Home Europe French Judge Who Disqualified Le Pen Gets Police Protection After Threats

French Judge Who Disqualified Le Pen Gets Police Protection After Threats

Benedicte de Perthuis, the head of a three-judge panel that found Le Pen guilty, received threats on social media, with her photo plastered all over X and far-right sites.
Le Pen
French far-right leader and member of parliament Marine Le Pen, President of the French far-right National Rally (Rassemblement National - RN) party parliamentary group, attends the questions to the government session at the National Assembly in Paris, France, April 1, 2025. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes/File Photo

The judge who ruled to exclude far-right leader Marine Le Pen from France’s 2027 presidential race is now under police protection following death threats and sharing her home address online, according to a source familiar with the matter.

The home address of Benedicte de Perthuis – the head of a three-judge panel that found Le Pen guilty of embezzling EU funds and handed her a five-year ban on seeking public office – was shared online after she delivered her ruling on Monday, the source said.

She is now receiving police protection at work and at home.

De Perthuis also received threats on social media, with her photo plastered all over X and far-right sites.

Paris police confirmed an investigation was underway into the threats, referring further queries to the Paris prosecutor’s office, which did not respond.

The threats against de Perthuis and other judicial officials involved in Le Pen’s trial have prompted soul-searching in France about a current of populist discontent that is undermining faith in the country’s justice system.

Nearly 90% of Le Pen’s National Rally (RN) supporters believe the court treated her more harshly than other politicians, while over half of French people believe she got a fair trial, according to an Odoxa opinion poll published on Monday.

Le Pen Vows Legal Fight

Before Monday’s ruling Le Pen was the front-runner for the 2027 vote. She and her allies at home and abroad have accused the French establishment of sabotaging her presidential ambitions, saying judges have caused a crisis for democracy by meddling in politics.


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Le Pen has denied stoking a backlash against the judiciary, and has condemned the threats against de Perthuis. She has pledged to use legal means to overturn her sentence, by appealing against the ruling.

Christophe Soulard, the head of the Court of Cassation, France’s highest judicial court, said in an interview with Le Monde published on Wednesday that the threats showed France’s democracy has been weakened and was facing a “worrying moment.”

“Attacking the judicial system is not only an attack on judges, but also on the foundations of our democracy,” he said. “Judges today are being attacked personally, particularly on social media, which is a new phenomenon.”

The Le Pen ruling and the threats against de Perthuis have echoed frictions seen in other countries over how judges adjudicate thorny political questions.

After President Donald Trump called for a judge to be impeached, U.S. Chief Justice John Roberts issued a rare public statement last month saying appeals, not impeachment, were the correct response to disagreement with judicial rulings.

Political support for de Perthuis and her colleagues has poured in, including from Justice Minister Gerald Darmanin, who condemned the threats, and the High Council for the Judiciary.

Mathilde Panot, who heads a hard-left party in the National Assembly called it unacceptable that a judge should need police protection and blamed what she called the “methods of the far-right”.

(With inputs fro0m Reuters)