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France's audiovisual authority, the CSA, sent out a reminder Tuesday of the French media's legal obligations. Dominique de Leusse, a lawyer specializing in defamation issues who has joined the Strauss-Kahn team, told The Associated Press he is considering filing a legal complaint about the images shown in the French media. "We have laws that are protective of the dignity of the person and of the presumption of innocence," he said. But there Strauss-Kahn was on French TV screens on Monday and fronting French papers Tuesday, the debonaire politician in his moment of ignominy. For many French, this was a man broken and delivered to his enemies on live TV. Socialist lawmaker Jean-Christophe Cambadelis, writing on his blog, said he and others were "profoundly saddened by the images and attitudes of authorities who refuse him any dignity. We don't underestimate the gravity of the suspected acts, but there were images and humiliations that weren't necessary for the truth to manifest itself." Having Strauss-Kahn jailed "is a kind of national humiliation," said political analyst Dominique Moisi, who dined with the IMF chief in Washington three weeks ago. "This is a man who incarnated France at the highest level of the financial world." Strauss-Kahn's reputation as a seducer may have titillated the French, but the actual charge of attempted rape was a shocker. "People knew he was a womanizer, even a quite extreme womanizer, but I don't think people were ready to face the accusation of sexual assault and attempted rape," Moisi told Associated Press Television News. Still, Garapon, a magistrate who trains judges, said he does not believe Strauss-Kahn would have been imprisoned if the alleged assault took place in France. "I think there would have been pressure,' he said. "There would have been multiple phone calls, to the Interior Minister's office, to the Justice Minister, the prosecutor." What surprised the French most, he said, is the "spectacular and brutal dimension of American justice." Even the vocabulary of the charges, some of which don't exist in France, like forcible touching, is less "precise" and "crude" under the French system, Garapon said. Strauss-Kahn is charged with attempted rape, sex abuse, a criminal sex act, unlawful imprisonment and forcible touching. The most serious charge carries up to 25 years in prison. Together, they carry more than 70 years in prison. But in France, Garapon estimated Strauss-Kahn would probably risk three to five years in prison if convicted, although he admitted an exact count at this stage was difficult. The Strauss-Kahn case has led to serious soul-searching in France. The left-leaning newspaper Liberation affirmed Wednesday that its journalists "will continue ... to respect the private lives of men and women" it covers, with the exception of suspected sexual crimes. But it conceded that its journalists are asking whether they should have more strongly pursued rumors about Strauss-Kahn's womanizing. Others voiced respect for the American judicial system. "It must be reiterated that the acts are very serious," said Ecology Minister Nathalie Kosciusko-Morizet in the daily Le Figaro. "In France, we have a tendency to treat this lightly." Garapon thinks the shock of the Strauss-Kahn case may "make the French reflect." "The French discovered you don't take American law lightly," Garapon said. "That's its grandeur, and sometimes its excess."
[Associated
Press;
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