Google – AFP, Thomas Urbain (AFP), 19 March 2014
![]() |
French
rogue trader Jerome Kerviel is pictured outside his hotel in Modena,
on March
18, 2014 (AFP/File, Gabriel Bouys)
|
Paris — A
top French appeals court on Wednesday upheld rogue trader Jerome Kerviel's
three-year jail sentence over high-risk trading that cost Societe Generale bank
nearly five billion euros.
But the
court cancelled the 4.9 billion euros ($6.8 billion) that Kerviel was ordered
to pay back, referring the issue of damages to another court for a fresh
decision.
Kerviel's
lawyer Patrice Spinosi had argued in February while appealing the conviction
for breach of trust that Societe Generale had committed "wilful
misconduct" and was aware of his client's high-risk trading.
![]() |
View of the
Societe Generale
headquarters in the business district
of La Defense, on
February 12, 2014
(AFP, Eric Piermont)
|
Kerviel is
currently undertaking a protest walk from Rome to Paris, but can now
technically be put behind bars at any time.
He was
sentenced to three years in prison in October 2010 for breach of trust, forgery
and entering false data for unauthorised deals that threatened to bankrupt the
bank, one of the biggest in Europe.
Spinosi
said Wednesday's decision to send the ruling on damages for judgement again
would effectively amount to Societe Generale going on trial over the failure of
its supervisory system.
"It
is, at the very least, surprising that Jerome Kerviel is being sent to prison
when the existence of significant failures by his employer and the consequences
of these failures have just been recognised as a factor in the case,"
Spinosi added.
Another Kerviel
lawyer, David Koubbi, termed the outcome of the hearing a "victory"
for his client.
But Jean
Veil, the lawyer for Societe Generale, said the 37-year-old Kerviel "has
lost the case".
The
controversial trader is on a 1,400-kilometre (870-mile) protest trek to
highlight the "tyranny of the markets".
He had met
with Pope Francis in the Vatican during the pontiff's weekly general audience
on February 19 before starting his protest.
"This
is great news, that's the only thing I will say," Kerviel said in a reaction
to the ruling. "I will continue to walk."
He told RTL
radio later: "It's the end of recreation for bankers and banks. It's the
end of impunity. That's how I interpret it.
![]() |
French
rogue trader Jerome Kerviel relaxes himself in an Hotel in
Modena on March 18,
2014 (AFP/File, Gabriel Bouys)
|
"I am
quite surprised that they prefer to lock me up in prison rather that investigate
the destruction of evidence," he added.
Kerviel and
his lawyers had launched a high-profile campaign on social media before the
case came before the appeal court.
His lawyer
Koubbi said his client had received several offers of help and hospitality
during his protest march.
When he was
passing through Tuscany he was accorded a warm welcome by Marie-Christine
Ferre, the widow of poet, composer and singer Leo Ferre.
"It
gives us pleasure to help someone who is doing all this distance on foot just to
save his skin," she was quoted as saying on the website of Kerviel's
official support group.



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