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CRIME

Brigitte Macron awarded damages over false transgender claim

A court on Thursday ordered two women to pay €8,000 in damages to French First Lady Brigitte Macron after making false claims she was transgender, falsehoods that were later spread online by conspiracy theorists and the far right.

Brigitte Macron awarded damages over false transgender claim
French First Lady Brigitte Macron at the Men's singles MS2 semifinal wheelchair table tennis match during the Paris 2024 Paralympic Games. Photo by JULIEN DE ROSA / AFP

Brigitte Macron filed a libel complaint against two women who posted a YouTube video in December 2021 alleging the French president’s wife had once been a man named “Jean-Michel”.

The claim went viral just weeks before the 2022 presidential election.

A Paris court sentenced the two defendants to pay a total of €8,000 in damages to the president’s wife, and €5,000 to her brother Jean-Michel Trogneux. They were also handed a suspended fine of €500.

Brigitte Macron, 71, did not attend the trial in June and was not present for the ruling.

Defendant Amandine Roy, a self-proclaimed spiritual medium, interviewed Natacha Rey, a self-described independent journalist, for four hours on her YouTube channel.

Rey spoke about the “state lie” and “scam” that she claimed to have uncovered.

The disinformation even spread to the United States where Brigitte Macron was attacked in a now deleted YouTube video ahead of the November elections.

Rey was ill during the trial, but did not manage to have it postponed.

Former US first lady Michelle Obama, US Vice President and presidential candidate Kamala Harris and New Zealand ex-premier Jacinda Ardern have also been the target of disinformation about their gender or sexuality in a bid to mock or humiliate them.

Also on Thursday, Brigitte Macron made her Netflix debut playing herself in the hit series Emily in Paris.

The show’s star Lily Collins told Elle magazine the idea came to her and programme creator Darren Star when they met the first lady at the Elysée Palace in December 2022.

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BANKING

Danish bank to pay millions to end French laundering probe

Denmark’s largest bank has agreed to pay a multi-million sum to end legal pursuits in France linked to alleged money laundering in its Estonian subsidiary that resulted in heavy US penalties

Danish bank to pay millions to end French laundering probe

Danske Bank will pay €6.3million (47million kroner) to end French financial authorities’ investigation.

An independent auditor’s report published in 2018 alleged Danske Bank’s Estonian unit allegedly laundered some €200billion through 15,000 accounts from 2007 to 2015.

The payment was agreed on August 27th with France’s national financial crime prosecutors and validated by a court on Wednesday. The agreement does not involve any admission of guilt.

Danske last December pleaded guilty in the United States and paid a $2billion fine.

The bank last October set aside an amount roughly equal to its US fine in expectation of legal pursuits in several countries.

Probes are underway in Estonia, Denmark, and Britain.

France charged Danske in 2019 with organised money laundering, which it denied, saying it was unaware of its Estonian subsidiary’s activities.

Tracfin, the French finance ministry’s anti-money laundering unit, found suspect movements on two accounts linked to a Franco-Russian businesswoman who has since been handed a two-year suspended sentence.

At Wednesday’s hearing, Danske’s counsel Niels Heering said his institution was “happy to reach this accord which for us is a way to close this chapter”, adding that “cracking down on financial fraud remains a priority” for the bank.

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