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French court delays ruling on Strauss-Kahn pimping probe

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Former IMF head Dominique Strauss-Kahn. Photo: Reuters

A French court has delayed a decision on whether to drop pimping charges against former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn until December 19, prosecutors said on Wednesday.

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The appeals court in the northern town of Douai had been expected to rule Wednesday on a request from Strauss-Kahn’s lawyers to stop a judicial inquiry into claims that he and associates arranged sex parties with prostitutes.

The case is the last in a series of sex-related probes that the former International Monetary Fund chief and one-time presidential front-runner has faced in France.

His lawyers have argued the charge of “aggravated pimping in an organised gang” has not been supported and that investigation procedures were not followed in the case, including with leaks to the press.

“Clearly the questions we have asked them are not so easy to dismiss,” one of Strauss-Kahn’s lawyers, Henri Leclerc, said after hearing the ruling had been delayed.

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The case, known as the “Carlton affair” in France, centres around allegations that business leaders and police officials in Lille operated a vice ring supplying girls for sex parties, some of which are said to have taken place at the Carlton Hotel in the northern city.

Among Strauss-Kahn’s fellow accused is Jean-Christophe Lagarde, a police commissioner, and Rene Kojfer, the former public relations officer at the Carlton.

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