Tuesday, February 3, 2015

First defendant to take stand in Strauss-Kahn 'pimping' trial



The pivotal character in a French prostitution ring that landed former International Monetary Fund (IMF) chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn in court for “pimping” will be the first to take the stand Tuesday in the trial.


Rene Kojfer, 70, former public relations manager for the luxury Carlton Hotel in the northern city of Lille, is accused of running a high-end prostitution ring that organised sex parties for local businessmen and police officials, often in his hotel.


It was during an investigation into the so-called “Carlton Affair” that investigators stumbled across the alleged involvement of Strauss-Kahn, whose high-flying career and presidential prospects imploded when a New York hotel maid accused him of sexual assault in 2011.


Kojfer is accused of procuring prostitutes for then-police commissioner Jean-Christophe Lagarde, a fellow freemason who threw parties for Strauss-Kahn in Paris, Brussels and Washington, and is also among the 14 accused.


Strauss-Kahn said Monday he has never set foot in the Carlton.


“I saw them for the first time today,” he said of Kojfer and notorious Belgian brothel-owner Dominique Alderweireld, known as “Dodo the Pimp”, who employed the prostitutes that attended some of Strauss-Kahn’s parties.


The involvement in the case of the disgraced 65-year-old former finance minister — known in France as DSK — has riveted the country and some 300 journalists thronged the Lille court on Monday for a first day dominated by procedural applications.


Dogged by sex scandals, Strauss-Kahn admits to being a “libertine” who took part in orgies in various countries, including in Washington where the IMF is headquartered.


But he steadfastly denies knowing that the women his entourage brought to the parties were prostitutes.


“In these circumstances one isn’t always clothed, and I challenge you to tell the difference between a prostitute naked and any other woman naked,” Strauss-Kahn’s lawyer Henri Leclerc, 84, said in 2011.


The economist nonetheless finds himself facing 10 years in prison and a fine of up to 1.5 million euros ($1.7 million) for “aggravated pimping in an organised group”, with prosecutors believing he played a role in initiating the sex parties and organising the presence of the prostitutes.


Prostitution is legal in France but procuring — the legal term for pimping which includes encouraging, benefiting from or organising prostitution — is a crime.


- Court ‘not guardian of morals’ -


Lurid details of group sex and high-end prostitution are likely to emerge in the trial, which has Strauss-Kahn sharing the dock with a colourful cast of characters including luxury hotel managers, a prostitute, police, as well as “Dodo the Pimp.”


Bernard Lemaire, the chief of the four judges who will oversee the three-week, jury-less trial said “the court is not the guardian of morals but of the law and its proper application.”


The trial is the latest in a series of cases offering a peek behind the bedroom door of a man once tipped as a potential challenger to former French president Nicolas Sarkozy.


France was stunned when it saw Strauss-Kahn paraded handcuffed in front of the world’s cameras after a New York hotel maid accused him of sexual assault in May 2011 — a case that was eventually settled in a civil suit.


His supporters believe he was set up by opponents exploiting his well-known, voracious sexual appetite.


On Monday, lawyers for several of the accused called for the case to be thrown out over revelations a secret probe had been carried out into some of their clients up to eight months before an official judicial enquiry was set up.


The lawyers demanded more information about the probe, which allegedly included a government-ordered interception of some of the defendants’ phonecalls, according to evidence presented in court.


Lemaire said the question about the secret probe would be deal with in the trial.





First defendant to take stand in Strauss-Kahn 'pimping' trial

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