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Berlusconi Sentenced to 7 Years in Sex Case


(from New York Times)

ROME — A court in Milan on Monday found former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi guilty of paying for sex with a minor and abusing his office to cover it up, handing him a seven-year jail sentence and banning him from public office for life.
Guido Montani/European Pressphoto Agency
The ruling, like most things involving Mr. Berlusconi, polarized Italy. It shook the governing coalition in which Mr. Berlusconi’s center-right party is participating, but was not expected to topple it. The former prime minister, who denies wrongdoing, does not immediately have to leave office while the case faces two rounds of appeals.
The trial, involving an under-age woman named Karima El-Mahroug, nicknamed “Ruby Heart-Stealer,” had become the most personal, and tawdry, of Mr. Berlusconi’s many legal sagas. The three presiding judges, all women, handed Mr. Berlusconi a seven-year sentence, tougher than the six years that prosecutors had requested.
Demonstrators, both pro and anti-Berlusconi, gathered outside the Milan courthouse for the ruling, and the courtroom was packed with journalists from around the world.
Mr. Berlusconi, 76, who is widely seen as remaining in politics in order to keep his parliamentary immunity and to protect his business interests — has vehemently denied all the charges, accusing prosecutors of being on a left-wing witch hunt against him. His critics wonder how it is possible that he can remain in office in light of his legal woes.
The ruling inevitably puts strains on the nearly two-month-old government of Prime Minister Enrico Letta, a coalition that unites the prime minister’s center-left Democratic Party with Mr. Berlusconi’s People of Liberty party for the first time.
In the coalition, Mr. Berlusconi has been fighting to abolish an unpopular property-tax increase imposed by former Prime Minister Mario Monti, and wants to delay raising Italy’s value-added tax, measures Italy had committed to in order to bring its budget deficit below 3 percent of gross domestic product.
But Mr. Letta’s tenure has largely been overshadowed by Mr. Berlusconi’s legal troubles.
Both Mr. Berlusconi and Ms. Mahroug say they did not have sex, although Ms. Mahroug said the prime minister gave her 7,000 euros, or about $9,100, the first time she visited his villa for a party in 2010. The judges found Mr. Berlusconi guilty of paying Ms. Mahroug for sex before she turned 18 and abusing his office in calling the police to intervene when she was detained in May 2010 for theft.
Mr. Berlusconi had said he called the police in order to avoid a diplomatic incident because he had been told that Ms. Mahroug was the niece of Hosni Mubarak, then the president of Egypt.
In the trial, which began more than two years ago, Milan prosecutors painted a picture in which young women attended parties at Mr. Berlusconi’s private residence near Milan in exchange for money and gifts.
They said the evenings were orchestrated by a former news anchor on one of Mr. Berlusconi’s television networks, a show business agent and a former dental hygienist-turned regional politician. All three face trial separately and deny wrongdoing.
In a testimony in the separate trial for the three aides, Ms. El-Mahroug said that she received up to 3,000 euros in cash for the half-dozen evenings that she attended what have become famously known in Italy as “bunga bunga” parties at Mr. Berlusconi’s house. Other women testified that they lived in apartments owned by Mr. Berlusconi in Milan at the time of the parties, and some said they still receive money from him.
During the trial, a Brazilian model and showgirl said she had worn a mask depicting President Obama to one party at the former prime minister’s house, while another dressed up like one of the prosecutors overseeing the Ruby trial itself.
Ms. El-Mahroug testified last month that the in-house disco in Mr. Berlusconi’s villa had a pole for erotic dancing where a former regional politician dressed up like a nun and performed a strip tease.
While the “Ruby Trial” has become a media spectacle, Mr. Berlusconi’s political career — and with it the stability of the Letta government — hinge on a separate trial in which Mr. Berlusconi has been convicted of tax fraud by two lower courts in a case involving his Mediaset television empire.
The final ruling by Italy’s highest court is expected later this year. If it upholds the lower court rulings, Mr. Berlusconi could be banned from holding public office for five years, with parliamentary approval. But under Italian custom, the former prime minister would most likely not go to prison because of his age.
According to Italian news media reports, Mr. Berlusconi wants President Giorgio Napolitano to appoint him a senator for life so he can keep his immunity.
Gaia Pianigiani contributed reporting.