This Article is From May 23, 2011

Strauss-Kahn will be cleared of sex crimes: Lawyer

Strauss-Kahn will be cleared of sex crimes: Lawyer

Dominique Strauss-Khan with his

wife Anne Sinclair in a file photo.

New York: Fallen IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn will plead not guilty and be cleared of attempting to rape a hotel chambermaid, his main lawyer said on Sunday.

The French politician, until recently considered a serious contender for the French presidency, is holed up in a Broadway apartment under armed guard while efforts were made to find him a more permanent home to prepare his defense.

Benjamin Brafman, who handled the child sex case against the late Michael Jackson, told Israeli newspaper Haaretz he was confident that Strauss-Kahn would go free.

"He'll plead not guilty and in the end he'll be acquitted," Brafman said during a family visit to Israel.

"Nothing is certain, but from what I've discerned in the investigation, he will be acquitted... He has impressed me very much. Despite the circumstances, he's doing well."

Strauss-Kahn, 62, faces seven charges over the alleged attempted rape of a worker at the Sofitel hotel in New York. The Muslim woman told police she was forced to carry out sex acts on the former French finance minister in his suite and that he tried to rip her clothes off.

Prosecutors told a bail hearing last week that they are building up a "strong" case and that the evidence so far backs the woman's claims. There has been no announcement however on whether police have found DNA evidence.

Brafman also told France's TF1 television, in a brief interview in Israel, that he's confident that "the charges will be proved false" and that he's working to restore Strauss-Kahn's "very good name."

Strauss-Kahn paid $1 million in cash and deposited a $5 million insurance bond to secure bail. He must wear an electronic bracelet and live under constant video camera surveillance with an armed private guard -- and pay for those services.

Security conditions for his bail alone cost more than $200,000 a month, prosecutors say.

The ex-IMF chief currently resides at the Empire Building at 71 Broadway, a stone's throw from Wall Street and the Ground Zero site of the September 11, 2001 attacks.

Tour buses going by the building point out its now notorious temporary resident.

Strauss-Kahn is only allowed to leave that apartment for a medical emergency though he will be able to go to his lawyer, a doctor or a synagogue when a more permanent home is found.

He will have to appear in court again on June 6 to formally enter his plea, with a full trial likely months away.

Strauss-Kahn, who is hugely wealthy through his heiress wife Anne Sinclair, has also hired a powerful team of private investigators to fight his 32-year-old accuser's case.

Defense lawyers have so far given little indication of their strategy against the maid's claims that a naked Strauss-Kahn chased her through the hotel room where she'd gone to clean, then forced her into oral sex.

However, there have been hints that the lawyers will say a consensual sexual encounter took place.

A report published Sunday by an online investigative journalism site, the Center for Public Integrity, sheds light on what took place in the hour after the alleged assault.

Citing anonymous sources, the report said the maid was "traumatized" after fleeing the hotel room. It said that during four separate interviews with supervisors and two hotel security officers, she gave consistent accounts of what allegedly took place.

The maid was visibly shaking and spitting as she described the events. The hotel security chief ultimately deemed her story credible and called police at 1:30 pm (1730 GMT), the Center's story said.

Hours later, Strauss-Kahn was pulled off an Air France plane moments before its scheduled departure to Paris.

In France, Interior Minister Claude Gueant told local radio that if Strauss-Kahn was found guilty and asked to come to France to serve out a prison term there, "the French government would support his request."

Gueant said the sex crime accusations have damaged France's image abroad.

Some 500 people turned out Sunday in Paris for a protest by feminist groups against a wave of sexist commentary generated by Strauss-Kahn's arrest.

Strauss-Kahn supporters in France took to the airwaves, blogs and newspaper columns to defend him, attack US justice and, in some cases, to question the integrity of the alleged victim.

"The problem is not what happened in New York, but the tide of sexism that followed it," declared Caroline Haas, president of "Dare Feminism" and one of the event organizers.

"We are all chamber maids," declared one of the banners unfurled in front of Paris' iconic Pompidou Centre gallery complex. "No means no!"

The feminists' anger was turned on male commentators in the media -- one magazine editor dismissed the attack as "touching up the help" -- and on a wave of off-color online jokes on social networking sites.

More than 15,000 people have signed the feminists' petition, including several French politicians.

The case has also sparked a battle between Europe and emerging powers over who should replace Strauss-Kahn as head of the International Monetary Fund.

French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde is tipped as a likely successor, thereby maintaining the unwritten rule that a European should occupy the post.

However, emerging economic giants, including China and Brazil, are arguing that the time has come for an IMF chief from outside the old club.

Mexico on Sunday announced it will back its central bank chief Agustin Carstens for job.


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