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Former mayor of French town found dead in suspected suicide as wedding scam trial begins

In this photo dated Oct. 2008, Tours mayor, Jean Germain, center, wearing a sash in the colors of the French flag, poses with a group of recently married Chinese couples in front of the city hall in Tours, France. AP Photo/Patrice Deschamps, la Nouvelle Republique

PARIS – A former mayor of Tours was found dead Tuesday in a suspected suicide, right as he was to go on trial over suspected kickbacks involving Chinese group weddings in the picturesque French city in the Loire Valley.

Minutes into the trial, a lawyer for former mayor Jean Germain announced that a colleague had found a suicide note, and his body was found later in town, attendees said. The court abruptly adjourned the case until October.

The apparent suicide quickly reverberated through France’s political class, and appeared likely to cast a pall over a fairytale tradition among some Chinese couples who chose Tours as a romantic getaway spot for tying the knot.

A half-dozen people are on trial over alleged kickbacks linked to (euro)750,000 ($815,000) that the city spent from 2008 to 2011 to lure Asian visitors, officials said. The city splashed out tens of thousands of euros to set up a stand at the Shanghai World Expo in 2010 and send a delegation of dozens of representatives, one defence lawyer said.

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Germain was a mayor for nearly two decades until 2014 and most recently a Socialist senator. He presided over some of the weddings while he was a mayor and was facing charges including misuse of public funds and embezzlement, said Gerard Chautemps, a lawyer for defendant Lise Han, a former City Hall staffer who worked on drumming up business with Asia.

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“We knew he was likely to come at the last minute, to not have to face the cameras,” said Chautemps by phone. Then Germain’s defence lawyer, Dominique Tricaud, announced that a suicide note to his family had been found.

The city’s effort to lure Chinese visitors ended after the case came to light.

Court documents show that Han told investigators that she had had an amorous relationship with Germain. Gerard Cebron de Lisle, a lawyer who is representing the city in its effort to recoup some of (euro)500,000 in estimated losses as part of the scam, said Germain never admitted to it. Cebron de Lisle also said Germain was never accused of enriching himself, but appeared to be motivated by making good on the project to lure Chinese visitors. Those suspected of benefiting financially from the scam included Han and her associates, he added.

The apparent suicide had echoes of the death of former Socialist Prime Minister Pierre Beregovoy, who shot himself with his bodyguard’s gun in a forest near his home in 1993. Political colleagues said Beregovoy was depressed by a landslide Socialist electoral loss that year, and the disclosure that he had received an interest-free loan from a businessman later jailed on corruption charges.

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Speaking to The Associated Press by phone, defence lawyer Tricaud called his client “a martyr of the republic who was thrown to the dogs” – an allusion to a similar quotation used by former President Francois Mitterrand at Beregovoy’s eulogy.

On Tuesday, French news reports showed white-suited forensic teams in Tours, and broadcast archive images of Germain giving the traditional French “bise” cheek-kiss to one bride in an ornate ballroom filled with dozens of Asian couples. A photo on the China News’ Web site showed Germain in his red-white-and-blue mayor’s sash posing with dozens of kissing couples.

State prosecutor Jean-Luc Beck, in comments broadcast on BFM-TV news channel, said there was little doubt Germain killed himself, noting that a colleague of Germain’s had found the note that indicated that he could not stand the thought of facing trial over the case.

The French Senate held a moment of silence in Germain’s honour, and President Francois Hollande expressed his sadness, saying Germain had taken his own life “because he didn’t want his honour sullied.” Prime Minister Manual Valls told i-Tele television that he believed Germain would have had “the strength” to face the trial, adding: “I lost a friend.”

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