Women in Strauss-Kahn sex trial withdraw damages claim

Lawyers say it would be too hard to prove pimping charges against former IMF head

Former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn leaves his hotel on February 16th, 2015, in the northern French city of Lille to attend a session at the third week of the so-called Lille Carlton Hotel Case trial. Photograph: Francois Lo Presti/AFP/Getty Images
Former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn leaves his hotel on February 16th, 2015, in the northern French city of Lille to attend a session at the third week of the so-called Lille Carlton Hotel Case trial. Photograph: Francois Lo Presti/AFP/Getty Images

Lawyers for the four prostitutes who participated in sex parties organised for Dominique Strauss-Kahn said on Monday they were giving up their claim of damages, saying it would be too hard to prove the pimping charge against the former IMF head.

Mr Strauss-Kahn (65), is accused of instigating parties he knew involved prostitutes between 2008-2011 in the French city of Lille as well as in Brussels, Paris and Washington.

The announcement was a surprise move on the first day of the final week of trial and suggests that Strauss-Kahn’s defence - that he had no idea that the women at the parties were prostitutes - may have been effective.

The case will nevertheless continue against Strauss-Kahn and 13 other defendants, and the women will remain civil parties in the criminal case, lawyer Gerald Laporte told Reuters.

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Mr Strauss-Kahn is charged with pimping, or “procuring with aggravating circumstances”, because investigating magistrates say he took a principal role in planning the parties, and that he knew the women who attended them were prostitutes.

“The prostitutes have renounced the request of damages and interest against Dominique Strauss-Kahn, reckoning that all the elements making up the crime of aggravated procuring have not been met,” Mr Laporte, the women’s lawyer, told Reuters.

Mr Strauss-Kahn, the laywer said, “didn’t give up” during questioning by judges, repeatedly denying knowledge that the women were prostitutes.

Mr Strauss-Kahn was tipped to become French president before being accused of sexual assault by a New York hotel chambermaid in 2011.

US criminal charges were subsequently dropped, and the allegations that he participated in a French sex ring centred in the northern French city of Lille emerged later.

If convicted, Mr Strauss-Kahn faces 10 years in prison and a fine of up to €1.5 million.

Reuters