Richard Malka

Last updated

Richard Malka
Richard-Malka-portrait.jpg
Born (1968-06-06) 6 June 1968 (age 56)
Paris, France
NationalityFrench
Occupation(s)Lawyer, comics writer, novelist

Richard Malka (born 6 June 1968) is a French lawyer, comics writer and novelist. As lawyer Malka in 2007 successfully defended Charlie Hebdo editor Philippe Val against charges of racism following the magazine's publication of Mohammad caricatures. Other clients include Clearstream, Dominique Strauss-Kahn and Caroline Fourest.

Contents

Early life and education

Malka was born in the 11th arrondissement of Paris to Jewish parents from Morocco. His father was a tailor, his mother a housewife and he has two brothers. He obtained the baccalauréat in 1986 and became a lawyer in 1992 after first having studied science and business. [1] [2]

Career as lawyer

As lawyer he started to work for Georges Kiejman [2] and started his own law firm in 1999. [3] [4]

Social debates

He often featured in emblematic trials and current social debates: the fight for the right to blasphemy, the defense of Charlie Hebdo in the trial regarding the caricatures of Muhammad, the defense of the Center of Contemporary Art's Director in the trial regarding the diffusion of pornographic images of minors in the course of the Présumés innocents exhibit, [5] the defense of the motion picture on the terrorist Carlos made by Daniel Leconte and Olivier Assayas.

For the National Organization of Publishers, he published a book entitled La gratuité, c’est le vol – 2015 : la fin du droit d’auteur ? and gave away 50 000 copies. The book was published with the support of the National Organization of Publishers, in the course of a battlet against a reform project of author's rights brought by the European Union. [6]

Political cases

Malka worked as an attorney for the nutritionist Jean-Michel Cohen in his lawsuit against Dr Pierre Dukan. He also worked for Marek Halter, for whom he obtained the conviction of former French Minister of Justice Rachida Dati for defamatory statements. [7]

In 2010 Malka defended his prior boss Kiejman in a defamation suit brought by Olivier Metzner and Françoise Bettencourt Meyers. Kiejman, who advocate for Liliane Bettencourt in the Bettencourt affair had accused Metzner, who was advocate for Françoise Bettencourt-Meyers; of being the brain behind a plot against Liliane Bettencourt. In 2011 the court found Kiejman's words were defamatory, but that they were stated in good faith and Kiejman was acquitted of wrongdoing. [8]

Malka worked as an advocate for Clearstream in the Clearstream affair where Clearstream sued investigating journalist Denis Robert for libel. Robert was eventually cleared of all charges. [1] [9]

In 2015 he supported former French Prime Minister Manuel Valls in his trial against the humorist Dieudonné. Malka said Dieudonné belonged "in an asylum" and this statement brought him a conviction for public abuse in July 2016. He appealed his sentence and was acquitted by the Court of Appeal of Paris on 6 July 2017. [10]

Religious cases

Malka was advocate for the day care center Baby-Loup who fired a woman because she wore hijab in 2008, alleging that the hijab violated the center's secular nature. The Court of Cassation in 2014 ruled that the center was within its right to fire the employee. [11]

Public figures and intellectuals

In 2011, Malka was hired by Dominique Strauss-Kahn and Anne Sinclair to take various legal actions against various media regarding the Carlton affair and related issues. [4] [12] In 2015 Strauss-Kahn was acquitted.

In 2014 Malka defended Carla Bruni in her trial against Patrick Buisson, former counselor of President Nicolas Sarkozy, regarding illegal recordings. [13]

In 2015 Malka featured in the trial of businessman Beny Steinmetz against the French newspaper Le Canard Enchaîné. [14] In 2016 he worked as a lawyer for the French essayist Pascal Bruckner, who has been sued twice for defamatory statements on two associations: Les Indigènes de la République and Les Indivisibles. Bruckner was acquitted. [15]

In 2016 Malka worked as Martin d’Orgeval's lawyer, partner of François-Marie Banier. Both of them were sued for weakness abuse in the Bettencourt affair. On 24 May in the appeal trial he stood out in court with his argument. He obtained a prison and financial redemption dismissal for his client. [16] [17]

In 2017 he featured in the Paris criminal court alongside fellow lawyer Eric Dupond-Moretti in order to defend Amina Friloux, accused of poisoning her husband. Friloux was acquitted. [18]

Media

Malka first met with Charlie Hebdo as an advocate in 1994 at a time the magazine was often attacked by Alliance générale contre le racisme et pour le respect de l'identité française et chrétienne (AGRIF) for anti-clericalism and by Front National. [2] He remained close to the people at the magazine. In 2007, Malka and Kiejman defended Charlie Hebdo's editor Philippe Val in a suit for incitement to racism [19] by Union of Islamic Organisations of France and the Grand Mosque of Paris following the magazine's publication of Muhammad caricatures. Val was acquitted. [20] [21] Malka also assisted Charlie Hebdo before and after the Charlie Hebdo shootings. [22] In 2015, Malka tried to prevent the publication of Charpie Hebdo, a journal mocking Charlie Hebdo. [23]

He also worked as a lawyer for radio groups such as NRJ and Beur FM, for publishers Association and Cherche midi, for newspaper Metro and Entrevue and for several journalists as well as large French news agency such as Tony Comiti Productions and Tac-Presse.

He featured in the movie C’est dur d’être aimé par des cons (Official choice Cannes 2008), relating the trials of Charlie Hebdo regarding their caricatures. [24]

In 2012, Malka and Keijman defended Caroline Fourest and Fiammetta Venner, who had co-authored the biography Marine Le Pen, in a defamation lawsuit filed by Marine Le Pen, her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen and Front National. The authors were acquitted on most accounts by a Paris court, but a couple of sentences were deemed to be defamatory and the authors fined for those. [25]

Recognition

In 2010 GQ Magazine ranked him among the 30 most influential people in the media in France. In its October 2012 edition GQ gave him the fifteenth position in its ranking of "the most powerful lawyers in France". In 2013 GQ ranked him at the same position. [26] In 2014 he was ranked as well as in 2015. [27] In 2016 he was ranked ninth most powerful French lawyer. [28]

Career as (cartoon writer) an author

Having gravitated close to the comics world for years (through his work with Charlie Hebdo and Association), he started writing cartoon scenarios in 2004.[ citation needed ]

In 2004, Malka published the first issue of the comics L'Ordre de Cicéron, illustrated by Paul Gillon. Later three other issues have been published. The series follow a family involved in finance and law in the US and France from the 1930s to contemporary times. [29]

He also launched another series of comics entitled Section financière along with Andrea Mutti. In 2006 he co-authored the book entitled La Face kärchée de Sarkozy with journalist Philippe Cohen and cartoonist Riss. The book sold 200 000 copies. [30]

In 2011 he took over the scenario of Les Pieds Nickelés with Ptiluc and Luz, and published a science fiction series with Juan Giménez. In 2011 he co-authored La face crashée de Marine Le Pen with Riss and Saïd Mahrane. [31] He published more than twenty comics. Cumulated sales of his work total more than hundreds of thousands copies. [32]

In 2014, he published La vie de palais : il était une fois les avocats..., illustrated by Catherine Meurisse which tells the story of a young female advocate named Jessica Chaillette, "exploited by her boss, underpaid, waiting for her clients’ gratitude". [33] Ondine Millot wrote in a review in Libération that the cartoon was pretty, malignant and funny while at the same time giving information on how the law system works. [34] [35]

Novelist

In January 2018 Malka published his first novel entitled Tyrannie. The heart of the novel is the "criminal lawsuit of 25 days" of a political refugee named Oscar Rimah, charged for premeditated murder of the Secretary of the Ambassador of his origin country, where an Aztride dictator has seized power. [36] Raphaël Constant, a renowned French lawyer has to defend Rimah. During this "political trial", he explores the duality of having to defend the symbolic value of Rimah's act, an act that was carried out in order to denounce the Aztride dictatorship. [37]

Malka claims that he wants to explore the "behind the scene of a criminal lawsuit" and "think about the dangers of our time", based upon what his experience as a lawyer inspired him. The novel ponders "the danger of totalitarianism for individual freedom". [36] Tyrannie also depicts a totalitarian dystopia that had manage to impose itself in our contemporary world, seducing people through an ideology at the crossroads of politics, philosophy and religion. For Malka, the key to totalitarianism is the human fascination for it, allowing people adhesion to these authorial regimes. [38]

Malka said he was inspired by 1984 written by George Orwell, a "founder" and "structuring" novel. Critics noted this inspiration, stating that Malka's style was "half judiciary half-Orwellian". [39]

Publications

Political-humoristic cartoons :

Investigation on Nicolas Sarkozy before him accessing French Presidency during the French Presidential Election of 2007; followed by, after his election :

Essay :

Novels :

Related Research Articles

Charlie Hebdo is a French satirical weekly magazine, featuring cartoons, reports, polemics, and jokes. The publication has been described as anti-racist, sceptical, secular, libertarian and within the tradition of left-wing radicalism, publishing articles about the far-right, religion, politics and culture.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Denis Robert</span> French journalist, novelist and filmmaker

Denis Robert is a French investigative journalist, novelist and filmmaker. He formerly worked for twelve years for the newspaper Libération. Robert's books, films and press interviews, denouncing the opaque workings of the Clearstream clearing house, earned him into more than 60 lawsuits in France, Belgium and Luxembourg by banks, such as Bank Menatep and BGL, as well as the Clearstream company. In 2008, he was involved in a polemic with Philippe Val and journalist Edwy Plenel in relation to the Clearstream affair.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Philippe Val</span> French journalist, singer, and comedian (born 1952)

Philippe Val is a French journalist, singer, and comedian. He was a co-founder of the second iteration of Charlie Hebdo in 1992, serving as the satirical political weekly's editor and director. After leaving Charlie Hebdo in 2009, Val was director of the public radio channel France Inter until 2014.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Maurice Garçon</span>

Maurice Garçon was a French novelist, historian, essayist and lawyer. A major figure at the bar, he gained a certain notoriety and was even mentioned with René Floriot in the last phrase of Jean-Pierre Melville's film "Bob le flambeur".

Gérard Boulanger was a French lawyer and human rights activist. He was close to the Left Front.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jeannette Bougrab</span> French lawyer and politician

Jeannette Bougrab is a French lawyer and politician of the UMP who served as the junior minister for Youth and Community Life in the government of Prime Minister François Fillon from 2010 to 2012. Prior to this, she was the Chair of the French Equal Opportunities and Anti-Discrimination Commission (HALDE) from 16 April 2010 to 14 November 2010.

Patrick Maisonneuve is a French lawyer of criminal law. He began his legal practice in 1979, and is known for taking on widely reviled high-profile clients that other lawyers have shunned. In 2013 and 2014 GQ ranked him the sixth most powerful lawyer of France.

The following lists events that happened in 2015 in France.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Charb</span> French satirist and journalist

Stéphane Jean-Abel Michel Charbonnier, better known as Charb, was a French satirical caricaturist and journalist. He was assassinated during the Charlie Hebdo shooting on 7 January 2015.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tignous</span> French cartoonist

Bernard Jean-Charles Verlhac, known by the pseudonym Tignous, was a French cartoonist. He was a long-time staff cartoonist for the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Riss (cartoonist)</span> French cartoonist and author

Laurent "Riss" Sourisseau is a French cartoonist, author and publisher. Since 1992, he has worked for the French satirical weekly newspaper Charlie Hebdo and is now its majority owner.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Éric Dupond-Moretti</span> French-Italian politician and lawyer

Éric Dupond-Moretti is a French-Italian lawyer and politician who was appointed Minister of Justice in 2020 by President Emmanuel Macron. As a criminal defence lawyer, he is renowned for his number of acquittals which earned him the nickname "Acquitator", some of the controversial figures he defended, as well as his outspoken personality.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Juan Branco</span> French-Spanish lawyer, writer and political activist

Juan Branco is a French and Spanish lawyer, political activist, and writer.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Francis Szpiner</span> French politician and lawyer

Francis Szpiner is a French lawyer, writer and politician of The Republicans who serves as the mayor of the 16th arrondissement of Paris between 2020 and 2023. He was elected Senator of Paris in September 2023. He was an attorney for several prominent French politicians.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Thierry Herzog</span> French lawyer

Thierry Herzog is a French lawyer. He is the former lawyer of Nicolas Sarkozy, who was the President of France from 2007 to 2012.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Chems-Eddine Hafiz</span> Franco-Algerian lawyer

Chems-eddine Mohamed Hafiz, born 28 June 1954 in Algiers, is a Franco-Algerian lawyer, rector of the Grand Mosque of Paris since 11 January 2020.

Thierry Lévy was a high-profile French criminal defence lawyer who spent his career in a state of permanent opposition to the French legal establishment. Admitted to the Paris bar in 1969, he went on to appear in a succession of well publicised criminal trials during the ensuing three and a half decades. His father had been a journalist and press proprietor who was not infrequently supportive of nationalist and other right-wing movements. Thierry Lévy's own assessments of the French criminal justice system, which he shared frequently through the print media and, especially during his later years, in television debates, placed him firmly at the liberal-left end of the political spectrum, however. He was a prominent and eloquent backer of the campaign that led to the abolition of the death penalty by Justice Minister Robert Badinter under President Mitterrand in 1981.

Pierre Haïk was a French lawyer. He defended high-profile politicians, such as Nicolas Sarkozy, Serge Dassault and Charles Pasqua.

Jean-Pierre Versini-Campinchi was a French lawyer and a member of the Paris Bar Association.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Henri Leclerc (lawyer)</span> French criminal defense lawyer (1934–2024)

Henri Leclerc was a French criminal defense lawyer.

References

  1. 1 2 Luc Le Vaillant (15 October 2015) Richard Malka, fais ce qu’il te plaide (in French) Libération
  2. 1 2 3 Didier Pasamonik (20 June 2008 ( La face kärchée de Richard Malka. (Archive)
  3. Richard Malka (in French) grand-advocats.com as archived on 16 January 2015
  4. 1 2 Anna Cabana (15 December 2011) Malka, l'avocat rock'n'roll de DSK (in French)Le Point
  5. Art-Justice : pas de procès pour « Présumés innocents », Sud Ouest, 3 mars 2011
  6. « La gratuité, c’est le vol » : la campagne en faveur du droit d’auteur, le Monde, Septembre 10, 2015
  7. Rachida Dati citée à comparaître pour diffamation : compte-rendu d'audience, Paris Tribune
  8. L'avocat de Liliane Bettencourt perd son procès en diffamation contre l'avocat de sa fille, 20 Minutes, 20 October 2010
  9. Augustin Scalbert (8 February 2011) Denis Robert bat Clearstream : la fin d'une « vraie censure » (in French) Nouvel Observateur / Rue69
  10. "Dieudonné à sa place dans un asile": l'avocat Richard Malka relaxé en appel, BFM TV, 6 July 2017
  11. French court backs firing of childcare worker for wearing Islamic headscarf Radio France Internationale 26 June 2014
  12. Rumeurs de séparation : DSK et Sinclair poursuivent Closer (in French)Le Parisien, 28 June 2012
  13. Patrick Buisson condamné pour ses enregistrements de Sarkozy, Reuters, 14 March 2014
  14. In Libel Battle With ‘Chained Duck,’ Steinmetz Touts Spy Agency Denial, 100r, 23 January 2014
  15. Procès Bruckner : une défaite pour les «collabos» de l'islamisme, le Figaro, 19 January 2017
  16. Bettencourt : la défense plaide « la liberté de donner » d’une « guerrière emmurée », le Monde, 25 May 2016
  17. Affaire Bettencourt : François-Marie Banier échappe à la prison, le Figaro, 25 August 2016
  18. Accusée d'être «l'euthanasiste» de son riche et vieux mari, sa femme ressort acquittée, Libération, 11 June 2017
  19. Victoria Ward (7 January 2015) Charlie Hebdo cartoonist murdered in Paris terrorist attack was on al-Qaeda wanted list The Telegraph
  20. Christophe Boltanski (23 March 2007) Procès Charlie: les caricatures de Mahomet relaxées (in French) Libération
  21. French cartoons editor acquitted BBC. 22 March 2007
  22. Isabelle Hanne (11 January 2015) Undeterred, Charlie Hebdo staff gather for first editorial meeting after fatal attack The Sydney Morning Herald
  23. L’avocat de “Charlie Hebdo” veut faire interdire le pastiche “Charpie Hebdo”, Les Inrocks, 18 February 2015.
  24. Débat entre les avocats Francis Szpiner et Richard Malka, l'Express, 11 September 2008
  25. Libération Caroline Fourest et Fiammetta Venner condamnées pour diffamation contre Marine Le Pen (in French) Yahoo.fr. Retrieved 16 October 2015
  26. Que doit-on penser du classement des avocats les plus puissants de France de GQ ?, Grands Avocats, 2013
  27. Qui sont les 30 avocats les plus puissants de France ?, GQ Magazine, 2 December 2015
  28. Les 30 avocats les plus puissants de France, GQ Magazine, 20 February 2017
  29. Noémie Sudre (August 2012) Trois questions à Richard Malka : Des bulles à la barre Le Magazine Littéraire.
  30. Richard Malka, le «poor lonesome» plaideur, le Figaro, 20 October 2016
  31. Dans "La face crashée de Marine Le Pen", une femme "sous influence" en bande dessinée, Marianne, 1 October 2016
  32. Glénat éditeur – Richard Malka, Glénat
  33. L'avocat ce héros... de bande dessinée !, Village Justice, 2 October 2015
  34. Ondine Millot (3 November 2014) Les dessous de la robe, par un avocat pénaliste et une dessinatrice de BD (in French) Libération
  35. L’avocat ce héros... de bande dessinée ! Village de la Justice. 5 November 2014
  36. 1 2 Richard Malka : "Méfiez-vous des gens qui vous vendent du bien", France Info, 1 January 2018
  37. Richard Malka, maître du thriller judiciaire, Thriller, 1 March 2018
  38. Personnalité de la semaine – Patricia Martin reçoit l'avocat à l'occasion de la sortie de son premier roman, "Tyrannie" aux éditions Grasset, France Inter, 21 January 2018
  39. « Tyrannie » : violences et passions judiciaires, Les Echos, 1 January 2018
  40. Romain Brethes, Candide chez les bonobos, Le Point , 4 décembre 2010