Dominique
Strauss-Kahn, the managing director of
the International Monetary Fund, was
arrested and is being questioned by
police after allegations of sexual
assault emerged on Saturday.
The New York Post initially
reported that Strauss-Kahn was removed
from an Air France flight just minutes
before takeoff from Kennedy Airport.
UPDATE:
Reuters has confirmed through NY
police that Strauss-Kahn was charged
with "a criminal sexual act,
attempted rape and unlawful
imprisonment." Scroll down for the
latest information on the charges.
According to The
New York Post, a housekeeper
entered Strauss-Kahn’s New York City
hotel room at noon on Saturday. Sources
claim that Strauss-Kahn emerged naked
from the bathroom and grabbed the
housekeeper, forcing her to perform oral
sex on him.
The New York Times reports
that Strauss-Kahn is a former economics
professor, and started in the 1980's as
a deputy in parliament, and then was a
finance minister:
Mr. Strauss-Kahn
eventually sought the socialist
party’s presidential nomination
himself in 2007 — calling for an
“anti-Sarkozy front” — but lost to
Segolene Royal. Months later he was
tapped to run the I.M.F. and
received Sarkozy’s support, which
many critics called a strategy by
Sarkozy to keep Mr. Strauss-Kahn
away from the forefront of the
socialist party.
According to a
Reuters post on Twitter, "Lawyer
representing IMF chief Strauss-Kahn says
Strauss-Kahn 'will plead not guilty.'"
IMF chief and
possible French presidential
contender Dominique Strauss-Kahn was
arrested and charged with an alleged
sexual assault, including an
attempted rape, on a hotel maid in
New York City, police said on
Sunday.
Strauss-Kahn, a
key player in the world's response
to the 2007-09 financial meltdown
and in Europe's ongoing debt crisis,
was removed from an Air France plane
minutes before it was to take off
for Paris from John F Kennedy
International Airport on Saturday,
New York police spokesman Paul
Browne said.
Browne said
Strauss-Kahn was formally arrested
at 2:15 a.m. (7:15 a.m. British
time) on Sunday on charges of
criminal sexual act, attempted rape
and unlawful imprisonment.
A lawyer
representing Strauss-Kahn, Benjamin
Brafman, told Reuters in an email
that the International Monetary Fund
chief "will plead not guilty."
Brafman made no further comment.
A 32-year-old
maid filed a sexual assault
complaint after fleeing the $3,000
(1,852 pound)-a-night hotel suite at
the Sofitel in Times Square where
the alleged incident occurred around
1 p.m. (6 p.m. British time) on
Saturday, Browne said.
Strauss-Kahn, 62,
who has been considered a possible
Socialist Party candidate in the
French presidential election in
April and May 2012, appeared to have
fled the hotel after the incident,
the police spokesman said.
Browne told
Reuters an account of events which
led to the state charges against
Strauss-Kahn. "She told detectives
he came out of the bathroom naked,
ran down a hallway to the foyer
where she was, pulled her into a
bedroom and began to sexually
assault her, according to her
account."
"She pulled away
from him and he dragged her down a
hallway into the bathroom where he
engaged in a criminal sexual act,
according to her account to
detectives. He tried to lock her
into the hotel room," Browne added.
Browne said
Strauss-Kahn does not have
diplomatic immunity. He is expected
to be brought before state court on
Sunday.
According to New
York state law, a criminal sexual
act includes forcibly compelling
someone to engage in oral sex. The
offence carries a potential sentence
of 15-20 years, the same as
attempted rape. Unlawful
imprisonment carries a potential
sentence of three to five years.
IMPACT ON IMF
The allegation
will be a major worldwide
embarrassment to the IMF, which has
authorized billions of dollars in
lending programs to troubled
countries and has played a major
role in the euro zone debt crisis.
It follows the
announcement on Thursday the IMF's
No. 2 official, John Lipsky, plans
to step down in August when his term
ends.
The IMF managing
director has yet to say whether he
will run for president, although
French opinion polls put him as a
clear winner over conservative
incumbent Nicolas Sarkozy if the two
faced off in an election.
"The NYPD
realized he had fled, he had left
his cell phone behind," Browne said.
"We learned he was on an Air France
plane. They held the plane and he
was taken off and is now being held
in police custody for questioning."
After being
removed from the aircraft's
first-class section, he was taken to
the police department's Special
Victims Unit in Manhattan, known to
viewers of a hit U.S. television
show based on its work.
The woman, who
has not been named, "was brought by
EMS (emergency medical services) to
the Roosevelt Hospital, where she
was treated for minor injuries,"
Browne said.
Strauss-Kahn was
on his way to Europe for a meeting
on Sunday with German Chancellor
Angela Merkel to discuss the
European debt crisis and then was to
attend a euro zone finance ministers
meeting in Brussels on Monday.
Strauss-Kahn took
over the IMF in November 2007 for a
five-year term scheduled to end next
year.
Before that, he
was a French finance minister,
member of the French National
Assembly and a professor of
economics at the Institut d'Etudes
Politiques de Paris.
The IMF declined
to comment and IMF board officials
told Reuters they had not been
informed officially of the incident.
PAST
CONTROVERSY
Strauss-Kahn has
faced controversy before. In October
2008, he apologized for "an error of
judgement" for an affair with a
female IMF economist who was his
subordinate. An inquiry cleared him
of harassment and abuse of power,
although he was warned by the fund's
board of member countries against
further improper conduct.
Strauss-Kahn
apologized to the woman, Piroska
Nagy, and his wife, French
television personality Anne
Sinclair, as well as to IMF
employees for the trouble he had
caused.
Since taking over
the IMF, he has won plaudits for
putting the fund, the world's main
overseer of the global economic
system, at the centre of global
efforts to cope with the financial
meltdown of 2007-09.
Strauss-Kahn
introduced sweeping changes at the
global institution to ensure that
countries swamped by the financial
collapse had access to emergency
loans. He was pivotal in brokering a
bailout program for Iceland,
Hungary, Greece, Ireland, and
recently Portugal.
He has also
overseen internal changes that have
given emerging market countries,
such as China, India and Brazil,
greater voting power in the
institution, and weighed into
thornier issues by urging China to
allow its currency to rise in value
in a dispute with the United States.
Based in
Washington at the IMF's
headquarters, Strauss-Kahn has
continued to spend a lot of time in
France, fanning speculation he was
considering re-entering politics as
a presidential candidate.
Lipsky's planned
departure and now Strauss-Kahn's
detention raises questions about a
possible leadership vacuum should
the IMF chief be charged by U.S.
authorities or face possible
discipline by the IMF board.
(Reporting by
Christine Kearney and Noeleen Walder;
Editing by Peter Cooney, Todd
Eastham and Jackie Frank)