French prosecutors reveal charges against Durov
Telegram allowed cybercriminals and drug traffickers to operate with impunity, authorities in Paris claim
The Paris Public Prosecutor’s Office has released a list of a dozen charges that could be brought against Telegram founder and CEO Pavel Durov, ranging from complicity in drug dealing and money laundering, to facilitating the distribution of child pornography.
The 39-year-old Russian, who also holds citizenship in France, the UAE, and St. Kitts and Nevis, was detained by French authorities on Saturday after arriving in Paris from Azerbaijan by private jet.
In a press release on Monday, prosecutor Laure Beccuau said that Durov was arrested as part of a broad criminal inquiry against a “person unnamed.” As part of that inquiry, 12 charges are being considered against Durov, including facilitating narcotics distribution, money laundering, and organized crime, and aiding in the distribution of child pornography.
The entrepreneur is also being investigated for refusing to cooperate with cybercrime and financial crime investigations, Beccuau stated.
Criminal investigations in France are run by special magistrates, and charges like those leveled against Durov are typically announced before investigators have finished gathering evidence. Investigations can take years, and charges can be dropped at any point if insufficient evidence of a crime is found.
The investigation, which began last month, is being conducted by France’s anti-cybercrime and anti-fraud offices, the press release read.
In a statement on Sunday, Telegram called it “absurd to claim that a platform or its owner are responsible for abuse of that platform.” Telegram complies with local laws, including the EU’s Digital Rights Act (DSA) and anti-Russian sanctions, the company added.
Telegram, which has almost a billion monthly users, generally refuses to hand over user data or chat records to law enforcement. Durov has said that this focus on user privacy has made him a target for intelligence agencies around the world, claiming in an interview in April that the FBI attempted to recruit one of his employees to install a backdoor in the app that would have allowed them to spy on Telegram users.
Anti-censorship activists have described Durov’s arrest as part of a wider campaign against free speech waged by Western governments, with NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden accusing France of taking the entrepreneur “hostage” in order to access private communications on Telegram. X Owner Elon Musk, American journalist Tucker Carlson, and Silicon Valley investor David Sacks have all condemned Durov’s arrest as an attack on free speech.
In a social media post on Monday, French President Emmanuel Macron insisted that Durov’s arrest “is in no way a political decision,” and took place as part of “an ongoing judicial investigation.”
“France is more than anything attached to freedom of expression and communication, to innovation and to the spirit of enterprise,” Macron added.
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