Pierre Arpaillange
Pierre Arpaillange (born 13 March 1924 in Simeyrols, Dordogne) is a French author, senior judge and former Government Minister.
Career
After obtaining his law degree, Arpaillange began a judicial career in 1949. He became Secrétaire Général du Parquet de la Cour d'Appel de Paris ("Secretary Prosecutor General of the Paris Court of Appeal") and Secrétaire Général du Parquet de la Cour de Cassation ("Secretary Prosecutor General of the Cour de Cassation") in 1962.
Seconded to the French Department of Justice from 1965 to 1974, Arpaillange became adviser to the Minister and, on several occasions, Chief of Staff for the Minister of Justice and Director of Criminal Affairs and Pardons at the Chancellery. He was also a member of the Haut Conseil de l'Audiovisuel ("High Council for the Audiovisual Industry") in 1973.
Adviser to the Supreme Court from 1974, he was promoted to Attorney General at the Cour de Cassation in 1984. He became Keeper of the Seals and Minister of Justice in Michel Rocard's first and second governments (12 May 1988 to 1 October 1990). He famously committed a verbal blunder in the French National Assembly.
He left the government in 1990 and now serves as a member of the Comité d'Honneur du Bicentenaire de la Cour des Comptes ("Bicentennial Committee of Honour of the Cour des Comptes").
Decorations
- In 1991, François Mitterrand made him Grand Officer of the Order of the Legion of Honour.
- He is entitled to wear the Croix du combattant volontaire de la Résistance ("Cross of Volunteer for the Resistance").
- Officer of the Palmes Académiques ("Academic Palms").
Books
He is the author of La simple justice (Julliard, 1980) ("Simple Justice").
External links
Translator's note: This is in French.
Sources
This article was translated from its counterpart on the French Wikipedia on 16 March 2009, and its sources are listed there.
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