NEW YORK (AP) — Pressure built Tuesday for Dominique Strass-Kahn to consider resigning as chief of the International Monetary Fund after he was charged with trying to rape a maid at a New York hotel.
Mr. Strauss-Kahn spent the night at the infamous Rikers Island, a 400-acre penal complex close to LaGuardia Airport, after being denied bail Monday. Prosecutors warned that the wealthy banker might flee to France and put himself beyond the reach of U.S. law like the filmmaker Roman Polanski.
Mr. Strauss-Kahn’s weekend arrest rocked the financial world as the IMF grapples with the European debt crisis, and it has upended French presidential politics. Mr. Strauss-Kahn, a member of France’s Socialist Party, was widely considered the strongest potential challenger next year to President Nicolas Sarkozy.
Austria’s finance minister suggested Tuesday that Mr. Strauss-Kahn consider stepping down to avoid damaging the IMF, which provides emergency loans to countries in severe distress and tries to maintain global financial stability.
“Considering the situation, that bail was denied, he has to figure out for himself that he is hurting the institution,” Maria Fekter said as she arrived at a meeting of European finance ministers in Brussels.
Elena Salgado, Ms. Fekter’s Spanish counterpart, said Mr. Strauss-Kahn had to decide for himself whether he wanted to step down, considering the “extraordinarily serious” nature of the charges.
“If I had to show my solidarity and support for someone, it would be toward the woman who has been assaulted, if that is really the case that she has been,” she said.
In France, defenders of Mr. Strauss-Kahn, a former finance minister who had topped the polls as a possible candidate in presidential elections next year, said they suspected he was the victim of a smear campaign. Others expressed sympathy.
“I didn’t like the pictures I’ve seen on television,” Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker said Monday night, referring to footage that showed Mr. Strauss-Kahn in handcuffs being escorted by police outside a New York precinct house.
Showing a suspect in handcuffs is illegal in France since a 2000 law aimed at preserving the presumption of innocence.
The 62-year-old Mr. Strauss-Kahn was arrested Saturday at John F. Kennedy International Airport after the allegations at the Sofitel hotel near Times Square.
Making his first court appearance Monday, a grim-looking Mr. Strauss-Kahn stood slumped before a judge in a dark raincoat and open-collared shirt. The silver-haired banker said nothing as a lawyer professed his innocence and strove in vain to get him released on bail.
“This battle has just begun,” defense lawyer Benjamin Brafman told scores of reporters outside the courthouse, adding that Mr. Strauss-Kahn might appeal the bail denial.
Because of his high profile, Mr. Strauss-Kahn will be held in protective custody on Rikers Island, away from most detainees, said city Correction Department spokesman Stephen Morello. Unlike most prisoners, who share 50-bed barracks, he will have a single-bed cell and will eat all of his meals alone there. He’ll have a prison guard escort when he is outside his cell.
Rikers is one of the nation’s largest jail complexes, with a daily inmate population of about 14,000.
The complex’s notable history includes accounts of run-ins between inmates and guards. In one such case last year, a guard was sentenced to six years in prison for ordering inmate beatings as part of a rogue disciplinary system. Prosecutors said he imposed order in a unit at the complex by having teenage inmates beat other teenagers who had stepped out of line. The union that represents jail guards said the prisoners fabricated the allegations.
Also last year, more than a dozen correction officers were injured while quelling fights between inmates awaiting pretrial hearings at a jail there. And in February, the city settled a wrongful death lawsuit brought by the family of an inmate who died after a scuffle with guards.
Mr. Strauss-Kahn was ordered jailed at least until a court proceeding Friday. He cannot claim diplomatic immunity because he was in New York on personal business and was paying his own way, the IMF said. He could seek that protection only if he were conducting official business, spokesman William Murray said.
The IMF’s executive board met informally Monday for a report on the charges against Mr. Strauss-Kahn, the managing director at the international lending agency since 2007.
The French newspaper Le Monde, citing people close to Mr. Strauss-Kahn, said he had reserved the suite at the Sofitel hotel for one night for a quick trip to have lunch with his daughter, who is studying in New York.
Mr. Strauss-Kahn is accused of attacking a maid who had gone in to clean his penthouse suite Saturday afternoon at a luxury hotel near Times Square. He is charged with attempted rape, sex abuse, a criminal sex act, unlawful imprisonment and forcible touching. The most serious charge carries five to 25 years in prison.
The 32-year-old maid told authorities that she thought the suite was empty but that Mr. Strauss-Kahn emerged from the bathroom naked, chased her down a hallway, pulled her into a bedroom and dragged her into a bathroom, police said.
He grabbed her breasts, tried to pull down her pantyhose, grabbed at her crotch and forced her to perform oral sex on him during the encounter at about noon, according to a court complaint. She ultimately broke free, escaped the room and told hotel staffers what had happened, authorities said. She was treated at a hospital for minor injuries.
“The victim provided a very powerful and detailed account of the violent sexual assault,” Assistant District Attorney John “Ardie” McConnell said. He added that forensic evidence may support her account. Mr. Strauss-Kahn voluntarily submitted to a forensic examination Sunday night.
Mr. Brafman said defense lawyers believe the forensic evidence “will not be consistent with a forcible encounter.” Defense lawyers wouldn’t elaborate, but Mr. Brafman said, “There are significant issues that were already found” that make it “quite likely that he will be ultimately be exonerated.”
Prosecutors asked the judge to hold Mr. Strauss-Kahn without bail, noting that he lives in France, is wealthy, has an international job and was arrested on a Paris-bound plane at Kennedy Airport. He left the hotel before police arrived, leaving his cellphone behind, and appeared hurried on surveillance recordings, authorities said.
At one point, Mr. Strauss-Kahn called the hotel “in a panic” about the phone, a law enforcement official said Monday.
Hotel security officers hadn’t found a phone, but they were instructed by NYPD investigators to set a trap by informing him they had it and asking where they could get it to him, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the investigation had not been completed.
Mr. Strauss-Kahn told them he was about to board a flight — unknowingly tipping off authorities to his whereabouts, the official said.
Prosecutors said they couldn’t force Mr. Strauss-Kahn’s return from France if he went there.
“He would be living openly and notoriously in France, just like Roman Polanski,” said Chief Assistant District Attorney Daniel Alonso, referring to the film director long sought by California authorities for sentencing in a 1977 child-sex case.
Defense lawyers suggested bail be set at $1 million and promised that the IMF managing director would remain in New York. His lawyers said Mr. Strauss-Kahn wasn’t trying to elude police Saturday: The IMF head rushed out of the hotel at about 12:30 p.m. to get to a lunch date with a family member, then caught a flight for which he long had had a ticket, they said.
Allegations of other, similar attacks by Mr. Strauss-Kahn began to emerge Monday. In France, a lawyer for a 31-year-old French novelist said she is likely to file a criminal complaint accusing him of sexually assaulting her nine years ago. A French lawmaker accused him of attacking other maids in previous stays at the same luxury hotel. And in New York, prosecutors said they are working to verify reports of at least one other case, which they suggested was overseas.
A French lawmaker from a rival political party also alleged, without offering evidence, that Mr. Strauss-Kahn had victimized several maids during past stays at the Sofitel near Times Square.
The hotel issued a statement calling conservative lawmaker Michel Debre’s claims “baseless and defamatory.” Sofitel management “has had no knowledge of any previous attempted aggressions,” the hotel said, adding that it had set up a hotline for workers to report incidents more than a year ago.
Mr. McConnell, the assistant district attorney, said in court Monday that New York authorities are working to verify at least one other case of “conduct similar to the conduct alleged.” When Criminal Court Judge Melissa C. Jackson asked whether the potential other incident occurred in the United States, Mr. McConnell said he “believed that was abroad.”
Mr. Strauss-Kahn’s lawyers said they had no immediate response to the allegations emerging from overseas.
Associated Press writers Jamey Keaten and Elaine Ganley in Paris, Christopher S. Rugaber in Washington and Tom Hays in New York contributed to this report.
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