The so-called "eavesdropping" trial ended on Thursday evening, at the end of the pleadings of the defense of the co-accused of Nicolas Sarkozy, his lawyer and friend Thierry Herzog and the former high magistrate Gilbert Azibert, and the court put its decision under advisement as of March 1, 2021.

"This affair was a way of the cross for me, but if it was the price to pay for the truth to progress, I am ready to accept it", declared the former President of the Republic before the lifting of the law. 'hearing.

"I told you the truth during these three weeks, as I said in police custody and throughout the investigation," he continued.

"I still have confidence in the justice of our country."

Four years in prison required

The national financial prosecutor requested four years in prison, two of which were suspended against the former President of the Republic, prosecuted for corruption and influence peddling.

The same sentence was requested for Gilbert Azibert and Thierry Herzog, with five years of professional prohibition for the latter.

After a false start on November 23, this unprecedented trial really opened on November 30, under high tension, in the 32nd correctional chamber of the Paris court.

Never had a former head of state appeared for corruption under the Fifth Republic.

Nicolas Sarkozy is suspected of having obtained, in 2014, through his lawyer, information covered by secrecy from Gilbert Azibert about an appeal then under consideration at the Court of Cassation in the Bettencourt case.

Defense pleads for release

At the time, Nicolas Sarkozy had benefited from a dismissal in this case, but he sought to have the high court annul the seizure of his presidential agendas, which could have been used in other legal proceedings.

In return for this information and an attempt to influence the magistrates who examined his request, the former head of state is suspected of having promised to provide Gilbert Azibert with a "boost" for a post. prestige in Monaco, where the latter was never finally named.

On the last day of the trial Thursday, lawyers for Thierry Herzog and Gilbert Azibert shelled the "sidereal void" of the file for seven hours, asking for release.

"Where is the evidence? There is no evidence," exclaimed Hervé Témime, one of Me Herzog's lawyers.

The day before, Nicolas Sarkozy's lawyer, Jacqueline Laffont, had also pleaded for release, calling for "accepting to say that justice is fallible, that it could have been wrong, have gone astray" by accusing his client wrongly. 

With AFP

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