Former French president Nicolas Sarkozy’s telephone was tapped during a judicial probe into financing for his 2007 election campaign, Le Monde newspaper reported, potentially presenting a new hurdle for Sarkozy, who is widely expected to run for office again.
The newspaper said the telephone tapping episode had given rise to suspicions Sarkozy had been secretly advised by a high court judge in exchange for help getting the judge a role in Monaco.
The alleged telephone tapping was denounced by Sarkozy’s lawyer, Thierry Herzog, as “monstrous.”
Herzog also said there had been “no influence peddling” in the context of contacts with the judge, named by Le Monde as Gilbert Azibert.
An attempt by reporters to reach Azibert via a telephone call to his office was unsuccessful on Friday.
A statement from Monaco’s judicial services department confirmed that Azibert had been a candidate for a role as a Monaco high court judge, but said there had been “no outside intervention” in the recruitment procedure.
The statement also said Azibert did not get the job.
The inquiry into election financing began in April last year, and is still at a stage that remains secret under French legal procedure, precluding any comment from investigating magistrates.
Herzog told the newspaper his long-held belief the ex-president’s telephone conversations were being monitored was reinforced when he learned that the same thing had happened to Sarkozy’s former French minister of the interior Brice Hortefeux.
“It’s not just scandalous, it’s monstrous. It’s a monumental violation of legal defense rights... Mr Sarkozy is probably still being phone-tapped,” he told the newspaper.
Sarkozy is expected by many to contest the 2017 presidential election after his defeat by French President Francois Hollande two years ago.
The alleged telephone tapping, ordered by magistrates investigating allegations that late Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi funded Sarkozy’s 2007 campaign, could create fresh legal hurdles to his running again for power.
The tapping allegations came a day after news that Sarkozy and his wife, Carla Bruni, would file a legal complaint over secret audio recordings made of them by an adviser during the 2012 election campaign.
Revelations that Patrick Buisson, part of Sarkozy’s inner circle, recorded hours of talks with the conservative leader and his entourage have caused uproar and disarray in his opposition UMP party weeks before local elections.
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