Sexual Assault Accusations: French Filmmakers Benoît Jacquot and Jacques Doillon in Detention

Sexual Assault Accusations: French Filmmakers Benoît Jacquot and Jacques Doillon in Detention
Sexual Assault Accusations: French Filmmakers Benoît Jacquot and Jacques Doillon in Detention

A clear acceleration in a flagship investigation of the French #MeToo movement: filmmakers Benoît Jacquot and Jacques Doillon, accused for several months by actress Judith Godrèche and other women of sexual violence, are in detention in Paris on Monday.

• Read also: France: MPs to investigate sexual violence in cinema

• Read also: France: Director Jacques Doillon wants to file a complaint for “defamation” against Judith Godrèche

The two men deny these accusations. They arrived Monday morning at the Regional Directorate of the Judicial Police in Paris accompanied by their lawyers, an AFP journalist noted.

Benoît Jacquot “will finally be able to speak in court,” reacted his counsel Julia Minkowski, who denounced a “criticizable” police custody when “a free hearing should have been decided.”


AFP

“I deplore all of these dysfunctions of justice, thanks to excessive media coverage which leads to unacceptable excesses,” she added.

For Me Marie Dosé, lawyer for Jacques Doillon, “none of the legal criteria could justify this measure” of police custody, “36 years” after the facts denounced by Judith Godrèche.


AFP

Her client “should have been heard in a free hearing given the age of the facts, their statute of limitations acquired for more than two decades, and the inevitable dismissal without further action which will close this investigation,” she added in a press release.

“His presumption of innocence is flouted all day long” in this “proceeding largely contaminated by extra-judicial considerations”, notably of “communication”.

The Paris prosecutor’s office confirmed these police custody cases by “recalling that the secrecy of the procedure aims to respect the privacy of the people who have confided their story to the courts alone, and the presumption of innocence.”

According to sources close to the case, these police custody periods, which could last until Tuesday evening, should provide an opportunity for confrontations between each of the directors and some of their respective accusers, including Ms Godrèche.

“I’m crying (…). I don’t know if I have the strength but I will have it. I will have it, I will have it” reacted the actress on Instagram Monday morning, in a message accompanied by a photo in which she appears with Benoît Jacquot.

Ms Godrèche’s lawyer, Laure Heinich, declined to comment, stressing the secrecy of the investigation.

“Hold”

In early February, his 52-year-old client sparked a new storm in the French #MeToo movement by filing a complaint against Benoît Jacquot for rape and Jacques Doillon for sexual assault.

Mr. Jacquot and Ms. Godrèche, born in March 1972, began their relationship in the spring of 1986. They lived openly together, even buying an apartment in Paris, until their separation in 1992. For the actress, it was a relationship of “control” and “perversion.”

Two other actresses have filed complaints against Mr. Jacquot.

Julia Roy, 42 years his junior and who starred in four of his films between 2016 and 2021, filed a complaint for sexual assault in “a context of violence and moral constraint that lasted several years,” according to a source close to the case.

Actress Isild le Besco filed a complaint at the end of May for rape of a minor over the age of 15 and rape dating back to the years 1998-2007.

Regarding Mr. Doillon, Ms. Godrèche accuses him of having “groped” her during an unplanned sex scene on the set of a film in 1989 when she was 15 years old and in a relationship with Benoît Jacquot.

Isild Le Besco also said she had to endure Mr. Doillon’s advances during work sessions, while actress Anna Mouglalis accused the filmmaker of forcibly kissing her at his home in 2011.

This new wave of accusations in the French #MeToo has set French cinema in turmoil in early 2024 and shaken the French cinema César ceremony and the Cannes Film Festival.

A commission of inquiry into sexual violence in cinema, audiovisual, live performance, fashion and advertising began in May but was brought to a halt following the dissolution of the French National Assembly in early June.

On Friday, Dominique Boutonnat, one of the most powerful men in the profession in France, left the head of the National Center for Cinema (CNC) after his conviction for sexual assault.

Gérard Depardieu is due to stand trial in Paris in October for sexual assault on two women, and risks a trial for rape for a third.

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