A French prosecutor has called for Dominique Strauss-Kahn to be acquitted of pimping charges in a trial which has seen lurid details of the former IMF chief's sex life exposed in court.
"Neither the judicial enquiry nor the hearing have established that Mr Strauss-Kahn is guilty" of procuring prostitutes for sex parties he attended in Paris, Brussels and Washington, said prosecutor Frederic Fevre on Tuesday.
The 65-year-old who was once tipped for the French presidency has denied knowing the women at the orgies were prostitutes, or that he organised for them to be there, which could have landed him in jail for up to 10 years for pimping.
Even before the trial, Fevre said he was not convinced there was a strong case against the former political heavyweight and asked for the charges to be dropped. However he was overruled by investigative judges who sent the case to trial.
The prosecutor argued that the economist's notoriety "should not be a presumption of guilt".
"Our legal system must take pride in never convicting someone if there is any doubt. I therefore request his acquittal, pure and simple," said Fevre.
In another boost for Strauss-Kahn, two ex-prostitutes who attended the orgies dropped a civil lawsuit against him, with lawyers saying they lacked enough proof to win the case.
The trial was a further humiliation for Strauss-Kahn four years after his high-flying career and presidential prospects were torpedoed by accusations of sexual assault by a New York hotel maid in May 2011, a case later settled in a civil suit.
He was charged with pimping shortly after the New York scandal when his name cropped up in a probe into a prostitution ring in northern France, which provided sex workers for orgies he attended.
Strauss-Kahn found himself in the dock alongside a colourful cast of characters including a senior police officer and brothel owner Dominique Alderweireld who is known as "Dodo the Pimp"
Many of them form part of a ring known as the "Carlton Affair" in which managers of the luxury Lille hotel set up prostitutes with well-connected locals.
"He was the boss," Fevre said of Alderweireld who is accused of sending prostitutes from Belgium to sex parties just over the border.
Fevre requested a sentence of one year in jail and a fine of 10,000 euros ($A14,595) against him.
He asked for a series of suspended sentences and stiff fines ranging from 2500 to 20,000 euros for the 13 other accused.
It remains to be seen whether the court will acquit Strauss-Kahn in a trial which has seen the most intimate details of his often rough sexual tastes bared to the world.
The man known in France as DSK has admitted to being a libertine, and taking part in group sex, but lashed out at the court for focusing on his morals.
He said people were free to disagree with his proclivities, but that he was not on trial for "deviant sexual practices".
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