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French film director charged with rape and assault of actresses

  • Following investigations, preliminary charges have been brought against French film director Benoît Jacquot, including rape, sexual assault and violence.
  • The allegations against Jacquot are based on statements from several actresses, including Judith Godrèche and Isild Le Besco.
  • Godrèche, the initiator of the #MeToo movement in France, claims that Jacquot raped and abused her from the age of 14.

A French judge has filed preliminary charges of rape, sexual assault and violence against a prominent French film director in a case involving actresses, the Paris public prosecutor’s office said on Thursday.

Benoît Jacquot, who has directed over 50 films and television shows, has become one of the best-known figures in a late-stage reappraisal of the problems of sexual violence and physical abuse within and outside the French film industry.

French actress Judith Godrèche claims Jacquot raped and physically abused her during a six-year relationship that began when she was 14. She has taken a leading role in initiating the #MeToo wave, a movement that struggled to gain ground before she spoke out publicly earlier this year and encouraged other actresses to do the same.

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Prosecutors in Paris said the judge was investigating allegations against Jacquot made by actress Isild Le Besco and another actress. The judge issued a series of provisional charges against him on Wednesday after he was detained for police questioning earlier this week. In France, such charges are brought when a judge concludes there is serious and conclusive evidence that crimes may have been committed, allowing further investigation before deciding whether to press charges.

Benoît Jacquot attends the German premiere of the film “3 Coeurs” during the 14th French Film Week at the Kino International on December 4, 2014 in Berlin. A French judge has brought preliminary charges against Jacquot for rape, sexual assault and violence in a case involving several actresses, the Paris public prosecutor’s office announced on Thursday. (Clemens Bilan/Getty Images)

The AP does not normally release the names of victims of sexual violence. Le Besco, 41, has already spoken publicly on French television and other media, as well as in a book, about her relationship with the director, which began when she was a teenager and who is 35 years her senior.

A statement from prosecutors said Jacquot was charged with raping Le Besco when she was a minor. The rape occurred over a two-year period beginning in 1998. Jacquot was also named as an assisted witness, a special status under French law, for the alleged rape of Le Besco by a partner that lasted for 10 months in 2007.

The AP could not confirm whether the other actress, named by Paris prosecutors as another of Jacquot’s alleged rape victims, has agreed to be publicly identified. The actress’s lawyer, Margot Pugliese, did not immediately respond to written and telephone requests for comment.

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Prosecutors said Jacquot was accused of raping the actress in 2013 during a year-long relationship. He was also charged with alleged sexual abuse of the actress while they were still together in 2018, as well as alleged violence against her in 2018 and 2019.

Jacquot was also named as an assisted witness in connection with the alleged rape of the actress by one of her partners from 2014 to 2018, the prosecutor’s office said.

Jacquot will remain free until the investigation is completed, but must undergo psychological treatment, prosecutors said. He is also prohibited from contacting his alleged victims and witnesses. He is also prohibited from working as a director or in any other capacity with minors. He was also sentenced to bail of 25,000 euros ($27,000).

Jacquot, 77, has previously denied the allegations against him. In a statement that did not directly address the charges, Jacquot’s lawyer Julia Minkowski said the case had been over-hyped in the media and that the director had not been given access to the evidence when questioned by police, even though French law allows this “in cases of blatant violations of the presumption of innocence.”

“The investigation is still at an early stage and it was extremely premature to submit it to an investigating judge,” the lawyer said in a statement.

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She condemned the ban that excludes Jacquot from his work as a director and which also entails restrictions on his public appearances.

“More than a professional ban, this is a real judicial annulment measure based on a preliminary investigation and before a verdict. We will of course appeal,” she said.

Another French director, 80-year-old Jacques Doillon, was also taken in for police questioning but was later released for medical reasons, the Paris prosecutor’s office said.

Godrèche has accused Doillon of sexual abuse when he directed a film she made when she was 15. Doillon has previously denied the allegation.