, our duty is to do whatever is right, in every case, without fear or favor, wherever that leads," he said. "The disclosures we made that led to today's proceeding reflect that principle."

Vance refused to take questions. By contrast, the accuser's attorney, Ken Thompson, went back and forth with reporters for 20 minutes, at one point questioning Vance's resolve.

The district attorney "is too afraid to try this case," Thompson said. "We believe that he's afraid that he's going to lose this high-profile case."

That fear, he suggested, stemmed from the stunning acquittal late last month of two police officers on charges that one had raped a drunken fashion-house staffer they had escorted home.

Jurors reached the not-guilty verdict despite dramatic testimony by the woman and security videotape showing the officers repeatedly entering and leaving her apartment building over the course of the night. They instead convicted the officers of misdemeanor official misconduct for returning to the building without telling dispatchers where they were.

Two weeks later, the district attorney's office informed the court that, after failing to get a grand jury indictment, it was dropping the most serious charge against two defendants in a different case that had been brought with fanfare under a rarely used state terror conspiracy statute.

Police alleged the men wanted to strike a synagogue to avenge mistreatment of Muslims around the world. Federal authorities raised eyebrows by passing on the case, and the top charge was eventually dropped. The men still face lesser terrorism and hate crime charges that still could net them up to 32 years behind bars if they are convicted. But the defense has used the development to try to portray the case as trumped-up and politically motivated.

There was more bad news last week in another closely watched case — that of construction supervisors charged in the deaths of two firefighters in a high-rise blaze in 2007 near ground zero. A jury acquitted two of the defendants after their attorneys argued prosecutors made them scapegoats for the removal of a standpipe that would have provided water to fight the fire.

Meanwhile, there has been some upheaval within the office as well as in the courtroom. The chief of the sex crimes unit, Lisa Friel, told insiders this week she would leave the post she has held for nine years to seek a private-sector job — curious timing amid the high-profile Strauss-Kahn case.

She didn't immediately return a telephone message Friday, and the district attorney's office has declined to discuss her departure.

Both the fire and the police officers' rape cases were launched before Vance arrived in 2010, and the terrorism and Strauss-Kahn cases have marked the biggest yet initiated on his watch.

Any misfortune probably has more to do with the risks in tackling tough cases than failings in legal tactics or internal turmoil, said Matthew Galluzzo, a criminal defense lawyer who worked in the sex crimes unit for three years until 2008.

"To say they've made mistakes is probably too simplistic," Galluzzo said. "It's more like they've had some bad luck and some bad publicity."

The office of the DA — vaunted for its high profile in the nation's largest city and portrayed with liberal embellishments in television shows like "Law & Order" — says it is undaunted by the recent spate of troubles.

"A prosecutor's job is to seek the truth. This office's reputation was built on its commitment to doing justice in every case, wherever that leads. We will never be afraid to try tough cases," spokeswoman Erin Duggan said Friday, noting that the office had just won a murder conviction of a man who slashed his girlfriend to death in August 2007 after a troubled relationship.

And not all the news has been bad for the DA's office this year. Prosecutors won a murder conviction in the killing of a motivational speaker, a case that drew attention because the defendant said he'd helped the man commit suicide.

A former art gallery director was convicted of scheming to defraud four artists' estates by selling their works without telling them, in a case that brought actor Robert De Niro to the witness stand; his painter father's estate was among the victims.

More than two dozen taxi drivers have pleaded guilty after a broad probe into a fare-boosting scam that affected thousands of tourists and residents who rode in the city's signature yellow cabs. A high-end hotel housekeeping manager who pleaded guilty to killing and trying to rape a woman in her room was sentenced last month to 23 years to life in prison.

In the end, it's not always about winning and losing, Galluzzo said.

"What's career-making for a DA is doing the right thing," he said. "And he should take credit for that."

___

Associated Press writer Jennifer Peltz contributed to this report.


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Strauss-Kahn spends first full day free of house arrest (AFP)

NEW YORK (AFP) – With the sex assault case against Dominique Strauss-Kahn hanging by a thread, damning new revelations emerged Saturday about his accuser, whose mounting credibility problems prompted the ex-IMF chief's release from house arrest.

Buoyed by a New York judge's order a day earlier to end all restrictions on him except foreign travel, Strauss-Kahn was enjoying his first full day of freedom -- as prosecutors scrambled to salvage some sort of case against the once high-flying French politician.

While the charges against Strauss-Kahn stand, the case has nearly imploded after prosecutors acknowledged their investigations of the accuser, a Guinea-born hotel maid, found she lied to a grand jury about the case.

In a letter to defense lawyers, Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance said the woman had provided a "false" narrative of her life -- including a gang rape which she later admitted never occurred -- as part of her application process for US asylum.

Among other details gleaned about the maid were her possible links to criminal activities, including drug dealing and money laundering, a law enforcement official told The New York Times.

Within a day of the alleged rape attempt, the maid was recorded speaking on the phone with a boyfriend jailed for possessing 400 pounds (180 kilograms) of marijuana and discussing the benefits of pursuing charges, according to the newspaper.

When the conversation was translated from Fulani, the maid's native language, investigators became concerned.

"She says words to the effect of, 'Don't worry, this guy has a lot of money. I know what I'm doing,'" the Times quotes one of the officials as saying.

The paper said the man was one of several individuals who made multiple cash deposits totaling around $100,000 into the woman's bank account over the last two years.

The sensational twist raised hopes among Stauss-Kahn's ardent supporters that the case will collapse and the Socialist party favorite will return to frontline politics, possibly even as a candidate to challenge French President Nicolas Sarkozy in 2012 elections.

In a hint of just how possible a potential Strauss Kahn bid might be, fellow socialist Segolene Royal, a candidate in the presidential vote, said she had no problem delaying the process to make room for him.

But the current deadline for declaring in the Socialist Party primary is July 13 -- five days before Strauss-Kahn's next scheduled court appearance in New York.

And authorities will keep his passport pending possible trial, meaning he cannot travel outside of the United States, though his $1 million bail and $5 million bond will now be returned.

The Socialist Party heavyweight quickly took advantage of his newfound freedom after leaving a packed Manhattan courtroom Friday, celebrating over dinner with his wife and another couple at a posh Italian restaurant on Manhattan's Upper East Side.

The 62-year-old dined on pasta pappardelle with truffles, and the tab ran to around $600, according to the restaurant owner.

It was a stunning reversal of fortune for a man who spent days locked up in New York's tough Rikers Island jail in May.

Despite the maid's shattered credibility, Vance vowed to continue the investigations until prosecutors had uncovered all the facts.

"Today's proceedings did not dismiss the indictment or any of the charges against the defendant," he stressed.

Judge Michael Obus concurred, telling the court: "The case is not over.... In the meantime, there will be no rush to judgment."

Legal analysts, however, said the case was likely dead in the water and would be dismissed.

According to the accuser's initial grand jury testimony, she fled Strauss-Kahn's luxury hotel suite immediately after the May 14 attack and waited in the hallway before informing a supervisor.

But, prosecutors revealed, the 32-year-old subsequently changed her story, admitting she actually cleaned another room and even returned to start cleaning Strauss-Kahn's suite before alerting her bosses.

Strauss-Kahn's attorneys William Taylor and Benjamin Brafman said the disclosures "only further confirm that he will be fully exonerated."

Outside the courtroom, the maid's lawyer Kenneth Thompson admitted his client had made "some mistakes," but insisted forensic evidence would prove Strauss-Kahn was guilty of a brutal sexual assault.

Neighbors in the accuser's Bronx neighborhood, including many fellow Guineans, were philosophical.

"Maybe she lied. It just ends up hurting all Guineans if people have less then good intentions," said Tidiane Ba, speaking in French. "But we have to let the courts do their job."


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More questions raised about Strauss-Kahn accuser (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Scrutiny of the accuser in the sexual assault case against former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn intensified on Saturday after more revelations about her conduct following the purported May 14 attack.

A judge released Strauss-Kahn from house arrest and lifted strict bail conditions on Friday after prosecutors discovered a pattern of lying in the accuser's background, although serious charges including sexual assault and attempted rape remain in place against the man once seen a top French presidential contender.

A new report says the 32-year-old woman, a hotel maid, spoke of the possibility of financial gain from the incident.

In a phone conversation with her boyfriend, who was held in an Arizona jail on suspicion of possessing 400 pounds (180 kg) of marijuana, she said there was money to be made from Strauss-Kahn, a law-enforcement source familiar with the investigation told Reuters on Saturday.

The call was recorded and the woman told her boyfriend she was fine and not to worry about her, the source said.

The New York Times quoted a well-placed law enforcement official as saying: "She says words to the effect of, 'Don't worry, this guy has a lot of money. I know what I'm doing.'"

On Friday, prosecutors said the accuser lied about being gang-raped in Guinea as part of an application for U.S. asylum and changed details of her story about what she did after the incident in Straus-Kahn's luxury hotel suite.

As the woman's stature falls, that of Strauss-Kahn has rebounded. Some in France are talking about a political comeback, although perhaps not to challenge President Nicolas Sarkozy in 2012.

Strauss-Kahn's whereabouts on Saturday were unknown. He left his Manhattan townhouse and got into a black sedan, followed by a flock of photographers in vehicles and on motorbikes. His car then pulled into a garage with restricted access and he disappeared, thwarting attempts to follow him further.

Revelations about the accuser have left prosecutors struggling to make a case with a central witness whose credibility would be targeted by Strauss-Kahn's defense lawyers.

Investigators once trumpeted the woman as a devout Muslim who immediately reported that Strauss-Kahn, a steward of the world economy from the French elite, sprang naked from the bathroom and forced her to perform oral sex.

Her lawyer, Kenneth Thompson, came to her defense on Friday, portraying her as a frightened, illiterate woman who remained a victim, her body badly bruised in the encounter.

"The victim here may have made some mistakes but that doesn't mean she's not a rape victim," Thompson said.

(Additional reporting by Allison Joyce in New York and Leila Abboud in Paris; Editing by Doina Chiacu and Bill Trott)


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Saturday, July 2, 2011

Strauss-Kahn freed from house arrest (AFP)

NEW YORK (AFP) – A US judge released Dominique Strauss-Kahn on his "own recognizance" Friday, but prosecutors who consented to the easing of bail restrictions did not agree to dismiss the sexual assault case against the former IMF chief.

The French politician was in a New York courtroom for a brief but extraordinary hearing that came in the wake of reports that prosecutors had grave doubts about the credibility Strauss-Kahn's accuser, and while sources suggested to US media that the case had serious problems, the judge stressed that the "case is not over."


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Strauss-Kahn free from house arrest; charges stand (AP)

By JENNIFER PELTZ and TOM HAYS, Associated Press Jennifer Peltz And Tom Hays, Associated Press – 47 mins ago

NEW YORK – Former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn walked out of court without bail Friday, freed from house arrest, after prosecutors acknowledged serious questions about the credibility of the hotel housekeeper who accused him of sexual assault.

The charges, which include attempted rape, were not dropped, but the easing of his bail conditions signaled that prosecutors do not believe the accusations are as ironclad as they once seemed.

"It is a great relief," said Strauss-Kahn's attorney, William Taylor. "It is so important in this country that people, especially the media, refrain from judgment until the facts are all in."

After his arrest, Strauss-Kahn, 62, resigned from his post leading the International Monetary Fund and watched his presidential ambitions in France seemingly crumble. He had been confined for weeks to a luxury New York City loft on $6 million in cash and bond.

The 32-year-old hotel maid accused Strauss-Kahn of chasing her through his luxury suite in May, trying to pull down her pantyhose and forcing her to perform oral sex. Authorities have said they have forensic evidence of a sexual encounter, but defense lawyers have said it wasn't forced.

The stark turn in the case came after the woman admitted to prosecutors she had made up a story of being gang-raped and beaten in her homeland of Guinea to enhance her application for political asylum, prosecutors said in a letter to defense lawyers.

She also misrepresented what she did after the alleged attack — instead of fleeing to a hallway and waiting for a supervisor, she went to clean another room and then returned to clean Strauss-Kahn's suite before telling her supervisor that she had been attacked, prosecutors said.

She also misrepresented her income and claimed someone else's child as her own dependent on tax returns, they said.

The details speak to the maid's credibility and whether her story would stand up under oath in a prosecution that would rely heavily on her testimony.

The woman's attorney, Ken Thompson, fired back outside court, saying the district attorney's office was backing away from the case because it was too scared to prosecute it. He said she would come out in public to tell her story but didn't specify when.

Thompson said the woman went to the district attorney with information that her asylum application was flawed, but that she exaggerated on it because she was scared she would be sent back to Guinea. He said she came to the U.S. because she was a victim of female genital mutilation, and she worried her daughter, now 15, would be victimized as well. He also said she had been raped by soldiers there, but that attack did not occur as it was written in her asylum application.

Thompson said that Strauss-Kahn bruised the woman's genitals, tore a ligament in her shoulder and ripped her stockings, and that she fought to get away.

Investigators have said they found traces of his semen on her uniform.

"From day one she has described a violent sexual assault that Dominique Strauss-Kahn committed against her," Thompson said. "She has described that sexual assault many times, to prosecutors and to me, and she has never once changed a single thing about that encounter."

Thompson also said that news reports saying his client was involved with a drug dealer were lies.

The New York Times, quoting unidentified law enforcement official, reported that the woman was recorded on the phone with an incarcerated man around the day she made the allegations, discussing whether to press her case in court.

The newspaper said the man had been arrested on marijuana possession charges and had deposited cash in the woman's bank account.

"It is clear that this woman made some mistakes, but that doesn't mean she's not a rape victim," Thompson said.

Strauss-Kahn arrived at the courthouse Friday morning in a Lexus SUV and strode confidently up the granite steps with his wife, French journalist Anne Sinclair, at his side.

After the hearing, he slowly walked out the building with his arm on her shoulder, smiling at the throng gathered outside.

He was not given back his passport, and he will not yet be allowed to leave the country. His other attorney, Benjamin Brafman, said Strauss-Kahn would be free to travel within the U.S.

Prosecutors offered few details inside court on the turn in the case. Assistant District Attorney Joan Illuzzi-Orbon said a further investigation caused them to reassess it.

"At the time this case came to the district attorney's office, we were faced with a credible claim of a serious sexual assault," she said, noting the accuser had promptly reported the alleged attack and had a "solid work history."

State Supreme Court Justice Michael Obus, in releasing Strauss-Kahn, said there would be no rush to judgment either way.

Illuzzi-Orbon said, "Although it is clear that the strength of the case has been affected by the substantial credibility issues regarding the complainant, we are not moving to dismiss the case at this time."

If the case collapses, it could once again shake up the race for the French presidency. Strauss-Kahn, a prominent Socialist, had been seen as a leading potential challenger to conservative President Nicolas Sarkozy in next year's elections — until the New York allegations embarrassed his party and led to his resignation from the IMF.

"Those who know Dominique Strauss-Kahn will not be surprised by this evolution of events," one of his French lawyers, Leon Lef Forster, told The Associated Press in Paris. "What he was accused of has no relation to his personality. It was something that was not credible."

New doubts about Strauss-Kahn's accuser would also revive speculation of a conspiracy against Strauss-Kahn aimed at torpedoing his presidential chances. Within days of his arrest, a poll suggested that a majority of French think Strauss-Kahn, who long had a reputation as a womanizer and was nicknamed "the great seducer," was the victim of a plot.

Strauss-Kahn was held without bail for nearly a week after his May arrest. His lawyers ultimately persuaded a judge to release him by agreeing to extensive — and expensive — conditions, including an ankle monitor, surveillance cameras and armed guards. He was allowed to leave only for court, weekly religious services and visits to doctors and his lawyers.

The security measures were estimated to cost him $200,000 a month, on top of the $50,000-a-month rent on the townhouse in the city's TriBeCa neighborhood.

Under New York law, judges base bail decisions on such factors as the defendant's character, financial resources and criminal record, as well as the strength of the case — all intended to help gauge how likely the person is to flee if released.

Strauss-Kahn is slated to return to court July 18.

___

Online:

Prosecutors' letter: http://www.courts.state.ny.us/press/index.shtml


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Maid lie sees Strauss-Kahn freed from house arrest (AFP)

NEW YORK (AFP) – Former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn was freed from house arrest Friday after prosecutors raised serious doubts about the credibility of the woman accusing him of sexual assault.

The sensational twist raised French opposition hopes that the sexual assault case will collapse and the Socialist party favorite will return to frontline politics, possibly even as a candidate to fight Nicolas Sarkozy for the presidency in 2012.

A smiling Strauss-Kahn, 62, appeared as if a large weight had been lifted off his shoulders as he left the frenzied atmosphere of the packed Manhattan courtroom, his arm affectionately draped on wife Anne Sinclair's shoulder.

Strauss-Kahn, whose $1-million bail and $5-million bond will now be returned, is free to travel anywhere he likes in the United States, though the authorities will hang onto his passport, pending possible trial.

According to the alleged victim's initial testimony to the grand jury, she fled Strauss-Kahn's luxury Manhattan hotel suite immediately after the May 14 attack and waited in the hallway before informing a supervisor.

But, prosecutors revealed Friday, the 32-year-old Guinean maid subsequently changed her story to say she actually cleaned another room and even returned to start cleaning Strauss-Kahn's suite before alerting her bosses.

"The complainant has since admitted that this account was false and that after the incident in Suite 2806, she proceeded to clean a nearby room and then returned to Suite 2806 and began to clean that suite before she reported the incident to her supervisor," District Attorney Cyrus Vance said in a letter sent to Strauss-Kahn's defense lawyers.

Despite shattering the credibility of the maid, Vance vowed that prosecutors would continue their investigations until they had uncovered all the facts.

"Today's proceedings did not dismiss the indictment or any of the charges against the defendant," he stressed.

Judge Michael Obus concurred, telling the court, "The case is not over, as we've heard. In the meantime there will be no rush to judgement on the case. We expect the process will go on."

But legal experts, such as CNN's Jeffrey Toobin, who admitted to being dumbfounded by the day's events, said the case was now heading in only one direction.

"It looks like this case is going to end with a dismissal of the case," Toobin said. "It's hard to imagine how there could be a trial at this point when the prosecution has essentially described its main witness as something close to a compulsive liar."

Outside the courtroom, the maid's lawyer admitted his client had made "some mistakes," but insisted the strength of the forensic evidence would prove Strauss-Kahn was guilty of a brutal sexual assault.

The lawyer, Ken Thompson, went on to relay in the most graphic detail yet the accusations against Strauss-Kahn.

"Dominique Strauss-Kahn came out running out of one of those rooms naked, towards her, and he grabbed her breasts first and started to attack her. He grabbed her vagina with so much force that he bruised her vagina."

Thompson said the attack was so violent that Strauss-Kahn ripped her stockings and tore a ligament in the maid's shoulder. "That is a medical fact. She now may need surgery for the damage he caused to her shoulder," he added.

"After he finished, she got up and started to run for that door and started spitting Dominique Strauss-Kahn's semen out of her mouth in disgust all over that hotel room."

Despite his defiance, Thompson admitted fearing the district attorney's office was "laying the foundation to dismiss this case."

"Our concern is that Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance is too afraid to try this case. We believe that he's afraid that he's going to lose this high-profile case."

Strauss-Kahn attorney William Taylor thanked the prosecution for investigating the maid's credibility and said: "these disclosures reinforce our conviction that he will be exonerated."

Doubts over the maid's credibility mark a stunning reversal in the case that has upended politics in France and prompted a change in leadership at the International Monetary Fund at a time of major upheaval in the eurozone.

Word that the case might implode has raised hopes among France's opposition Socialists that a vindicated Strauss-Kahn might return to help them drive Sarkozy from office in next year's elections.

"It's a thunderbolt -- but in the opposite direction this time," said Socialist former prime minister Lionel Jospin.

Strauss-Kahn, who resigned from his high-profile post at the world's crisis lender on May 18 to fight the charges, was ordered to return to court for his next scheduled hearing, on July 18.


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Friday, July 1, 2011

Strauss-Kahn released from house arrest (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn was released from house arrest on Friday after prosecutors said the hotel maid who accuses him of attempted rape lied to a grand jury and made other false statements.

Strauss-Kahn, 62, still faces charges that he sexually assaulted the woman in New York but questions about her credibility appear to be shifting the case in his favor in a twist that could upend French politics.

The former steward of the global economy smiled as he left court with his wife, Anne Sinclair, at his side.

Until his May 14 arrest, Strauss-Kahn was a strong potential challenger to Conservative President Nicolas Sarkozy in the 2012 election. Jubilant supporters in the French Socialist party hoped he might rejoin the presidential race but some analysts saw his chances as too tarnished.

Strauss-Kahn's lawyers want the charges dropped. The judge said prosecutors will reexamine the evidence after they revealed the maid lied to a grand jury about her actions after the alleged attack and on tax and immigration documents.

"I understand that the circumstances of this case have changed substantially and I agree the risk that he would not be here has receded quite a bit," Justice Michael Obus told the court as he released Strauss-Kahn.

"There will be no rush to judgment. The people will continue to investigate and reexamine the matter as appropriate."

Strauss-Kahn, whose house arrest had included electronic monitoring and an armed guard, agreed to return to court as needed, including for a July 18 hearing.

His bail payment of $1 million and bond of $5 million were returned to him but his passport was not, meaning he can travel only within the United States.

With his resignation on May 19, Strauss-Kahn severed all his ties to the International Monetary Fund. Christine Lagarde, who has just stepped down as French finance minister, takes over the top IMF job on Tuesday.

QUESTIONS EMERGE

The case has hinged on the accuser, a 32-year-old Guinean immigrant who cleaned the $3,000-a-night suite at the Sofitel hotel in Manhattan where Strauss-Kahn was staying.

Prosecutors found issues with her asylum application, tax return and statements to the grand jury investigating the assault case, court documents showed.

Prosecutor Joan Illuzzi-Orbon told the court "the facts of the sexual encounter was and is corroborated" but some details appear to have changed.

The woman initially said Strauss-Kahn assaulted her and she then cowered in the hallway outside his room until he left and she felt safe to seek help. Now, prosecutors say, she admits she cleaned a nearby room and then returned to Strauss-Kahn's suite to start cleaning before reporting the incident.

After the dramatic revelations, Strauss-Kahn's lawyer Benjamin Brafman said he wants the charges dropped.

"We are absolutely convinced that while today is a first giant step in the right direction, the next step will lead to a complete dismissal of the charges," Brafman said.

The woman's brother told Reuters in Guinea that she was the victim of a smear campaign.

Her lawyer, Kenneth Thompson, said after the hearing his client's story had never wavered and that Strauss-Kahn had bruised her badly and tore a ligament in her shoulder.

"The claim that this was consensual is a lie," Thompson told reporters. "She made some mistakes but that doesn't mean she is not a rape victim."

The New York Times quoted law enforcement officials as saying prosecutors found possible links between the accuser and people involved in drug dealing and money laundering.

They also discovered the woman made a phone call to a jailed man within a day of her encounter with Strauss-Kahn in which she discussed the possible benefits of pursuing the charges against him, the paper said.

The conversation was recorded. The man was among a number of people who had made multiple cash deposits, totaling around $100,000, into the woman's bank account over the last two years, The New York Times said.

Some commentators suggested that Strauss-Kahn, known as the "great seducer" of French politics, could have been set up.

His arrest opened the field for several other Socialist candidates for next April's presidential election, including party leader Martine Aubry, who trails colleague Francois Hollande in opinion polls.

Sarkozy, who nominated Strauss-Kahn for the IMF job, has not commented on the affair since his arrest. The case has prompted debate in France on gender equality and a media tradition of respecting the privacy of politicians' sex lives.

Nina Mitz, a former senior adviser to Strauss-Kahn at the French Ministry of Finance, said: "Today's stunning news can only make us regret that so much talent may have been wasted at a time when we all very much needed it."

(Additional reporting by Grant McCool, Christine Kearney, Paula Rogo and Bernd Debussmann Jr in New York, Mark Hosenball in Washington, Marie Maitre, Catherine Bremer and Geert De Clercq in Paris and Saliou Samb in Guinea; Writing by Mark Egan; Editing by John O'Callaghan)


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Prosecutors detail flaws in Strauss-Kahn accuser's account (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) – The woman who accused former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn of sexual assault admitted she lied to a grand jury about what happened after the purported attack, prosecutors told Strauss-Kahn's lawyers in a letter.

The inconsistencies in her story led investigators to lose faith in her credibility as a witness, a dramatic turnabout in the case against a man who once had been seen as a top contender for the French presidency.

The accuser initially told prosecutors and the grand jury she fled to the hallway after the incident and waited for Strauss-Kahn to leave, and informed a supervisor of what happened shortly after, prosecutors said.

"The complainant (accuser) has since admitted that this account was false and that after the incident in Suite 2806, she proceeded to clean a nearby room and then returned to Suite 2806 and began to clean that suite before she reported the incident to her supervisor," the letter said.

(Reporting by Daniel Trotta; Editing by Doina Chiacu)


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Strauss-Kahn court hearing: live report (AFP)

1730 GMT: This ends AFP's Live Report coverage Friday on developments in the sexual assault case against former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn. Here is a summary of events in the fast moving case: -- In an unscheduled hearing, New York Judge Michael Obus releases Strauss-Kahn on his own recognizance and sets a new hearing for July 18. -- Obus makes his decision because Strauss-Kahn's accuser gave false information to the grand jury. The alleged victim also lied on her application to immigrate to the United States, further undermining her credibility. -- Strauss-Kahn is allowed to end his strict house arrest conditions and go where he pleases, but cannot travel abroad, as Obus retains the ex-IMF chief's passport. -- "This case was not what it appears to be," Strauss-Kahn said attorney Benjamin Brafman tells reporters outside the courthouse, predicting that his client will be exonerated. -- However the victim's attorney, Kenneth Thompson, gives a full-throated defense of his client. "The victim made mistakes, but that doesn't mean she's not a rape victim," he said. -- Thompson points to powerful physical evidence that she was sexually assaulted, including a bruised vagina, and torn shoulder ligament and ripped stockings. -- Thompson claims District Attorney Cyrus Vance is laying the foundation to dismiss the case. -- Vance speaks to reporters but takes no questions. His office is committed "to the truth and the facts" and will continue to pursue the case, he says.

1714 GMT: In a letter to Strauss-Kahn's attorneys, Vance said his office believes the alleged victim gave false information in both her asylum application to enter the United States and in her account to the grand jury about what happened immediately after the alleged assault.

1655 GMT: Thompson, the victim's attorney, claims that district attorney Vance "is too afraid to try this case" after recently losing several high-profile New York cases.

1642 GMT: After vowing to pursue the case, Vance leaves without taking questions from reporters.

1640 GMT : "Today's proceedings do not dismiss the indictment," said Vance. "Our office's committment is to the truth and the facts."

1637 GMT: District Attorney Cyrus Vance speaks to reporters.

1635 GMT: "The complainant has since admitted that this account was false and that after the incident in Suite 2806, she proceeded to clean a nearby room and then returned to Suite 2806 and began to clean that suite before she reported the incident to her supervisor," prosecutors said in court filings.

1634 GMT: Strauss-Kahn's alleged victim gave a false account in testimony to the grand jury, omitting the fact that she cleaned another room before alerting a supervisor of her claims of sexual assault, prosecutors said in court documents.

1627 GMT: .The victim said she is "going to stand in front in the cameras and tell to the world what Dominique Strauss-Kahn did," said Thompson, her lawyer.

1617 GMT: Strauss-Kahn made it back to the Manhattan home where he is staying.

1616 GMT: "We are grateful to the office of the disrict attorney for following up on this investigation and making these disclosures," Strauss-Kahn attorney William Taylor said, adding: "these disclosures reinforce our conviction that he will be exonerated."

1615 GMT: Strauss-Kahn will be exonerated, his lawyers said after a judge freed him on house arrest.

1612 GMT: The victim's credibility "is important. But you cannot discount the powerful physical evidence that was left behind in that assault," said Thompson.

1608 GMT: "The victim made mistakes, but that doesn't mean that she's not a rape victim," said Thompson.

1607 GMT: "We believe the district attorney is laying the foundation to dismiss this case," said Thompson.

1605 GMT: "Her asylum information is not completely accurate," said Thompson, saying that the victim had been raped by soldiers in Africa.

1559 GMT: News reports that the victim is linked to drugs are a lie, Thompson said.

1558 GMT: There is medical and forensic evidence supporting the victim's account that she was sexually assaulted by Strauss-Kahn, Thompson said.

1555 GMT: Thompson said the victim herself came forward voluntarily to talk about problems on her asylum application that are undermining her credibility.

1552 GMT: "The only defense that Dominique Strauss-Kahn has is that this sexual encounter was consensual. That is a lie," said Kenneth Thompson, attorney for the alleged victim, speaking outside the courthouse.

1549 GMT: A smiling Strauss-Kahn puts his arm around his wife's shoulder as the two leave the courthouse and walk to their car. One of his defense attorneys pats him on the back as the couple enters the car.

1543 GMT: Obus however did not return Strauss-Kahn's passport.

1542 GMT: Strauss-Kahn leaves the courtroom smiling with his wife Anne Sinclair.

1541 GMT: Obus releases Strauss-Kahn on his own recognizance, sets the next hearing for July 18.

1537 GMT: Judge Michael Obus arees there are "substantial changes, but the case is not over."

1535 GMT: Prosecutors agree to ease bail conditions against Strauss-Kahn, but say they will not dismiss the case.

1533 GMT: Prosecutors agree to lift Strauss-Kahn's bail.

1529 GMT: The judge and Strauss-Kahn arrive in the courtroom to start the hearing.

1525 GMT: Strauss-Kahn's lawyers enter the courtroom.

1523 GMT: The New York Times reports that prosecutors do not believe much of the version of events told by the Guinean-born chambermaid who claimed that Strauss-Kahn sexually assaulted and attempted to rape her in his luxury hotel suite in Manhattan on May 14. Although there was clear evidence of a sexual encounter, they suspect she had repeatedly lied to them.

1518 GMT: Reporters are allowed to enter the courtroom in groups of seven under the strict control of security officers.

1513 GMT: The victim's lawyer, Kenneth Thompson, takes his place in the courtroom.

1510 GMT: Strauss-Kahn is wearing a dark suit, a white shirt and a sky-blue tie, and appeared serious but confident.

1509 GMT: Prosecutors agreed to free Strauss-Kahn from house arrest and return his bail money after admitting the accuser had lied repeatedly, Bloomberg TV reports.

1508 GMT: About 100 journalists packed the viewer's gallery of Room 51, on the 13th floor of the courthouse in Manhattan, while a throng of television cameras and reporters clustered outside.

1503 GMT: The unscheduled hearing, set for 1530 GMT, will likely alter Strauss-Kahn's strict bail conditions, allowing him to travel freely within the United States. His lawyers were reportedly discussing a dismissal of the felony charges.

1455 GMT: Strauss-Kahn walks into a New York court for a special hearing in his sexual assault case, amid revelations that charges against him were unravelling on doubts about his accuser's credibility. He is accompanied by his wife, journalist Anne Sinclair.

Welcome to the AFP Live Report for Friday on a surprise US court hearing on the sexual assault case against former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn.


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Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Strauss-Kahn case raises issue of abuse by diplomats in U.S. (Reuters)

ATLANTA (Reuters) – The case against Dominique Strauss-Kahn is an extreme example of alleged sexual assault by an elite member of the international community. But the charges against him also shine a light on how diplomats and international officials have been accused of abusing maids or nannies in the United States, and have largely escaped prosecution.

Foreign diplomats have been the subject of at least 11 civil lawsuits and one criminal prosecution related to abuse of domestic workers in the last five years, according to a Reuters review of U.S. federal court records. The allegations range from slave-like work conditions to rape, and the vast majority of the diplomats in these cases avoided prison terms and financial penalties.

Strauss-Kahn, the Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund, was charged on Sunday with sexually assaulting a hotel maid. He does not have full diplomatic immunity, but IMF rules grant him immunity limited to acts performed in his "official capacity." He was denied bail Monday and sent to jail in New York. He did not enter a plea, and his lawyer said he intends to plead not guilty.

A common theme in many of the incidents involving alleged abuse of maids and nannies is the elevated legal status of the foreign officials, which some experts say can lead to an improper sense of superiority and make them believe they are unaccountable. Also, most of the alleged victims come from countries where women have few rights, making them easy prey. "In short, diplomatic immunity means diplomatic impunity," says Mark Lagon, former head of the U.S. State Department's Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons.

Even when judges in the United States have ruled against diplomats, the officials have recourse to another option most other defendants do not: They can simply leave the country.

And in many cases, despite pleas from the State Department for action, government officials in the diplomats' home countries do not pursue sanctions. "There's no accountability," said Janie Chuang, an assistant professor at the Washington College of Law at American University in Washington. "You can totally get away with it."

The IMF said its immunity provisions are not applicable in Strauss-Kahn's case because he was visiting New York on personal business. Had he been able to leave the United States and fly to his native France, his fate likely would have turned on a different issue -- extradition. The two countries do not have an extradition treaty, and there is some troubled recent history between the United States and France.

"Two words: Roman Polanski," said Martina Vandenberg, a partner with law firm Jenner & Block in Washington and an expert in abuse cases involving foreign diplomats. She was referring to Polish-French film director Roman Polanski, who has avoided prosecution in the United States for more than 20 years on charges of having sex with a minor.

FORESHADOWING STRAUSS-KAHN

In July, 2008, a lawsuit was filed against an attache in the Embassy of Kuwait, Brig. Gen. Ahmed Al Naser, and his family, parts of which foreshadowed the allegations against Strauss-Kahn. Their former maid, Regina Leo, an Indian immigrant, alleged that she was forced to work as much as 18 hours per day and was sexually abused. According to court documents, on one occasion in 2005, Leo said that Al Naser "forcibly embraced and pinned (Leo), twisting her arm to control her, and then began kissing and fondling her ... Despite (Leo's) resistance, (Al Naser) forced himself upon her and raped her."

Al Naser did not respond to the lawsuit, filed in federal court in Washington, and is believed to have left the United States. He could not be reached, and a spokesman for the Embassy of Kuwait declined to comment, citing the ongoing litigation.

Another case, filed in April 2007 by a Tanzanian maid against Alan Mzengi, a minister-counselor at the Tanzanian Embassy, and his wife, Stella, helped spark an inquiry into alleged abuse by foreign diplomats in the United States. A July, 2008, study by the U.S. Government Accountability Office found that 42 employees of foreign diplomats alleged they had been abused. The actual number was probably higher, the GAO found, because domestic workers are often fearful of reporting abuse.

The maid in the Tanzanian case, Zipora Mazengo, alleged that the Mzengis held her as "a virtual prisoner in their residence, stripping her of her passport, refusing to permit her to leave the house unaccompanied." According to the suit, which was filed in federal court in Washington, they paid her nothing for four years and forced her to work in their catering business. She claimed she escaped after making a desperate plea for help to a customer of the catering business, who provided cab fare.

A U.S. magistrate judge awarded Mazengo more than $1 million in back pay and attorneys' fees. Alan Mzengi moved to cancel the award, arguing "it was not necessary to respond because he was a diplomat" with immunity under the Vienna Convention. In April 2008, a federal judge denied the motion in part, finding that the Mzengis' catering business was exempt from diplomatic immunity. But instead of paying the award, the Mzengis left the country.

A December 2009 State Department cable made available by Wiki Leaks, and provided to Reuters by a third party, shows the U.S. government has asked the Tanzanian government to investigate the case. "While payment of the lost wages to Ms. Mazengo is our first priority, we also hope that any diplomat who has treated his domestic staff in such an abusive manner would face appropriate sanction upon his return home," the cable said. In an e-mail, a State Department official said discussions with the Tanzanian government are ongoing. The Tanzanian Embassy did not respond to a request for comment.

The State Department has said it plans to get tough on alleged abuse of domestic workers by foreign diplomats. "Whether they're diplomats or national emissaries of whatever kind, we all must be accountable for the treatment of the people that we employ," Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said in a speech on February 1 to the Interagency Taskforce to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons.

EXEMPTION FROM IMMUNITY

The Vienna Convention, ratified by the United States in 1972, contains an exemption from immunity for "action relating to any professional or commercial activity exercised by the diplomatic agent in the receiving State outside his official functions." But that exemption did not protect Araceli Montuya, a former maid in the household of Lebanese Ambassador Antoine Chedid. On April 26, U.S. District Judge James Boasberg in Washington threw out a case in which Montuya alleged that Chedid and his wife underpaid and verbally abused her. The judge's decision relied, in part, on a State Department filing in a separate case, which found that when diplomats hire domestic workers, "they are not engaging in 'commercial activity' as that term is used in the Diplomatic Relations Convention."

In a rare criminal case that began as an FBI investigation into alleged domestic worker abuse, a World Bank economist from Tanzania -- who, like Strauss-Kahn, qualifies for only limited immunity related to official duties -- pleaded guilty in March, 2010, to two counts of making false statements. The economist, Anne Margreth Bakilana, hired a Tanzanian woman, Sophia Kiwanuka, to work in her home in Falls Church, Virginia, and improperly withheld Kiwanuka's wages and threatened to send her back to Tanzania, according to court records. Unaware that she had been taped by Kiwanuka at the request of the FBI, Bakilana then lied to federal investigators about her statements. She was sentenced to two years probation and fined $9,400. A civil case is ongoing in federal court in Washington. Jonathan Simms, an attorney for Bakilana, said he believed she was not longer in the United States. A World Bank spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment.

Domestic workers continue to allege abuse by foreign diplomats. On March 25, four former cooks and housekeepers for Essa Mohammed Al Manai, a senior Qatari diplomat, filed a civil lawsuit alleging they were paid less than 70 cents per hour and "forced to work around the clock" at Al Manai's six-bedroom home in Bethesda, Maryland. The suit also claimed that Al Manai sexually assaulted one of the women.

Al Manai could not be reached for comment, and the Embassy of Qatar did not respond to a request for comment.

(Reporting by Brian Grow; Editing by Amy Stevens and Eddie Evans)


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Monday, June 13, 2011

Strauss-Kahn to plead for bail in New York court (AFP)

NEW YORK (AFP) – Ex-IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn was due back in court Thursday hoping to win bail from a gritty New York jail, just hours after quitting as head of the world body to fight sex charges.

Strauss-Kahn vowed in his letter of resignation as head of the International Monetary Fund that he would battle to clear his name after being charged with seven counts of sexual assault, attempted rape and unlawful imprisonment.

"I deny with the greatest possible firmness all of the allegations that have been made against me," said Strauss-Kahn, who was arrested on Saturday shortly after the alleged assault of a chambermaid in a luxury Manhattan hotel.

The veteran French politician said in a statement that it was with "infinite sadness that I feel compelled today to present... my resignation."

"I want to devote all my strength, all my time, and all my energy to proving my innocence," said Strauss-Kahn, who before the scandal broke was considered a top contender to be the next president of France.

A police official confirmed to AFP that he had arrived at the New York supreme court complex Thursday and was awaiting to appear at the bail hearing due at 2:15 pm (1815 GMT) on the 13th floor of the courthouse.

Defense lawyers said Strauss-Kahn would put up $1 million in bail, surrender all his travel documents and submit to 24 hour electronic monitoring.

He would also agree to be confined round-the-clock in a New York apartment, most likely the home of his daughter who lives in the city. And he is ready to waive any rights he has to fight any extradition proceedings.

His lawyers were also expected to tout his wife's American credentials before judge Michael Obus, hoping to free him from Rikers Island jail.

The New York jail is a chaotic maze of holding cells filled with thousands of defendants who either can't afford bail or who, like Strauss-Kahn, are deemed a flight risk and have had their bail application denied.

The complex, which sits on a 400-acre (1,650 kilometer) island on the East River near LaGuardia airport between Queens and the Bronx, can house more than 20,000 detainees and staff at a time.

Strauss-Kahn was refused bail in his first court hearing Monday, after a different judge deemed him a flight risk, and he has now spent three nights in the notorious jail in isolation and on suicide watch.

"These additional bail conditions eliminate any concern that Mr Strauss-Kahn would or could leave this court's jurisdiction," attorney Shawn Naunton wrote in the bail application.

Strauss-Kahn is behind bars awaiting a grand jury decision on whether to indict him on the charges brought by the 32-year-old chambermaid, who is originally from Guinea.

Her lawyer, Jeff Shapiro, said his client, who has so far not been identified, was "alarmed" at the prospect of her alleged attacker leaving jail.

"The idea that this man would somehow or another be on the streets and free, I'm sure it would cause her a great deal of concern," he told CNN Wednesday. "She's very concerned about her security."

The chambermaid, who has a 15-year-old daughter, on Wednesday appeared before the grand jury that must decide if there is enough evidence to go to trial.

She alleges that Strauss-Kahn groped and mauled her in his room in the posh Sofitel hotel in Times Square and forcibly tried to have oral sex with her.

Police have taken away a section of a rug from the luxury suite which reportedly contains evidence of bodily fluids hoping to gain DNA evidence from the scene.

But Strauss-Kahn's lawyer Benjamin Brafman has said the evidence "will not be consistent with a forcible encounter," and New York media reports quoted a source close to the defense as saying "there may well have been consent."

Strauss-Kahn's resignation paves the way for the IMF to elect a new managing director as it steers delicate negotiations on the eurozone debt crisis.

Acting IMF chief John Lipsky said the Fund's executive board would meet later Thursday to launch the search for Strauss-Kahn's successor.

He said earlier in a speech that he deeply regrets "the circumstances that have made it necessary for me to substitute for Dominique Strauss-Kahn."

French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde is the front-runner to succeed him and become the first woman to head the IMF, but emerging economic powers have called for an end to Europe's virtual monopoly on the world lender's top post.


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Sunday, June 12, 2011

IMF's Strauss-Kahn resigns amid sex charges (AP)

By BRADLEY KLAPPER and DAVID McHUGH, Associated Press Bradley Klapper And David Mchugh, Associated Press – Thu May 19, 6:48 am ET

WASHINGTON – Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the embattled managing director of International Monetary Fund, has resigned, saying he wanted to devote "all his energy" to battle the sexual assault charges he faces in New York.

The IMF's executive board released a letter from the French executive Wednesday in which he denied the allegations lodged against him but said that with "sadness" he felt he must resign. He said he was thinking of his family and he wanted to protect the IMF.

"It is with infinite sadness that I feel compelled today to present to the executive board my resignation from my post of managing director of the IMF," the five-paragraph letter said. "I think at this time first of my wife — whom I love more than anything — of my children, of my family, of my friends. I think also of my colleagues at the Fund. Together we have accomplished such great things over the last three years and more.

"To all, I want to say that I deny with the greatest possible firmness all of the allegations that have been made against me. I want to protect this institution which I have served with honor and devotion, and especially — especially — I want to devote all my strength, all my time and all my energy to proving my innocence."

Strauss-Kahn, who faced increasing international pressure to quit, announced his decision on the eve of a bail hearing Thursday that could have spelled the end of his leadership of the IMF anyway. He faces charges of assaulting a maid in a New York hotel room.

The maid, a 32-year-old immigrant from the West African nation of Guinea, told police that the 62-year-old Strauss-Kahn came out of the bathroom naked, chased her down, forced her to perform oral sex on him and tried to remove her underwear before she broke free and fled the room.

Strauss-Kahn is jailed in New York City.

The IMF's statement late Wednesday said the process of choosing a new leader would begin, but in the meantime John Lipsky would remain acting managing director.

The dividing lines are sharpening in a dispute over whether someone from a rich or an emerging economy should lead the IMF.

Europe is aggressively staking its traditional claim to the top position. But fast-growing nations such as China, Brazil and South Africa are trying to break Europe's grip on an organization empowered to direct billions of dollars to stabilize the global economy.

Europeans have led the IMF since its inception after World War II. Americans have occupied both the No. 2 position at the IMF and the top post at its sister institution, the World Bank. The World Bank funds projects in developing countries.

Europe has "an abundance of highly qualified candidates" to lead the IMF, German government spokesman Christoph Steegmans declared Wednesday. He also noted the relevance of having a European at the helm, to deal with the debt problems that have racked the eurozone.

France's European affairs minister signaled backing for Steegmans' position on Wednesday.

"The big question now is: what role for Europe at the IMF, and the (German) chancellor has expressed that very clearly," Laurent Wauquiez told Germany's ZDF television. "Who is the biggest contributor? Europe. So we should still play an important role."

Steegmans didn't name any potential candidates or say whether Germany might propose one. But German Chancellor Angela Merkel, along with the finance ministers of Sweden and the Netherlands, have pressed Europe's case for the IMF leadership.

Still, developing nations see Europe's stranglehold on the position as increasingly out of touch with the world economy. China's is now the world's second largest economy. India's and Brazil's have cracked the top 10. Many emerging economies are sitting on stockpiles of cash and have become forces of financial stability, while rich countries have become weighed down by debt.

"We must establish meritocracy, so that the person leading the IMF is selected for their merits and not for being European," Brazilian Finance Minister Guido Mantega said, calling for a "new criteria" for leadership. "You can have a competent European ... but you can have a representative from an emerging nation who is competent as well."

China suggested it was time to shake things up at the IMF, with Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu saying the leadership "should be based on fairness, transparency and merit."

It remains unclear which way the United States is leaning. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner had said Tuesday that Strauss-Kahn is "obviously not in a position" to run the IMF, escalating pressure on the 62-year-old economist.

The United States has a major say in determining who will head the fund, in part because it holds the largest number of votes. The prevailing view among analysts and former Treasury officials appears to be that Washington would back a strong European candidate who could be approved in a smooth process.

"It's kind of not our fight," said Phillip Swagel, a Treasury official in the George W. Bush administration. "There are very good reasons to have a forceful, prominent European head of IMF."

Potential European candidates include French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde; Germany's former central bank chief, Axel Weber; the head of Europe's bailout fund, Klaus Regling; and Peer Steinbrueck, a former German finance minister.

Candidates from elsewhere include Turkey's former finance minister, Kemal Dervis; Singapore's finance chief, Tharman Shanmugaratnam; and Indian economist Montek Singh Ahluwalia.

___

McHugh reported from Frankfurt. Associated Press writers Christopher S. Rugaber in Washington, Geir Moulson in Berlin, Charles Hutzler in Beijing, Bradley Brooks in Sao Paulo and Anita Powell in Johannesburg contributed to this report.


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Strauss-Kahn resigns as Lagarde heads race to take over (Reuters)

WASHINGTON/PARIS (Reuters) – French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde emerged as frontrunner on Thursday to succeed Dominique Strauss-Kahn as head of the IMF after he resigned and vowed to fight charges of sexually assaulting a hotel maid.

His letter of resignation, tendered from a New York prison cell, triggered a political tug-of-war over the leadership of the global lender. Strauss-Kahn arrived at a New York court building on Thursday to apply for release on $1 million bail.

His arrest on Saturday dashed his prospects of running for the French presidency in 2012 and sparked debate over the 65-year-old tradition that a European heads the IMF.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner called for an "open process" to select a successor to Strauss-Kahn, although sources in Washington said the United States, the largest financial contributor to the IMF, would back a European for the post.

"We want to see an open process that leads to a prompt succession for the Fund's new managing director," Geithner said in a brief statement.

The U.S. push to find a replacement quickly was also likely to favor a European replacement because it would be difficult for developing nations to unify around a rival candidate to challenge Europe's long hold on the job.

A Reuters poll of economists showed 32 out of 56 think Lagarde is most likely to succeed him, and diplomats in Europe and Washington said she had backing from France, Germany and Britain -- the three biggest European economies.

They also said there was an expectation that the United States would back Lagarde, not least because it wants to keep the number two IMF job and the leadership of the World Bank, the IMF's sister organization that funds developing countries.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel tried to preempt calls from emerging nations for a shot at the post by saying the next managing director should be appointed quickly and should be a European.

Canada, a member of the Group of Eight leading economies, who meet for a summit in France next week, expects a European to get the post, a government source said.

In veiled warnings against another U.S.-European stitch-up, China and Japan both called for an open, transparent process to choose a successor on merit.

'GREATEST POSSIBLE FIRMNESS'

Strauss-Kahn's resignation letter, released by the IMF and dated May 18, contained his first public comment on the charges of attempted rape, illegal sexual acts and sequestration of a 32-year-old widow from West Africa at a luxury Manhattan hotel.

"I deny with the greatest possible firmness all of the allegations that have been made against me," he wrote. "I want to devote all my strength, all my time, and all my energy to proving my innocence."

A senior source at the IMF said Strauss-Kahn had tendered his resignation of his own accord through lawyers before the Fund's board had been able to contact him to ask his intentions.

The former finance minister was to make his second request to be released on $1 million cash bail and placed under 24-hour house arrest until his trial, his lawyers said.

He is being held in New York's Rikers Island jail, charged with attempted rape, sexual abuse, a criminal sexual act, unlawful imprisonment and forcible touching.

The woman Strauss-Kahn allegedly tried to rape testified on Wednesday before a grand jury. The 23-member panel will decide in secret whether there is enough evidence to formally press charges with an indictment.

Any trial could be six months or more away. If convicted, he could face 25 years in prison.

Strauss-Kahn's attorney, Benjamin Brafman, told his arraignment hearing on Monday that the evidence "will not be consistent with a forcible encounter."

A lawyer for the alleged victim, a Guinean mother of a 15-year-old daughter who has gone into hiding to avoid media attention, told Reuters she opposed bail.

"The idea that the man who did this to her is now on the street, so to speak, and able to do what he wants to do in the world is something which is frightening to her," Attorney Jeffrey Shapiro said.

MUG SHOT

Strauss-Kahn's resignation intensified debate over who should lead the Fund and whether it was time to ditch the practice, in place since the IMF was set up in 1945, that a European heads the IMF while an American leads the World Bank.

The vacancy comes at a sensitive time, given the IMF's dominant role in helping euro zone states such as Greece, Ireland and Portugal deal with massive debt problems.

Europeans argue that the euro zone debt crisis means it makes sense for them to retain the post for now.

Lagarde, 55, declined to answer when asked if she was interested in the post, but told reporters: "Any candidacy, whichever it is, must come from Europeans jointly, all together."

Several European diplomats said she had been quietly canvassing support in the expectation that Strauss-Kahn would stand down within weeks to run for the French presidency.

A fluent English-speaker who headed the U.S. law firm Baker & McKenzie in Chicago before joining the French government in 2005, Lagarde is also under something of a legal cloud herself.

A public prosecutor recommended this month that she be investigated for her conduct in a business-related arbitration case involving businessman and former politician Bernard Tapie.

Judges at a special court for ministers are expected to decide in mid-June whether to order a full-scale inquiry.

Emerging economy officials acknowledge that one problem would be their own difficulty in agreeing on a single candidate, in contrast to the Europeans' disciplined unity.

One possible figure could be former Turkish Economy Minister Kemal Dervis, 62, an economist with IMF experience, who is from an emerging economy that is a candidate for EU membership.

Turkish Finance Minister Mehmet Simsek said the practice of Europe appointing the IMF head must change because "the center of the world is moving from west to east."

Japan, China, Mexico, Brazil and South Africa have all suggested a new approach to selection.

John Lipsky, the Fund's number two whose term expires in August, is acting managing director until the IMF executive board selects a successor to Strauss-Kahn.

A police mug shot of Strauss-Kahn, 62, taken more than 24 hours after he was detained, showed him looking exhausted in a rumpled open-neck shirt, looking down through half-closed eyes.

In a poll released in France on Wednesday, 57 percent of respondents thought the Socialist politician was definitely or probably the victim of a plot.

But French politics has moved on to the search for a replacement challenger to unpopular conservative President Nicolas Sarkozy next year. Former Socialist leader Francois Hollande is now the center-left frontrunner, but party leader Martine Aubry is under pressure to enter a Socialist primary.

(Additional reporting by Emily Kaiser in Singapore, Tetsushi Kajimoto in Tokyo, Sam Cage and Andreas Rinke in Berlin, Elizabeth Pineau in Paris, David Milliken in London, David Morgan in Washington, Noeleen Walder and Mark Hosenball in New York, Writing by Paul Taylor and Matt Daily; Editing by Kevin Liffey and Laura MacInnis)


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Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Strauss-Kahn DNA found on maid's clothes: reports (AFP)

NEW YORK (AFP) – Investigators found traces of semen from former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn on the clothes of a hotel maid who accused him of attempted rape, media reports said.

DNA was found on the shirt of the 32-year-old woman who said she was attacked in Strauss Kahn's New York hotel suite, according to NBC and ABC television.

The DNA matched sperm on the collar of the maid's shirt, according to The Wall Street Journal and France 2 television channel.

All of the media quoted sources close to the investigation. But neither police, nor prosecutors nor Strauss-Kahn's lawyers would comment on the reports.

The evidence could prove that there was a sexual encounter but not that there was violence of any kind, experts said.

Strauss-Kahn has denied charges made against him. The French politician, who is racing to find a new home, told his former staff how he is confronting a "personal nightmare."

Under house arrest pending trial, he has been rejected by one luxury residence because of his newfound notoriety and must soon leave his temporary apartment.

Charges that he attempted to rape and sexually assault the chambermaid on May 14 forced him to resign as head of the International Monetary Fund last week and torpedoed his chances of standing in the French presidential election next year.

But Strauss-Kahn again denied the accusations in an email message sent to IMF staff Sunday in which he expressed "profound sadness" at the way he left his $450,000-a-year tax-free post.

"I deny in the strongest possible terms the allegations which I now face; I am confident that the truth will come out and I will be exonerated," he wrote.

"In the meantime, I cannot accept that the Fund --- and you dear colleagues -- should in any way have to share my own personal nightmare. So, I had to go."

Strauss-Kahn is holed up in the Empire Building at 71 Broadway, where management has apologized to residents and said the new arrival will be gone by "early" this week.

His wealthy wife, French television journalist Anne Sinclair, had previously arranged a $15,000 a month apartment on the Upper East Side. But Strauss-Kahn was rejected after residents complained about the bad publicity.

Sinclair left the Broadway apartment for a few hours on Sunday on what was believed to be part of the new hunt for a home. She has suspended her blog about American life.

"Dear reader, many, many many of you have sent me messages," Sinclair wrote. "I cannot answer everybody, but know that these touched me and helped me."

"You will understand the circumstances that have forced me to temporarily suspend this blog. All I can say is, a bientot."

While Strauss-Kahn gets used to bail life wearing an ankle bracelet and being forced to stay in an apartment under the watch of video surveillance and and armed guard around the clock, the legal battle is heightening even before his next court appearance on June 6 to make a formal plea.

His lawyer Benjamin Brafman visited Strauss-Kahn on Monday. He has said his client will plead not guilty and that he is confident his client will go free.

The defense team has hired a posse of private investigators who, according to media reports, are already sifting through the 32-year-old accuser's personal history in New York and her native Guinea in West Africa.

Prosecutors told Strauss-Kahn's bail hearing last week that they are also building a "strong" case in support of the accusations.

Strauss-Kahn was arrested on an Air France flight just as it was about to leave New York's John F. Kennedy airport, a few hours after the alleged attack. He spent the first days in detention at the notorious Rikers island jail.

He now faces seven counts, including the attempted rape charge.

Ian Weinstein, a law professor at Fordham University in New York, said that if convicted at trial, "a sentence of 10 years in prison is entirely likely, and a sentence higher than that is entirely possible."


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