The ruling means that Lagarde will stand trial at the Cour de Justice de la Republique in Paris, which is a special court that tries ministers for crimes committed while in office.
“She will attend,” Lagarde's lawyer Patrick Maisonneuve told Reuters.
Lagarde faces up to a year in prison and a fine of €15,000 ($16,850) if found guilty. A panel of three judges and 12 MPs selected from the upper and lower houses of parliament will look into her case.
Trials at the Cour de Justice are extremely rare, with Lagarde’s hearing set to be just the fifth in the tribunal’s history. The trial is expected to run until December 20.
In July, the Cour de Cassation, one of France’s courts of last resort, accused Lagarde of “negligence” which “resulted in a misuse of public funds by a third party.”
The party in question was French businessman Bernard Tapie who received a €400 million payout in compensation following a lawsuit against French bank Credit Lyonnais, which he accused of undervaluing his stake in multinational sportswear company Adidas.
In search of funds in 1993, Tapie began to look for buyers of his stake in the German sportswear company, which he eventually sold to Credit Lyonnais for two billion francs...
https://www.rt.com/news/359157-lagarde-trial-imf-court/
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