Former French President Nicolas Sarkozy began serving a five-year prison sentence on Tuesday after being convicted for conspiring to illegally finance his 2007 election campaign with funds from late Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi. This marks a historic downfall for the once-influential leader, making him the first former French head of state to be jailed since World War II collaborator Philippe Pétain.
Sarkozy, who led France from 2007 to 2012, was found guilty of coordinating a plan with aides to secure millions in Libyan cash donations. Although he was acquitted of personally receiving the money, judges ruled that he played a central role in the conspiracy. The 69-year-old has repeatedly denied all charges, calling the case politically driven and an attempt to humiliate him. Despite his appeal, he must serve time while the process continues.
The former president will be held at La Santé prison in Paris, a facility that once housed notorious figures like Carlos the Jackal and Manuel Noriega. Sarkozy will likely stay in the prison’s isolation wing for security reasons, occupying a 9 to 12-square-meter cell with a private shower. He will have access to a landline and a television for a monthly fee of €14. Sarkozy told French media he plans to spend his first week reading, including The Count of Monte Cristo, a novel about a man wrongly imprisoned who seeks revenge.
The ruling has divided France, with Sarkozy’s allies condemning it as excessive. However, a recent Elabe poll for BFM TV revealed that 61% of French citizens support his immediate imprisonment. President Emmanuel Macron, who maintains a cordial relationship with Sarkozy, reportedly met him ahead of his incarceration. The case underscores France’s tougher stance on political corruption and white-collar crime.


Trump, Xi Begin High-Stakes China Summit Focused on Trade, Taiwan and Global Tensions
Trump DOJ Accuses Yale Medical School of Racial Bias in Admissions
Trump and IRS in Settlement Talks Over $10 Billion Tax Return Leak Lawsuit
Macron Faces Political Test Over Bank of France Nomination Ahead of 2027 Election
Vance Says Progress Made in Iran Nuclear Talks as Trump Rejects Tehran Proposal
Japan Considers Extra Budget Aid Amid Rising Fuel and Utility Costs
TikTok Nears $400 Million Settlement With Trump Administration Over Child Privacy Lawsuit
Taiwan Court Fines Tokyo Electron Unit $4.78M in Major TSMC Trade Secrets Case
RFK Jr. Spokesman Resigns Over Trump Administration’s Flavored E-Cigarette Policy
US Hosts Israel-Lebanon Talks as Ceasefire Deadline Nears
Cuba Weighs $100M U.S. Aid Offer Amid Fuel Crisis
DOJ Ends Probe Into Fed Chair Jerome Powell, Boosting Kevin Warsh Confirmation Prospects
Judge Dismisses Elon Musk’s Fraud Claims Against OpenAI, Trial to Proceed on Remaining Allegations
Oil Prices Climb as Strait of Hormuz Tensions and Supply Concerns Persist
Argentina Court Upholds Cristina Kirchner Asset Seizure in Corruption Case
Judge Rules Use of Military Lawyers in Civilian Prosecutions Is Lawful 



