

A sexual assault complaint filed last year against French actor Gérard Depardieu, related to alleged events dating back to 2007, was dismissed on Monday, January 22, with prosecutors saying it exceeded the statute of limitations.
Depardieu, 75, has been charged with rape in another case and has been accused of sexual harassment and assault by more than a dozen women – allegations he denies.
The criminal complaint from actress Hélène Darras, who said Depardieu groped and propositioned her during a 2007 film shoot, was dropped late last month, the Paris prosecutors' office told news agency AFP. Neither Darras nor Depardieu's lawyers were immediately available for comment.
Darras had already spoken to investigators in 2022, and news site Mediapart, before filing her complaint in September, she told AFP last month. "It took me a year to go from talking about what happened to the criminal complaint," she said at the time. "Walking through the door of a police station, telling an officer someone touched your intimate parts, it's not easy, you need time to think about it."
But she had "wanted to respond to the defence that plays down our allegations by saying they're 'just' witness accounts," Darras said. In an interview with broadcaster France 2, she accused Depardieu of touching her hips and buttocks and inviting her into his dressing room, continuing to do so even after she refused.
Depardieu was charged with rape and sexual assault in 2020 after another actress, Charlotte Arnould, filed her own complaint over allegations dating to 2018. Arnould's lawyer has also asked Paris prosecutors to investigate a recording of Depardieu making derogatory comments about women during a filming trip to North Korea, which was later passed to France 2.
In a separate case, Spanish journalist and author Ruth Baza said that she had filed a criminal complaint in Spain against Depardieu last month, claiming he raped her nearly three decades ago in Paris. This complaint has little hope of leading to charges due to the statute of limitations in France, but Baza said she decided to go ahead anyway in the hope that it would "help other people" to do the same.
Repeated allegations of sexual violence against Depardieu have become a culture-war frontline in France, dividing the world of cinema and pitting feminist groups against those who would defend the actor – including President Emmanuel Macron.
The president last month said Depardieu should enjoy the presumption of innocence, calling him an "immense actor" who "makes France proud" and saying he was now the victim of a "manhunt". Macron more recently allowed that he had not "said enough how important the words of women who are victims of this violence are".