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Strauss-Kahn to sue French attempted rape accuser

Update: 05-07-2011 | 00:00:00

Former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn plans to sue for slander a French woman who said she will file an attempted rape complaint against him, his lawyers said in a statement Monday.

  

Dominique Strauss-Kahn

Earlier French journalist and writer Tristane Banon, 32, who once branded Strauss-Kahn a "rutting chimpanzee", indicated she would lodge "a complaint for attempted rape" against him, her lawyer David Koubbi told the news magazine L'Express on its website.

 

Koubbi added he would likely send the complaint to French prosecutors on Tuesday.

 

But Strauss-Kahn, who resigned from his post at the IMF after being charged with sexual assault in New York, fired back at his French accuser.

 

His lawyers Henri Leclerc and Frederique Baulieu told AFP in a statement that Strauss-Kahn had taken note of Banon's intentions, but dismissed her charges as "imaginary."

 

They said they "were in the process of compiling a libel complaint against her."

 

The prospect of a new criminal complaint against Strauss-Kahn came as the case in New York, where he was recently released from house arrest on charges of trying to rape a New York hotel maid, looked set to collapse after prosecutors revealed they had doubts about the credibility of his accuser.

 

Noting the developments in New York, Strauss-Kahn's lawyers said Banon's complaint "comes at a time when the untruthful nature of the accusations he faces in the United States are no longer in any doubt."

 

Koubbi told AFPTV that she "took that decision because she endured what she accuses Dominique Strauss-Kahn of and in France as elsewhere when you are a victim of an attempted rape, you must file a complaint."

 

In February 2007, Banon was a guest on a television chat show and recounted how a senior politician a few years before had lured her to a virtually empty apartment in the guise of agreeing to give an interview and then assaulted her.

 

In the broadcast version of Banon's comments the name of the politician was bleeped out, but a year later Banon confirmed to the AgoraVox website that she was referring to Strauss-Kahn.

 

"I put down the recorder straight away to record him. He wanted to hold my hand while he replied, because he told me 'I wouldn't be able to manage unless you hold my hand'," she alleged in the Paris Premiere broadcast.

 

"Then the hand went to my arm, then a bit further, so I stopped straight away," she explained. "It finished very violently -- as I told him clearly 'No, No!' -- and we finished up fighting on the floor.

 

"There wasn't just a couple of blows. I kicked him, and he tried to unclip my bra, to open my jeans," Banon alleged, adding that she eventually escaped and considered pressing charges before abandoning the idea.

 

Banon's mother, Socialist politician and blogger Anne Mansouret, confirmed to the news website Rue89, that she had advised her daughter at the time not to make a formal complaint for fear of hurting her career in journalism.

 

Koubbi referred to the attack as taking place in 2003, although her mother has previously said the incident occurred in 2002.

 

Before his arrest in New York, Strauss-Kahn, a heavyweight in France's Socialist Party, polled as the person most likely to beat President Nicolas Sarkozy in the 2012 election.

 

But Koubbi denied the decision to move forward with a complaint now was driven by political motives or influenced by the unravelling of the New York case.

 

"Even if (the New York) case against Mr Strauss-Kahn turns out to be unfounded, ours is not. It is extremely solid and backed up," L'Express quoted him as saying.

 

Kenneth Thompson, who is representing the hotel maid accuser in New York, applauded Banon's decision to filed a complaint against Strauss-Kahn.

 

-AFP/ac

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