Paris tribunal president warns against potential US interference

Peimane Ghaleh-Marzban, president of the Paris judicial tribunal, has warned against potential US interference in the case of the Front National's parliamentary assistants. The alert comes ahead of the appeal trial for Marine Le Pen and eleven other defendants, accused of diverting European Parliament funds. It follows reports of US sanction threats against French magistrates.

Starting January 13 and running until February 12, 2026, Marine Le Pen, leader of France's far-right, along with the party as a legal entity and eleven other defendants, will face trial on appeal in Paris. They are accused of using European Parliament funds solely for the benefit of the party in the case of the Front National's parliamentary assistants (now Rassemblement National).

On Tuesday, January 6, 2026, during a speech for the installation of new magistrates, Peimane Ghaleh-Marzban warned against an "unacceptable and intolerable interference." He was responding to reports in the German weekly Der Spiegel, which stated that the Trump administration had considered sanctions against the judges of the Paris correctional tribunal who convicted Marine Le Pen in March 2025 to four years in prison, including two firm, a 100,000 euro fine, and five years of ineligibility.

"If such facts were proven or were to occur, they would constitute an unacceptable and intolerable interference in our country's internal affairs that should provoke the reprobation of the public authorities," the tribunal president stated. He referenced the case of Nicolas Guillou, a French magistrate at the International Criminal Court (ICC), sanctioned by the United States since August 2025 for his involvement in the arrest warrant against Benjamin Netanyahu. "We must rise against even the possibility that this could be imagined," he added.

In March 2025, Donald Trump had compared Marine Le Pen's conviction to his own judicial troubles. This case highlights international tensions surrounding French justice as the appeal trial approaches.

مقالات ذات صلة

Marine Le Pen gestures confidently while testifying in the Paris Court of Appeal during the Rassemblement National assistants trial.
صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

Marine Le Pen testifies in ongoing RN assistants appeal trial

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

In the Paris Court of Appeal's ongoing trial over alleged misuse of European Parliament funds by Front National/Rassemblement National staff, Marine Le Pen was questioned on January 20-21, 2026, rejecting claims of a 'system' of embezzlement and highlighting the European Parliament's prior silence on assistants' roles.

On the first day of her appeal trial in the FN/RN parliamentary assistants case, Marine Le Pen partially shifted her defense strategy on January 13, 2026, in Paris. Previously denying any offense, the RN leader now admits a possible unintentional fault while blaming the European Parliament for oversight failures on disputed contracts.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

At the Paris appeal trial for the Front National parliamentary assistants case, prosecutors on February 3, 2026, requested four years in prison, including one year firm, and five years of ineligibility against Marine Le Pen, without provisional execution. The case concerns an alleged system of diverting European funds from 2004 to 2016 to finance the party. The court of appeal's decision is expected before summer.

Paris judicial court examined on Thursday, January 15, a defamation complaint filed by Christian Tein, Kanak independentist leader, against Sonia Backès, a loyalist figure, who accused him of being 'the leader of the terrorists' after the 2024 riots. Tein appeared via videoconference from Nouméa, while Backès did not attend the hearing. This case comes ahead of an Élysée meeting on New Caledonia's future.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

At the appeal trial before the Paris Court of Appeal, former MEP Bruno Gollnisch admitted that his parliamentary assistants worked residually for the National Front, not solely for him. This admission comes in the case of the party's assistants, where he is accused of diverting 996,000 euros in public funds. At 76 years old, he faces three years in prison, including one firm, a 50,000 euro fine, and five years of ineligibility.

Fugees rapper Pras Michel is attempting to postpone his 14-year prison sentence while he appeals his convictions for conspiracy, money laundering, and illegal lobbying. His legal team argues that the trial involved unprecedented improper jury influence, warranting a review before incarceration. The motion highlights several alleged errors that compromised the fairness of the proceedings.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

The French government threatened on Friday to dissolve the National Assembly if censured, preparing early legislative elections alongside March municipal polls. This response to censure motions from RN and LFI on the Mercosur deal draws criticism from figures like François Hollande and Michel Barnier. As the 2026 budget nears debate, calls to use article 49.3 grow to avert deadlock.

 

 

 

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