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Rogue trader Kerviel launches retrial bid in fraud case

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Convicted rogue trader Jerome Kerviel appeared in a Paris court Monday seeking a retrial over his fraud conviction stemming from risky bets that nearly brought down Societe Generale, one of Europe's biggest banks.

"The time of reckoning has come for those who fiddled this case," Kerviel's lawyer David Koubbi said as he arrived at the court with his client

The hearing before the review court's investigating committee is the first step towards a possible retrial in the sensational case over Kerviel gambling away 4.9 billion euros ($5.5 billion) through unauthorised trades in 2008.

Branded a crook by his ex-employer and a scapegoat by his apologists, Kerviel insists his bosses knew what he was doing and turned a blind eye to it as long as the profits kept rolling in.

Kerviel, now 39, was convicted in 2010 of breach of trust, forgery and entering false data, and sentenced to three years in jail, a verdict that was upheld on appeal.

He was also ordered to repay to Societe Generale the 4.9 billion euros he lost -- although an appeals court overturned the order, arguing that the bank's internal oversight mechanisms had failed.

Kerviel left prison in September 2014 after spending less than five months behind bars, winning conditional release that initially required him to wear an electronic bracelet and stay home on weekday evenings.

He points to the testimony of the top detective in the case, Nathalie Le Roy, who told the court that she was "certain" Kerviel's superiors "could not have been unaware" he was taking wildly risky bets on equity derivatives.

She charged in a French TV documentary that the bank tried to manipulate her, "taking me in the direction they wanted to go".

On Sunday, explosive new support emerged for Kerviel in the form of remarks secretly recorded by Le Roy in which a former prosecutor said it was "obvious, obvious" that Societe Generale was aware of Kerviel's dealings.

Convicted rogue trader Jerome Kerviel appeared in a Paris court Monday seeking a retrial over his fraud conviction stemming from risky bets that nearly brought down Societe Generale, one of Europe’s biggest banks.

“The time of reckoning has come for those who fiddled this case,” Kerviel’s lawyer David Koubbi said as he arrived at the court with his client

The hearing before the review court’s investigating committee is the first step towards a possible retrial in the sensational case over Kerviel gambling away 4.9 billion euros ($5.5 billion) through unauthorised trades in 2008.

Branded a crook by his ex-employer and a scapegoat by his apologists, Kerviel insists his bosses knew what he was doing and turned a blind eye to it as long as the profits kept rolling in.

Kerviel, now 39, was convicted in 2010 of breach of trust, forgery and entering false data, and sentenced to three years in jail, a verdict that was upheld on appeal.

He was also ordered to repay to Societe Generale the 4.9 billion euros he lost — although an appeals court overturned the order, arguing that the bank’s internal oversight mechanisms had failed.

Kerviel left prison in September 2014 after spending less than five months behind bars, winning conditional release that initially required him to wear an electronic bracelet and stay home on weekday evenings.

He points to the testimony of the top detective in the case, Nathalie Le Roy, who told the court that she was “certain” Kerviel’s superiors “could not have been unaware” he was taking wildly risky bets on equity derivatives.

She charged in a French TV documentary that the bank tried to manipulate her, “taking me in the direction they wanted to go”.

On Sunday, explosive new support emerged for Kerviel in the form of remarks secretly recorded by Le Roy in which a former prosecutor said it was “obvious, obvious” that Societe Generale was aware of Kerviel’s dealings.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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