Former MEP Sylvie Goulard has been dismissed in the judicial investigation into her role as a consultant to an American institute.

Two investigating judges at the Paris court have ordered a dismissal of the case in the judicial investigation opened into the role of Sylvie Goulard, a former minister who worked at the Bank of France, as a consultant to the Berggruen Institute, Agence France-Presse (AFP) learned on Tuesday, August 5, from sources close to the case and the judiciary.
The dismissal order was issued on December 23, according to the judicial source, three months after the National Financial Prosecutor's Office (PNF) filed a request to that effect. Sylvie Goulard, a MoDem MEP from 2009 to 2017, declined to comment. Placed under assisted witness status on April 4, 2024, she could not be referred to the criminal court.
A judicial investigation was opened in 2022 following a complaint with civil action by the Anticor association for passive corruption, passive influence peddling, illegal taking of interests, and breach of trust. An initial preliminary investigation opened following a simple complaint by Anticor resulted in the PNF closing the case without further action in 2020 due to no violation.
No evidence of influence and “real work”In its complaint, Anticor questioned the reality of the work carried out by Ms. Goulard for the Berggruen Institute, a California-based think tank, and the possible compensation in exchange for the remuneration paid under this contract. Ms. Goulard had denounced "inaccurate and slanderous allegations" and filed a complaint. She admitted to having worked, while she was an MEP, as a "special advisor" for a monthly remuneration of more than €10,000 from October 2013 to January 2016 with a think tank at the Berggruen Institute, founded by German-American billionaire Nicolas Berggruen.
In their order, consulted by AFP, the investigating judges emphasize that "the signing of this consultancy contract was authorized" by the European Parliament and "does not present any element of concealment or opacity, this agreement having on the contrary been made public and executed in a transparent and traceable manner." They emphasize that the "risk of conflict of interest" between Nicolas Berggruen's commercial activities and Sylvie Goulard's activity in Parliament "justified that the conclusions of the contract or the absence of work" by the latter be verified .
But, at the end of the investigation, "no objective evidence supports the initial suspicions of Nicolas Berggruen using this contract to influence Sylvie Goulard's parliamentary activity or to obtain confidential information", the judges stressed, according to whom the former MEP provided "real work" .
Sylvie Goulard, who briefly served as Emmanuel Macron's Minister of the Armed Forces in 2017, was Deputy Governor of the Banque de France from 2018 to December 2020.
The World with AFP
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