Paris
court finds 10 guilty of harassing Brigitte Macron online
Teacher
and publicist among those convicted of maliciously posting or sharing false
claims French first lady is a man
Angelique
Chrisafis in Paris
Mon 5 Jan
2026 11.22 GMT
A Paris
court has found 10 people guilty of online harassment of the French first lady,
Brigitte Macron, by posting or reposting malicious comments on social media
that claimed falsely that she was a man.
Eight men
and two women, aged 41 to 60, including a school sports teacher, an art gallery
owner and a publicist, were on Monday given sentences ranging from a compulsory
course in understanding online harassment to an eight-month suspended prison
sentence. One man, a property developer, who was absent from the trial
hearings, was given a six-month prison sentence.
Some were
also suspended from accessing the social media platforms on which they had made
or reposted the comments.
All were
found guilty of making or sharing malicious comments about Brigitte Macron’s
gender and sexuality, saying she had been born a man. For some, this included
equating her age difference with her husband, the French president, Emmanuel
Macron, to paedophilia.
The Paris
trial is the latest phase in a legal battle on both sides of the Atlantic by
the Macrons against the false claim that Brigitte Macron is a man named
Jean-Michel Trogneux.
The
Macrons have also filed a US lawsuit for defamation against the conservative
podcaster Candace Owens for amplifying and repeating the claim. The US lawsuit
states that the accusation Brigitte Macron is a man called Jean-Michel Trogneux
is completely false and that Trogneux is in fact Brigitte Macron’s older
brother. Trogneux, 80, lives in the northern French town of Amiens, where he
grew up with Brigitte and their siblings in a family famous for its chocolate
business.
The false
theory about Brigitte Macron’s gender spread in part because the Macrons’
relationship has long been a topic of comment online. Brigitte Macron, who is
24 years older than her husband, first met Emmanuel Macron when she was a
French teacher at his Jesuit secondary school in Amiens, where she directed him
in a school play.
The
Macrons’ US lawsuit against Owens states: “Through the school’s theatre
programme, President Macron and Mrs Macron formed a deeper intellectual
connection.” It added: “At all times, the teacher-student relationship between
Mrs Macron and President Macron remained within the bounds of the law.”
Brigitte Macron, who has three children from her first marriage, divorced in
2006 and she and Emmanuel Macron married the following year, when he was 30.
Brigitte
Macron’s daughter Tiphaine Auzière, 41, a lawyer, had told the court that false
claims the French first lady was born a man had damaged her mother’s quality of
life, leaving her worrying every day about the clothes she wore and how she
stood.
Auzière,
who is one of three children from Brigitte Macron’s first marriage, said her
mother had been affected by social media posts that had caused a “deterioration
of her health” and a “deterioration of her quality of life”.
She said:
“Not a day or week goes by when someone does not talk about this to her … What
is very hard for her are the repercussions on her family … Her grandchildren
hear what is being said: ‘Your grandmother is lying’ or ‘Your grandmother is
your grandfather.’ This affects her a lot. She does not know how to stop it …
She’s not elected, she has not sought anything, and she is permanently
subjected to these attacks. I – as a daughter, a woman and a mother – would not
wish her life on anyone.”
Brigitte
Macron told TF1 the night before the verdict that she would fight on. She said:
“People are playing with my family tree, claiming I’m a man.”
She said
her online abusers had ignored the strong evidence of her gender. She said: “A
birth certificate is not nothing. It is a father or a mother who goes to
declare their child, who says who he is or who she is.”
She said
she wanted to be a role model for young people against bullying: “I want to
help teenagers fight against bullying, and if I do not set an example, it will
be difficult.”

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