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Tristane Banon To File Sexual Assault Lawsuit Against Dominique Strauss-Kahn

PARIS — Dominique Strauss-Kahn faced a potential new sexual assault investigation Monday after a young French writer said she would formally accuse him of trying to rape her during a 2002 book interview – a dizzying turn of events just as the former IMF chief's fortunes seemed to be growing brighter.

With France debating his possible return to presidential politics, Strauss-Kahn swiftly hit back at author Tristane Banon's plans to take him to court over the attempted rape accusations, labeling her account "imaginary" and countering with his own plans to file a criminal complaint of slander.

The sordid exchange may have deep ramifications for the 2012 presidential race in France, where the surprise weakening of the sexual assault case against Strauss-Kahn in New York last week sparked a fierce debate about whether he should return to politics if the American case against him collapses completely.

Before Banon's announcement, polls showed voters were evenly split about whether Strauss-Kahn, 62, should try to revive a career that until recently had him on track to take on conservative President Nicolas Sarkozy in the race to be France's next leader.

"DSK Back?" the left-leaning daily Liberation asked on its front page Monday.

Some politicians and pundits see Strauss-Kahn, who won plaudits for his stewardship of the International Monetary Fund, as a victim of overzealous American prosecutors and journalists who denied him the presumption of innocence when a maid accused him of forcing her to perform oral sex in his Manhattan hotel room.

"He was crushed, then, by that fraction of the American judicial apparatus that, by putting Dominique Strauss-Kahn in stocks, by humiliating him before the entire world, by ruthlessly pursuing him, has probably ruined his life," celebrity philosopher Bernard-Henri Levy wrote on The Daily Beast website.

Others have expressed disgust with allegations that the Socialist politician routinely subjected women to crude sexual advances, and lived a luxurious lifestyle out of touch with ordinary French people, even in the glare of press attention in New York.

"Between his luxury tastes and other subjects, Dominique Strauss-Kahn has not offered a very positive image recently," Sports Minister Chantal Jouanno, a Sarkozy ally, said on Europe-1 radio.

Strauss-Kahn has been living under house arrest in a $50,000 (euro34,500)-a-month town house in the trendy TriBeCa neighborhood. Once released, Strauss-Kahn had dinner at a pricey Manhattan restaurant.

"To see Strauss-Kahn freed then straight away eat in a luxury restaurant with friends, that makes me sick," Banon told the magazine L'Express in an account published Monday. "I only want one thing, that he comes back to France, with his presumption of innocence, so that we can go before a court."

Banon, 31, said on a 2007 television show that she had been attacked five years earlier by a politician she had interviewed for a book in his apartment. She later identified the man as Strauss-Kahn.

"It finished very violently," she said on the television show. "I kicked him. He opened my bra. He tried to undo my jeans. It finished very badly."

Lawyer David Koubbi said Banon had been dissuaded from filing charges by her mother, a regional councilor in Strauss-Kahn's Socialist party. Her mother, Anne Mansouret, admitted in a French television interview in May that she had urged her daughter not to file a complaint after the incident.

Banon came forward again after Strauss-Kahn's May 14 arrest in New York, but Koubbi said his client had no intention of pressing charges while the American prosecution was going on because the two cases should be kept separate.

Banon is now moving forward, Koubbi told The Associated Press. He denied that decision was connected to the weakening of the U.S. case.

"It is all the same to me what happens in the hours and days to come in the United States," he said.

Strauss-Kahn's lawyers said that Strauss-Kahn "has always said that the incident described by Ms Banon since 2007 is imaginary."

"He notes that this complaint comes quite conveniently right at the moment when there is no longer the slightest doubt about the false nature of the accusations against him in the United States," attorneys Henri Leclerc and Frederique Baulieu said in a joint statement.

Koubbi did not respond to phone and text messages left asking about the slander accusation.

If Banon files her complaint, a prosecutor can conduct a preliminary investigation to determine if there is enough evidence to support charges against Strauss-Kahn. Preliminary charges are followed by a lengthier investigation, sometimes lasting years, to determine if the case should go to trial before a judge.

The same process would apply to the slander complaint against Banon.

Prosecutors could decide not to pursue the case against Strauss-Kahn if they find evidence he engaged in forcible sexual contact that fell short of attempted rape. The statute of limitations on the charge of "sexual assault" is three years, while attempted rape charges can be filed for as many as 10 years after the alleged crime.

Strauss-Kahn has relinquished his passport to authorities in New York. Another court hearing would be needed for him to get it back. His next appearance is scheduled for July 18 – five days after the deadline for candidates to register in the Socialist Party primary.

"Let's acknowledge that if Strauss-Kahn decides to come back as a candidate on our side, no one will try to oppose him using some calendar," Socialist Party leader Martine Aubry said before Banon's announcement.

The Socialist Party's spokesman appeared to disagree, an indication of the confusion and disagreement within the party about betting the opposition's 2012 chances on Strauss-Kahn.

"We can't base the (political) calendar, which involves millions of French people, on the American judicial calendar," party spokesman Benoit Hamon said Monday.

A poll released Monday found that 51 percent of French people found that Strauss-Kahn no longer had a political future, versus 42 percent who thought he did.

The telephone poll of 956 adults selected as a demographically representative sample was conducted July 1 and 2 by the Ipsos Public Affairs institute for the magazine Le Point. No margin of error was provided.

Another poll out Sunday conducted by Harris Interactive poll for the newspaper Le Parisien showed 49 percent of those surveyed saying 'yes' to the question "Without prejudging his innocence or guilt, do you want DSK to come back to the French political scene one day?"

At least some were won over by what they perceived as his mistreatment in the U.S.

"I had no intention of supporting him in the first round, but if he returns to French political life I will certainly vote for him," Jean-Rene Gendre, 63, said as he went shopping in central Paris. "What happened to him I think was a terrible manipulation."

Forty-five percent of respondents to the Harris poll said they didn't want Strauss-Kahn back in politics and six percent didn't answer the question. The agency asked a demographically representative group of 1,000 people 18 years old and older to fill out the July 1-2 online survey. No margin of error was provided.

___

Sylvie Corbet and Greg Keller in Paris contributed to this report.

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PARIS — Dominique Strauss-Kahn faced a potential new sexual assault investigation Monday after a young French writer said she would formally accuse him of trying to rape her during a 2002 book i...
PARIS — Dominique Strauss-Kahn faced a potential new sexual assault investigation Monday after a young French writer said she would formally accuse him of trying to rape her during a 2002 book i...
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08:06 PM on 07/07/2011
Sorry. You cannot wait this long to take action and not expect people to look askance at your allegations. Try defending yourself for conduct alleged to have occurred many years ago. Try to even remember exactly everything so you can have a chance to refute the charges or to find witnesses.

She didn't even mention it to anyone for a number of years. Anything could have influenced her memory by then.
01:52 AM on 07/08/2011
Personally I would love to agree with you except for one thing: the corroborating evidence of the mother. That is a real dicey problem. And while I hate to admit it, it is corroborating evidence and it is not biased in the sense that she advocated against filing a complaint. I think Bannon has a strong case and she should be heard.
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jackbutler5555
08:06 PM on 07/08/2011
A mother's corroborating a daughter's version of events is not nearly as effective as someone with looser ties to the accuser.  Even if the mother has in common party membership with the accused.
07:58 PM on 07/24/2011
What revived her memory is the New York incident. Then as the New York case was going according to plan, she disappeared: she won't help the American prosecution. Then the minute the NY prosecution is in trouble, her lawyer files and shows up at Cyrus Vance 's offices for 3 hours, Now Cyrus wants to interview her as taxpayers' expenses, a case that brings nothing to the now farcical NY case, now that Ms. Diallo has identified herself to Newsweek and is going to splurge us with her ABC Good Morning interviews... By the way has anyone mentioned that Ms. Bannon is the daughter of Gabriel Bannon, a notorious money lauderer for Yasser Arafat who worked for him for years ...Interestingly enough Bannon's father has also recently worked for another great 'democratic" leader: Vladimir Putin, as special account adviser...
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IsyFleur
Om, Shanti, Shanti, Shanti. ॐ
01:31 PM on 07/06/2011
Many of the posts on this thread demonstrate why women everywhere in the world still hesitate to report attempted sexual assaults: they are immediately ridiculed and slandered, regardless of their credibility. It is pretty stunning that if a guy presses charges about another guy physically assaulting him it is taken seriously, but when a woman accuses a man of sexually assaulting her she systematically becomes suspected of simply trying to draw attention to herself. Women are particularly guilty of this entrenched prejudice - after all, didn't Banon's mother herself dissuade her own daughter to press charges 9 years ago? And how many mothers turn a blind eye to their daughters being abused by their father or step father, and how many parents have turned a blind eye to their children being abused by their priest?
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StrawHat
Eat veggies, don't vote for them
08:17 PM on 07/06/2011
You raise excellent points. I asked earlier, whoever says of a man that he "cried car theft" or that a bank "cried robbery" but we speak of women "crying rape" with tremendous derision.

I think it's because people can't stand to face how prevalent rape is -- that it is not something done just by shaggy-haired homeless men or thugs in criminal gangs -- it is done by the priest, the coach, the boss, the father-in-law, the uncle...we don't want to face it as a human society, so we attack and berate the victim.

It's a sad indictment of the patriarchy.
02:01 AM on 07/08/2011
I certainly agree with you that Bannon's charge is credible. But we still have not heard from the Mother in terms of details. We did allegedly get a comment that she suggested that the daughter not file charges, but it did not say what her recollection of what specifically he did. So maybe we should wait for more info. However, it is also worth noting that charging someone 8 years later does make someone raise their eyebrows. If it was a rape, why did she not report it? And why did the Mother advocate against it? Your comment about a guy physically assaulting another person is taken seriously. Well, I can tell you that I was involved in an altercation in which by accident I almost killed a man (I broke a rib which punctured a lung and cut a vein and he almost bled to death) we didn't take it all too seriously. Two men fought, one got hurt. It was clearly an accident since I was not the aggressor--bottom line, boys will be boys. The reality is that we take women's comments 10 times more seriously than we taken men's.
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jmyoung666
09:52 AM on 07/06/2011
If the rape victim's history is allowed to be used against her, shouldn't DSK's history be considered as well? Or do people's politics trump justice on this forum?
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StrawHat
Eat veggies, don't vote for them
08:18 PM on 07/06/2011
As the saying goes, "If it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck..."
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jackbutler5555
08:12 PM on 07/08/2011
That was originally said by an extremist anti-Communist in the 50s.  He used that phraseology to persuade others that certain people with leftist views were actually Communists.
02:10 AM on 07/08/2011
DSK has never been convicted of a sex crime. Seducing women is not a crime. They are not little children. They can say no. So what specifically of DSK's history should be taken into consideration? That he likes women? The Hungarian Economist at the IMF that he had an affair with. She was married at the time. That did not stop her. Her comment was: "Oh well, I was damned if I did and damned if I didn't." How come no one bothered to interview her husband that was cuckholed? Or doesn't it matter one way or another? She was a freakin Economist. If she is too stupid or "afraid" to open her mouth, shouldn't we fire that individual? Who wants an economist studying the fate of whole countries if they don't know how to advocate for themselves? At some point women are going to have to make a decision: 1) they can whine about "being intimidated, being "afraid" or being "ashamed," in which case perhaps we should treat them as 5 year olds and make decisions for them, or they can stand up and say: 2) You're an adult, act like one and quick subscribing to the double standard that you are too weak to make rational decisions. I think women are just as capable as men. And if you believe this, then we have to start demanding that women take the same level of responsibilities for bad behavior that we demand that men take.
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12:31 AM on 07/09/2011
...and go ahead breaking each other's ribs? Or men's?
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jmyoung666
10:18 AM on 07/11/2011
Seduce or rape or does it matter to you when a woman says no? That's the question. And given that DSK had neither physical or intellectual charms, I cannot imagine his seduction doesn't involve the payment of money.
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rlugbill
08:41 AM on 07/06/2011
Sometimes in court cases, delaying a few hours or a few days is seen as making the witness less credible. A delay of a few years doesn't necessarily doom the case, but it makes it look like she has other motives for coming forward now.

I don't wait a few years before telling the police that my car was broken into. If I did, they wouldn't take me very seriously.
08:29 PM on 07/06/2011
Being raped is far more intimidating than having your car broken into. It's your body that's broken into... and your psyche. Rape victims can be filled with shame even when it's not their fault. They can be afraid of even seeing, let alone confronting, their rapist in court. They want to just bury the whole memory so they can function and move on. Compare that to getting your car broken into. That, too, is certainly a violation, and it can shake you up. But rape, and attempted rape, is a serious trauma. It can take years to gather the courage to come forward. That's why the law allows rape victims more time to come forward. Years ago, the legal system didn't take all that into account.
02:15 AM on 07/08/2011
This is something that women are going to have to deal with. Society is not their mommies. We don't care whether they are intimidated or not. If you are an adult, you should act like one. Bannon wanted to file charges but her mother told her not to. There was no issue of shame for her. She did it for other reasons. The bottom line is that if you have emotional issues related to rape, go see a priest or a psychiatrist. Society is only interested in crimes and the punishment of those crimes. Society cannot be a victim's nursemaid. If you can't advocate for youself, perhaps you may want to inform the court that you are not capable of logical mature thought--in which case the court will appoint a "guardian" for you to advocate for you. But you can't have it both ways.
03:32 AM on 07/06/2011
Why doesn't the media want to tell the American public about the real scandals that threaten the US' relationship with its closest ally and bring us to the brink of a currency war?
Here are links to my comments to the European Parliament and to a Dutch newspaper, De Volkskrant, on the heads of the Bretton Woods Institutions and equality before the law:
http://www.europarl.europa.eu/activities/committees/eventsCom.do?language=EN&body=CONT
http://opinie.volkskrant.nl/artikel/show/id/8663/Leve_de_afkeer_van_de_doofpot_in_de_VS#reactiemarker

translation: "amazing that Karen Hudes reacted to this yesterday evening. For 21 years she worked at the World Bank as Senior Counsel but was fired for courageous whistleblowing. Here is an interview with her on YouTube. http://www-.youtube.com/watch?v=M4VGoXV5vYg"

KarenHudes schreef op 08-06-2011 19:09

translation: "Olaf Trans should have picked another high roller as an example. Abuse of power at the top of the other Bretton Woods institution goes unpunished. Please read my comment at http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rebecca-harris/knowledge-is-power-transp_b_851020.html
09:48 PM on 07/05/2011
I will give you a reason why I doubt some of these accusations, (We don't know the whole story in other words). DSK is a man who is out there, worldwide, literally. Nine years ago he was about 52 years old. Sometimes men at that age look like interesting men if you will. With DSK's power and money, he was an interesting man. In my life I have seen women make dates with men which they were actually quite attracted, only to be turned off in the end because these men acted too personal during attempted sex. I know this because the men who were on those dates told me what went wrong. The behaved exactly like Ms. Banon described DSK. But it does not mean she did not agree to meet him alone.
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07:35 AM on 07/06/2011
"But it does not mean she did not agree to meet him alone."

Whatever someone told you about what went wrong on some dates is really relevant for this specific case, it's not about statistics. And of course we don't know the whole story.

What I find rather disturbing about your stance though is your last sentence. Banon went to interview Strauss-Kahn for a book, a job. Now, do you imply working women should be reprimanded for meeting men alone in one room, regardless of their job? (If you think that, the religious police in Saudi-Arabia would agree with you.)
01:51 AM on 07/10/2011
You are fishing for bad commentary. Working women have every right to be alone with a man if they wish. I only suggested that if a young woman is attractive there is a chance she may get hit on. Likewise, if a man is interesting, a woman might be open to suggestion.
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tbone99
cruisin' duality
09:13 PM on 07/05/2011
"Mrs Banon, the woman who said she is going to file a charge in France works for atlantico.fr, a pro Sarkozy website which is co founded by Arnaud Dassier, the man behind Sarkozy's web campaign of 2007, and the man who started the smear campaign against DSK a few weeks before May 15th.
One can ask oneself: 9 years after the alleged assault, what can a woman without much resource, and close to "prescription" , expect to win in court ? I don't see. This change of mind appears when polls show that DSK is still popular enough in France to be dangerous to Sarkozy (49% of the French want him back in the presidential race). Such a move can only serve gaining time, adding to the character assassination, and nothing else. "

izmastervois
11:22 PM on 07/05/2011
"close to "prescript­ion" "

What does this mean?
08:22 AM on 07/06/2011
statute of limitations.
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smburwick
08:53 PM on 07/05/2011
Nomercy: idiot.
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07:17 PM on 07/05/2011
Strauss-Kahn Raped me 6 years ago can I have some money ?
07:49 PM on 07/05/2011
No, no, it's nine years.
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StrawHat
Eat veggies, don't vote for them
08:55 PM on 07/05/2011
Another marionnette de chaussette? They're crawling all over this thread.
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madsen26
08:41 AM on 07/06/2011
Did you forget to log in as "catz" again? You won't collect an extra $5 from Anne Mansouret if you do double id's on HP, tsk tsk.
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Merle Borja
Más sabe el diablo por viejo que por diablo.
06:13 PM on 07/05/2011
All part of a circus coordinated by Sarkozy.

NYPD police commissioner Ray Kelly was awarded the French Legion of Honor by Sarkozy in 2006.They are apparently quite friendly. Last summer, Sarkozy invited Kelly to Paris to celebrate Alain Bauer’s induction into the Legion of Honor. Bauer is a French criminologist and national security expert. http://nypdconfidential.com/columns/2011/110530.html

No accident, then, that Kelly´s department was accused of leaking inflammatory details of the accusation against DSK, Sarkozy´s worst political rival. And it´s not surprising now that Banon is suddenly interested in pressing her accusation. This is all about the French presidential election.
06:56 PM on 07/05/2011
Many comments sound as coming directly from DSK's propaganda legal team w/ intricate details, anger and links.
07:21 PM on 07/05/2011
I'm curious. Did you actually read the news link provided? It really does not sound like it to me.
07:02 PM on 07/05/2011
If Sarko's behind this, it's biting him HARD. It's not like his image has been enhanced by DSK's drama. If anything it makes him look worse because so many suspect him of setting this up w/ it's attendant fallout (ie a French pol in handcuffs in NYC, Greece being basically bankrupted w/ French taxpayers on the hook, etc...). If Sarko did this, it makes the Watergate coverup look competent by comparison.

All this sitch has ultimately done is to allow Marine Le Pen a pretense of looking wholesome and respectable by default. :(
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catz1515
05:56 PM on 07/05/2011
guess that DSK big head just can't stay out of trouble!
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StrawHat
Eat veggies, don't vote for them
05:43 PM on 07/05/2011
The woman-hating on this thread is appalling. Enjoy that money for the sale of this site -- it has taken the discourse down fifty notches.
06:51 PM on 07/05/2011
I wonder if you said the same thing when the Duke U. case was reported. If so, you need to do some real soul searching. For someone who was not there, you seem very very certain of what the facts are. Do you think that accusers never lie? Do yourself a favor and look up Eugene Kanin. Read the research.
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StrawHat
Eat veggies, don't vote for them
08:52 PM on 07/05/2011
Stick Duke Lacrosse where the sun will never, ever shine (if you're lucky).

This is not ONE accuser -- this is THREE accusations of out-right assault that we know of and a whole lot of complaints from former employees and colleagues of "aggressive" and "unrelenting" hitting on them and refusing to take ten "non"'s for an answer. When senior members of his own party say they have arranged their lives so that they NEVER have to be alone with him, that should start to get through your noggin.

Catch up.
07:12 PM on 07/05/2011
Most of the woman hating comments are coming from DSK legal propaganda team and family. They have just a few fans, and write as if French speaking a second language.
Women all over the world are horrified by this cruel sexual predator.
What woman would want to be in same room alone w/ him.
Tragically, at least 1 in 4 women are raped...
This is just the beginning of DSK's exposure.
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StrawHat
Eat veggies, don't vote for them
08:53 PM on 07/05/2011
I agree Kat119, this is the tip of the iceberg.
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iLoveOldNY
What Would George Carlin do?
04:44 PM on 07/05/2011
Keep digging for that gold, honey.
04:31 PM on 07/05/2011
Man, if I could file lawsuits on eight- to ten-year-old cases, I've got several I'd like to file.
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catz1515
05:55 PM on 07/05/2011
MILLIONS of women have a few each.....
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frant52
03:21 PM on 07/05/2011
How is it that a person who has the money and means to insult and intimidate anyone who dare speak against him, is taken seriously as a political world leader?
I wonder how many women would speak up if they weren't convinced that they too would be discredited.
I wonder too, how his wife lives with him and overlooks all this ugliness.
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madsen26
04:59 PM on 07/05/2011
Look at your first sentence and then remember a man called George W. Bush. There's your answer.

If his his wife overlooks all this ugliness, then she's no different than Tristane Banon's mother and Banon herself who "overlooked" it for over 5 years and joked about it casually on French TV.
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catz1515
05:57 PM on 07/05/2011
oh lala....your loving your little french sex pert, no?

role model or cousin?
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catz1515
06:08 PM on 07/05/2011
have you ever been r@ped?