DSK confronts French writer over rape claim
PARIS - Former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn met in a face-to-face confrontation Thursday with a Frenchwoman who says he tried to rape her, as the two were questioned jointly by investigators deciding whether to pursue the case.
CBS Radio News reporter Elaine Cobbe says the confrontation lasted two hours. Neither Strauss-Kahn nor Banon made any comment as they left the police department, and investigators would not reveal anything that was said.
The Paris prosecutor's office is investigating Tristane Banon's claims that Strauss-Kahn attacked her during an interview for a book in 2003. Strauss-Kahn calls the claims imaginary and slanderous.
Banon requested a one-on-one meeting with Strauss-Kahn, which investigators granted. The two arrived at the police facility Thursday morning in cars and did not speak to reporters gathered outside.
It's now up to the investigators to decide if they will continue and seek to press charges against Strauss-Kahn, reports Cobbe.
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Strauss-Kahn quit as head of the International Monetary Fund and saw his chances for the French presidency evaporate after a New York hotel maid accused him of attempted rape in May.
The U.S. case was later dropped amid questions about the maid's credibility, but the maid, Nafissatou Diallo, has filed a civil suit. Strauss-Kahn claimed Monday he has diplomatic immunity and asked a New York court to dismiss the lawsuit.
French accuser Banon has also threatened to sue Strauss-Kahn if Paris prosecutors decide not to go forward with a criminal case against him.
One challenge for Banon's case is that the incident in question happened eight years ago.
Banon has said that Strauss-Kahn invited her to an empty apartment for the book interview, and they ended up tussling on the floor, with the politician trying to open her jeans and bra and putting his fingers in her mouth and underwear.
Banon has defended her decision not to press charges against Strauss-Kahn at the time of the alleged incident. In 2003, she was 23 years old and Strauss-Kahn was an eminence grise of France's Socialist party.