Gérard Depardieu faces verdict in sexual assault trial seen as #MeToo test
PARIS – French film legend Gérard Depardieu is set to receive a verdict on Tuesday in a closely watched sexual assault case. Two women say the 76-year-old actor groped them on the set of the 2022 film Les Volets Verts.
In France, the trial has been widely seen as more than a case against one man. Women’s rights advocates say it’s a test of how seriously the country takes sexual violence, and whether its long-delayed #MeToo reckoning is finally beginning.
“If there’s a guilty verdict, it will be a victory not just for the women in court, but for all others who were silenced by time,” Carine Durrieu-Diebolt, a lawyer representing one of the two plaintiffs, told NPR the day before the verdict.
Durrieu-Diebolt says more than 20 women have come forward with accusations against Depardieu — including groping, harassment, and rape — but only two cases fell within France’s statute of limitations to make it to court.
The case was originally expected to be heard in late 2024, but it was postponed multiple times, first due to scheduling issues, and then for medical reasons cited by the defense.
The trial finally opened in March 2025 and lasted four days.
During the proceedings, Depardieu testified that if he ever touched the women, it wasn’t with sexual intent. He admitted to using vulgar language on set, and said he now avoids female assistants in dressing rooms so as not to be misunderstood.
“I try not to be heard by the new world,” he told the court. “I think my time is done.”
In October 2023, Depardieu published an open letter in Le Figaro denying all allegations. “Never, ever have I abused a woman,” he wrote, calling the accusations a “lynching that has been reserved for me.”
Depardieu’s lawyer, Jérémie Assous, was accused of using aggressive tactics in his questioning of the plaintiffs during the trial, prompting nearly 200 French lawyers to sign an open letter condemning the defense strategy as sexist and intimidating.
Prosecutors have asked for an 18-month suspended prison sentence and a fine of up to €200,000 euros (roughly $221,000).
The actor has continued working throughout the legal proceedings and received public support from some high-profile figures, including French President Emmanuel Macron.
Speaking on national television in December 2023, Macron described himself as “a great admirer of Gérard Depardieu,” and warned against what he called a “witch hunt” when asked whether the actor should be stripped of his Legion of Honor, France’s highest award of merit.
The comments drew backlash, and Macron later clarified that he would be “uncompromising” in the fight against rape and what he called “a culture of brutality.”
A wider reckoning
For many women’s rights advocates, the Depardieu case is part of a much larger pattern.
In January, a French parliamentary report found that sexual violence and harassment remain “endemic” in the country’s film and TV industry.
It also noted a climate of “collective denial” and warned that France’s legal system may be failing victims.
Another high-profile rape investigation involving Depardieu, brought by actress Charlotte Arnould, remains open.
“It’s a test of the moral independence of the justice system,” said Elodie Tuaillon-Hibon, a lawyer and analyst focused on systemic responses to sexual violence.
“Depardieu has become a symbol of what we no longer want to see in France: this, ‘bawdiness,’ this so-called ‘gallantry,’ which, in reality, is harassment.”
You can trust the jobs report, Labor Department workers urge public
A strongly-worded statement from Bureau of Labor Statistics workers comes a month after President Trump attacked the integrity of the jobs numbers they release monthly.
Headed to the FBI, Missouri’s Andrew Bailey opposed abortion, backed Trump
Andrew Bailey rose quickly to be state attorney general of Missouri where he built a record for fighting abortion and defending Donald Trump. Now he's a co-deputy director of the FBI.
How Chicago, Baltimore and New Orleans are reacting to Trump’s National Guard threats
Even after a federal court ruled his use of the National Guard in LA was illegal, the president has weighed sending troops to Chicago, Baltimore and New Orleans. Here's where things stand in those cities.
Watching a neighbor’s cat turns lethal in ‘Caught Stealing’
Darren Aronofsky's film is a funny, bloody valentine to 1990s New York City. Though awfully engrossing, Caught Stealing's mix of rambunctious slapstick and bone-crunching violence doesn't always gel.
Hundreds of South Koreans are among 475 detained in a Georgia immigration raid
"The business activities of our investors and the rights of our nationals must not be unjustly infringed," a foreign ministry spokesman said after about 300 South Koreans were detained.
Four Democratic senators urge Smithsonian to resist White House attempts to ‘bully the institution’
Sen. Alex Padilla of California and three other Democrats are reminding the Smithsonian's secretary that the institution "is the responsibility of Congress."