Following his acquittal in February in the case of the European parliamentary assistants of the UDF and then the Modem, the prosecution lodged an appeal.
Justice has not yet completely finished with François Bayrou, appointed Prime Minister this Friday by the President of the Republic, replacing Michel Barnier.
On February 5, the Paris Criminal Court acquitted the 73-year-old president of the Modem in the European parliamentary assistants case , "giving the benefit of the doubt ." Considering that he was guilty of acts that "undermined the values of probity and exemplarity that he promotes ," the prosecution had requested a thirty-month suspended prison sentence , a 70,000 euro fine and a three-year suspended ineligibility sentence for complicity, by instigation, in the misappropriation of European public funds. The court therefore did not follow his lead.
Two other defendants – Stéphane Thérou and Pierre-Emmanuel Portheret – were also acquitted, while the eight others, including five former MEPs, were sentenced to suspended prison sentences of ten to eighteen months, fines of €10,000 to €50,000 and a two-year suspended ineligibility period. The UDF (now MoDem) was sentenced to a fine of €150,000, of which €100,000 was firm, and the MoDem to €350,000, of which €300,000 was firm.