A Paris appeals court has decided to release former French president Nicolas Sarkozy from prison and place him under judicial supervision.
Monday’s announcement came less than three weeks after Sarkozy began serving a five-year sentence for criminal conspiracy in a scheme to finance his 2007 election campaign with funds from Libya.
Sarkozy (70) was expected to leave Paris’s La Santé prison in the afternoon. He will be banned from leaving French territory, the court said. An appeal trial is expected to take place at a later date.
Sarkozy became the first former French head of state in modern times to be put behind bars after his conviction on September 25th. He denies wrongdoing.
He was jailed on October 21st pending appeal but immediately filed for early release.
During Monday’s hearing, Sarkozy, speaking from prison via videolink, argued he had always met all justice requirements.
“I had never imagined I would experience prison at 70. This ordeal was imposed on me, and I lived through it. It’s hard, very hard,” he said.
Sarkozy also paid tribute to prison staff who he said helped him through “this nightmare”.
Sarkozy’s wife, supermodel-turned-singer Carla Bruni-Sarkozy, and two of his sons attended the hearing at the Paris court.
Monday’s proceedings did not involve the motives for the sentencing.
Still, Sarkozy told the court he never asked Libya’s longtime ruler Muammar Gadafy for any financing.
“I will never admit something I didn’t do,” he said.
Under French law, release is the general rule pending appeal, while detention remains the exception.
The former president, who governed from 2007 to 2012, faces separate proceedings, including a November 26th ruling by France’s highest court over illegal financing of his failed 2012 re-election bid, and an ongoing investigation into alleged witness tampering in the Libya case.
In 2023, he was found guilty of corruption and influence peddling for trying to bribe a magistrate in exchange for information about a legal case in which he was implicated. France’s highest court, the Court of Cassation, later upheld the verdict. – AP