Dominique Baudis

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Person.png Dominique Baudis  Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(journalist, politician, deep state operative)
Dominique Baudis devant le Parlement européen.jpg
Born14 April 1947
Died10 April 2014 (Age 66)
NationalityFrench
Alma materLycée Carnot, Sciences Po
ParentsPierre Baudis
InterestsFrance/VIPedophile
PartyUnion for a Popular Movement

Employment.png France/Defender of Rights

In office
22 June 2011 - 10 April 2014
Appointed byNicolas Sarkozy

Employment.png Mayor of Toulouse

In office
11 March 1983 - 24 January 2001

Dominique Baudis was the French Defender of Rights (ombudsman). Formerly a journalist, politician and Mayor of Toulouse, he had been a member of Liberal Democracy and later of the leading centre-right Union for a Popular Movement.

Baudis was implicated in a case related to serial killer Patrice Alègre, involving allegations of corruption and perversion by a ring of cops, judges and other high officials, sado-masochistic sex parties and murders in an elegant chateau and shocking revelations on prime-time television.


L'Express reported that a judicial inquiry in Toulouse, closed to the public, had been told that Mr Baudis, a former TV newsreader, was known as Nénette and had met the killer at a city hotel for sado-masochistic sessions. A former call girl, "Patricia", told magistrates that she had been "offered" to Mr Baudis by Alègre at a Toulouse flat where she underwent three hours of torture that left scars. L'Express says she described Mr Baudis as Alègre's lover.[1]

Biography

Early life

Dominique Baudis was born in Paris. He was educated at Sciences Po where he graduated in 1968. He is the son of former Mayor of Toulouse (1971-83) Pierre Baudis, an associate of Antoine Pinay of the deep state Le Cercle.

Career

A journalist, he was a foreign correspondent for TF1 in the Middle East from 1976 to 1977. He was news anchor on TF1 from 1977 to 1980 and from 1980 to 1982 on FR3.

A member of the CDS (a member of the centre-right UDF, he was elected to replace his father, Pierre Baudis as mayor of Toulouse in the 1983 French municipal elections. In 1984, he was elected to the European Parliament, in 1986 he became President of the Regional Council of the Midi-Pyrénées, also in 1986 he was elected to the French National Assembly representing Haute-Garonne's 1st constituency. He won re-election in 1988, 1993 and 1997.

He led the UDF-RPR list in the 1994 European election.

In 2001, Jacques Chirac appointed him President of the Conseil supérieur de l'audiovisuel (CSA), a post which he held until 2007, when Chirac appointed him President of the Arab World Institute.

In 2009, the UMP nominated him to lead the UMP list in the South-West for the 2009 European election. His list won 26.89% and he was elected to the European Parliament for a third time.[2]

In July 2009, he was elected Vice-President of the Commission of Foreign Affairs of the European Parliament and in November 2009 he was named rapporteur on the Association Agreement with Syria.

Baudis was nominated by the Prime Minister to the new office of Defender of Rights, essentially an ombudsman role, and was appointed by the Council of State with effect from July 2011.

Serial killer Patrice Alègre

L'Express reported that a judicial inquiry in Toulouse, closed to the public, had been told that Mr Baudis, a former TV newsreader, was known as Nénette and had met the killer at a city hotel for sado-masochistic sessions. A former call girl, "Patricia", told magistrates that she had been "offered" to Mr Baudis by Alègre at a Toulouse flat where she underwent three hours of torture that left scars. L'Express says she described Mr Baudis as Alègre's lover.

In 2003, while he was president of the CSA, Dominique Baudis was implicated in a case related to serial killer Patrice Alègre. On May 18, 2003, he publicly revealed this affair to Claire Chazal's newspaper on TF1: then accused of pimping, rape, murder and acts of barbarism, he appeared on the set very tense, his face beaded with sweat. Claiming to be "determined to face slander face to face", this clumsy defense reinforces the rumors of his involvement, relayed by the media21,22.

News24 reported on the case[3]:

The affair began, of all days, on April 1, 2003, when the national daily Le Figaro and a regional newspaper published reports that a former Toulouse prostitute had told police investigators that the serial killer Patrice Alegre had received police protection during his crime spree.

One of France's bloodiest killers, Alegre was sentenced to life imprisonment in February 2002 for murdering five women and raping a sixth between 1990 and 1997.

The former prostitute, given the pseudonym of Patricia, had been interrogated by a special police unit, code-named Homicide 31. The unit was established in June 2000 to look into 191 unsolved murders, disappearances and suspicious suicides in the Toulouse region during the time Alegre was active there.

What had astonished police during their investigation of Alegre was that several of the murders of which he was convicted were classified by police as suicides, including one in which the investigator gave as his reason: "A murderer would not leave so many clues."

According to Patricia, at least two highly placed police officials and several judges protected Alegre, who was not only a psychopathic killer, but also the enforcer for a local network of pimps and racketeers with police connections.

In addition, he also organized sadomasochistic parties at a castle owned by the city of Toulouse involving under-age girls and attended by senior officials and judges.

Patricia said that in 1992 she and another prostitute had seen Alegre kill a prostitute in a downtown Toulouse hotel to prevent her from going to the police.

She further alleged that, the same year, Alegre also murdered a transvestite named Claude Martinez to take the videos the latter had made of the perverse parties.

Patricia's testimony was substantiated by another former Toulouse streetwalker.

Shortly thereafter, former Toulouse Mayor Dominique Baudis went on national television to say that the two ex-prostitutes had told investigators that he had attended these parties while he ran city hall.

More incredible, the magazine L'Express revealed, Patricia claimed that Baudis and Alegre had been lovers, and that their trysts took place in the same Toulouse hotel in which the convicted serial killer had killed the prostitute.

What makes Baudis's involvement particularly tantalising is that he is currently head of the French government's powerful media watchdog office, the Superior Audiovisual Council (CSA).

He claimed that he was the victim of an "outrageous frame-up" and suggested that pornographers he had been pursuing in his position as head of the CSA were behind it.

"I have never had any kind of connection, close or distant, with Patrice Alegre, the prostitution milieu or the organisers of those barbaric parties," a visibly upset and heavily perspiring Baudis told the national television audience in mid-May.

Just as a disbelieving French public was digesting this latest twist in the story, Toulouse's highest-ranking magistrate revealed that he too had been implicated in the affair. He was immediately replaced.

At this point another Toulouse transvestite, who calls himself Djamel, confirmed everything and even promised to take police to where the videos of the parties had been stashed.

He also told police that he was the secret son of Michael Jackson and that British Prime Minister Tony Blai had also participated at the sadomasochistic parties.

Djamel was soon arrested for perjury, but the affair continued to take centre stage in the French media - for Alegre, long wrapped in a sphinx-like silence, finally spoke out.

At the beginning of June he wrote a letter to the high-profile presenter of a news programme on the Canal Plus cable television station.

The presenter, Karl Zero, read the letter on air before turning it over to police. In the letter, Alegre said that the testimony of the two former prostitutes was true and declared that he had been ordered to kill Martinez by "two personalities" afraid that the videos would be handed over to police.

One of those "personalities", French media reported, was Dominique Baudis.

Alegre said that he was breaking his public silence because "numerous personalities, supposedly pure as lambs, have expressed themselves at length to claim their innocence. Therefore I also demand my media stage".

Despite its many turns, the scandal seems only just to have begun. With more revelations likely, it threatens not only to destroy the reputation of the entire legal and political system of a major French city, but also to throw its insidious shadow into every corner of France's public life.

Djamel died in September 2009, in a psychiatric hospital in Toulouse, "presumed after a massive absorption of drugs"[4].


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References


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