6 cases from France
Convicted: Ghislaine Maxwell
Ghislaine Maxwell, once a high-profile British socialite, became globally notorious following her association and subsequent legal trial with financier Jeffrey Epstein. Her life transformed dramatically from attending elite social gatherings to facing charges in a New York trial for sex trafficking and child abuse. Maxwell's case captured international attention due to its depth of criminal activities intertwined with the lifestyles of the influential. Convicted in 2021, Maxwell was handed a 20-year prison sentence, underscoring her pivotal role in facilitating Epstein's network of sexual exploitation. This outcome not only secured a measure of justice for the victims but also highlighted the severe implications of power misuse in elite circles. Currently, Maxwell remains incarcerated, her previous affluent lifestyle starkly contrasted by her life behind bars, continually making headlines and prompting discussions about accountability and the social elite.
Convicted: Anna Vadimovna Sorokin
When Rachel DeLoache Williams returned from a luxury week at the Surf Club in Marrakech in the spring of 2017, she was $62,000 poorer. Her friend had promised the wire transfer was coming. It never came. The friend was Anna Sorokin, the 26-year-old daughter of a Russian truck driver who had spent four years convincing Manhattan's elite that she controlled a 60-million-euro European trust fund. Operating under the alias Anna Delvey, she defrauded banks, luxury hotels, and private individuals of approximately $275,000, forged financial documents, bounced checks, and nearly secured a $22 million bank loan using fabricated paperwork. When she was arrested, tried, and convicted in 2019, she hired a courtroom stylist and showed up in Saint Laurent and Victoria Beckham, making international headlines for her courtroom looks as much as her crimes. Netflix paid $320,000 for her story. The state took most of it under the Son of Sam law. She was released from prison, immediately detained by ICE, held for nineteen months, then released to house arrest in a 470-square-foot East Village apartment. She started selling art and made $340,000. She appeared on Dancing With the Stars wearing a bedazzled ankle monitor. Her deportation case remains unresolved. Anna Delvey, it turns out, is very hard to get rid of.
Alleged Offender: Catherine de' Medici
Catherine de' Medici, though not officially convicted or charged, is often implicated in a series of political machinations and alleged crimes during her reign as Queen of France. She is notably associated with the St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre in 1572, where thousands of Huguenots (French Protestants) were slaughtered by Catholic mobs. While her role in the massacre is still debated among historians, she is often portrayed as a perpetrator or instigator.
Convicted: Doris Marie Payne
She was 86 years old, wearing an electronic ankle monitor from her previous arrest, and she was shoplifting $86 worth of merchandise from a Walmart near Atlanta. That is the last chapter, so far, in the seven-decade criminal career of Doris Marie Payne, a woman who once walked out of a Monte Carlo Cartier boutique with a half-million-dollar diamond hidden in the seam of her girdle. Born in the coal-scarred poverty of Slab Fork, West Virginia, in 1930, Payne became the most prolific jewel thief in American history: over $2 million stolen, 32 aliases, nine passports, ten Social Security numbers, and an FBI file reportedly six feet long. She wore designer clothes into the finest jewelry stores in Paris, Rome, Geneva, and Tokyo, charmed the clerks with a smile, and walked out richer. Judges called her "the Terminator." Interpol tracked her for decades. She expressed no remorse, ever. Now approaching 95, she lives as a free woman in Atlanta. A documentary about her life won an Audience Award at Tribeca. Halle Berry is reportedly attached to play her in a biopic. And through it all, Doris Payne has remained exactly what she always was: the best-dressed thief in the room.
Convicted: Jacqueline Sauvage
At 7:27 PM on September 10, 2012, Jacqueline Sauvage called emergency services in rural central France to report that her husband was on the terrace of their home, shot three times in the back. He was dead. The night before, their only son Pascal had hanged himself. Jacqueline was 64 years old, married for 47 years, and had allegedly spent nearly five decades absorbing the fists, boots, and violations of the man now cooling on the terrace flagstones. She would later say she fired the shots with her eyes closed. The case that followed split France down the middle, drew nearly 436,000 petition signatures, forced a sitting president to act twice, and dragged into the open a question French law had never been designed to answer: what does self-defense mean for a woman who has been taught by decades of violence that by the time the threat feels immediate, it is already too late? This is the story of Jacqueline Sauvage, a woman the courts convicted of murder, the public embraced as a martyr, and history will not easily categorize.
Convicted: Christine Léa Papin
Christine Léa Papin and her sister Léa Papin were both live-in maids who were convicted for the murder of their employer's wife and daughter in Le Mans, France on February 2, 1933. The crime, which was a shocking and brutal attack, stunned the country and has been the subject of numerous books, films, and studies. The sisters were found guilty and sentenced to prison, with Christine's sentence being commuted to life imprisonment after a retrial.