Ten people face trial accused of cyberbullying Brigitte Macron
French President Emmanuel Macron and his wife Brigitte Macron at the presidential Elysee Palace (Michel Euler/AP)
Ten people will go on trial on Monday over cyberbullying of Brigitte Macron after they allegedly made âmaliciousâ comments online spreading claims that President Emmanuel Macronâs wife is a man.
The Paris prosecutorâs office said the eight men and two women are accused of spreading ânumerous malicious commentsâ online about the first ladyâs gender and âsexualityâ and of mentioning her age gap with her husband as âpaedophiliaâ.
Aged between 41 and 60, some of the defendants are very active on the social media, with posts sometimes cumulating dozens of thousands of views.
A woman presenting herself as a medium and an advertising executive, whose X account has since been suspended, are considered as having played a major role in spreading the rumour.
Others include an elected official, a teacher and a computer scientist.
The Macrons have for years been dogged by conspiracy theories that Mrs Macron was born a man named Jean-Michel Trogneux, who supposedly then took the name Brigitte as a transgender woman.
Jean-Michel Trogneux is the name of Mrs Macronâs brother.
The two-day trial in Paris comes after the Macrons filed a defamation suit in July in a Delaware court as their lawyer said they will be seeking âsubstantialâ damages from US conservative influencer Candace Owens if she persists with claims that Mrs Macron is a man.
Ms Owens is a right-leaning political commentator whose YouTube channel has about 4.5 million subscribers.
In 2024, she was denied a visa from New Zealand and Australia, citing remarks in which she denied Nazi medical experimentation on Jews in concentration camps during the Second World War.
A verdict in the Paris case will likely be issued at a later date.
In September 2024, Mrs Macron and Jean-Michel Trogneux won a defamation suit against two women who were sentenced by a Paris court to fines and damages for spreading the claims about the first lady online.
A Paris appeals court overturned the ruling in July.
Mrs Macron and her brother have since turned to Franceâs highest court to appeal that decision.
The Macrons, who have been married since 2007, first met at the high school where he was a student and she was a teacher.
Mrs Macron, 24 years her husbandâs senior, was then called Brigitte Auziere, a married mother-of-three.
Mr Macron, 47, has been Franceâs president since 2017.





