Sarkozy’s former “right hand man” Claude Gean released after two months

After two months of confinement, her former interior minister France, Claude Gean, was released today from La Sante prison in Paris. Imprisonment for breach of a conviction was for the first time in the country.

The former “right hand” of President Nicolas Sarkozy, aged 77, came out shortly after 08:30 (local time, 09:30 Greek time) with all discretion from the Paris prison, riding in a vehicle with dark windows, they found journalists of the French Agency, as relayed by the Athenian News Agency.

Claude Gann was taken into custody on December 13 because he had not paid on time the fine and compensation he had been ordered to pay in a case of misuse of cash from the secret funds of the Ministry of Interior.

Jean, who also served as secretary general of the French presidency under Nicolas Sarkozy, benefited from a conditional release on Monday as part of a change in his sentence.

His lawyer, Philippe Bouce El Gozi, backed his client’s request for a change in his sentence, noting that Gean “repaid” his debt to the state through loans taken out by his relatives and that in prison “her condition his health can only worsen, due to the triple pathology “from which he suffers.

The former interior minister was sentenced in absentia on January 21 for another case, that of the presidential polls. He was sentenced to one year in prison for favoritism – eight months without suspension.

However, he will not return to prison for this last sentence, as he has appealed, which suspends the application of this sentence until a second trial is held.

Architect of his election campaign Nicolas SarkozyClaude Gean had been appointed Secretary-General of the Presidency since the 2007 victory and had gained considerable influence behind the scenes in government.

A former prefect and former director of the national police, he now embodies the cases related to the five-year presidency of Nicolas Sarkozy (2007-2012).

He is accused in the case of alleged Libyan financing of Nicolas Sarkozy’s election campaign and is due to be tried this month for “unfair financing” of his campaign for the 2012 parliamentary elections.

Source: News Beast

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