How are Whistleblowers assassinated by the French Justice? (Part III)
On Panodyssey, you can read up to 10 publications per month without being logged in. Enjoy9 articles to discover this month.
To gain unlimited access, log in or create an account by clicking below. It's free!
Log in
How are Whistleblowers assassinated by the French Justice? (Part III)
Fire tests gold, suffering tests brave men.
Seneca
Five years after the Sapin II law was passed, what about ethics within justice?
Françoise Nicolas’s case is symbolic in terms of legal costs to be paid by the whistleblower. As a civil servant employed by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, she explained to me that since the summer of 2015 the consequences of her situation as a whistleblower have come in many different forms and led to numerous procedures. Since she suffered the physical attack, the former diplomat has spent over 50,000 euros in solicitor’s fees. However her case has come up against the ‘reasons of state’ even though no-one in her administration has disputed the existence of the fictitious expenses which she disclosed. She certifies that she has lost everything before the different courts, which each time held motives that left her helpless and incredulous. Here is what this civil servant wrote to me in
This is a Prime publication
To access, subscribe to the Creative Room Whistleblowers: The Manhunt (Hunters become the hunted) by Stephanie Gibaud
Membership benefits:
Full access to exclusive content and archives
Early access to new content
Comment on the author's publications and join the community of subscribers
Get a notification for each new publication
Subscribing is a way of supporting an author in the long run
Subscribe to the Creative Room