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Macron’s Ex-Bodyguard Faces Fresh Charges In ‘Benallagate’ Scandal

  A former top security aide to French President Emmanuel Macron who caused a political storm after it emerged he had roughed up protesters at … Continue reading Macron’s Ex-Bodyguard Faces Fresh Charges In ‘Benallagate’ Scandal


In this file photo taken on September 19, 2018 former Elysee senior security officer Alexandre Benalla looks over prior to the start a Senate committee in Paris. The President former bodyguard has been indicted again by judges on November 29, 2018 for “interference in exercise of a public function” and “deliberate violence” as he alledgedly hit a demonstrator arrested in the Jardin des Plantes before a May Day rally in Paris, AFP reported on December 16, 2018. Bertrand GUAY / AFP
Alexandre Benalla

 

A former top security aide to French President Emmanuel Macron who caused a political storm after it emerged he had roughed up protesters at a May Day demonstration is facing further charges over the affair.

Ex-bodyguard Alexandre Benalla, 26, is already facing two criminal charges after videos emerged of him manhandling demonstrators on May 1 in Paris while wearing a police helmet and armband.

A source told AFP Sunday that he was charged on November 29 with two more offences over events earlier during the protest in which he allegedly participated “actively in the questioning” of a man.

Benalla is accused of “interference in the exercise of a public function” and “deliberate violence”, according to the source.

Revelations that top officials in Macron’s office knew about the incidents but did not report Benalla to prosecutors earlier prompted accusations of an attempted cover-up, which the government denied.

Instead, Benalla was given a two-week suspension days after the incident and removed from organising the president’s security during his trips.

He was not sacked or charged until the scandal broke in July amid reports he enjoyed perks unusual for someone of his rank.

Benalla later defended his actions during the protest, saying through his lawyer that he was “lending a hand”.

Questioned by three judges in court on November 29, he again defended his actions saying he “helped the police to question a violent delinquent who had just committed a serious offence against police”.

He was previously charged with assault, impersonating a police officer and illegally receiving police surveillance footage in a bid to claim his actions were justified.

Vincent Crase, an associate and security agent employed by Macron’s Republic on the Move (LREM) party who was also at the scene, has also been charged, as have three police officers.