Rogue trader Kerviel 'crushed' by sentence - Action News
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Rogue trader Kerviel 'crushed' by sentence

Ex-trader Jerome Kerviel, speaking for the first time about his tough sentencing in history's biggest rogue trading scandal, insisted he is a scapegoat for his former bank and compared the penalty to getting "hit on the head with a club."

Ex-trader Jerome Kerviel, speaking for the first time Wednesday about his tough sentencing in history's biggest rogue trading scandal, insisted he is a scapegoat for his former bank and compared the penalty to getting "hit on the head with a club."

Jerome Kerviel, sentenced Tuesday in France's biggest rogue trader scandal, says he is crushed by the French court's decision. ((Laurent Cipriani/Associated Press))

The 33-year-old was convicted Tuesday, sentenced to three years in prison and ordered to pay his former employer damages of 4.9 billion euros($6.86 billion) equivalent in value to about 20 Airbus A380 superjumbo jets.

"I'm starting to digest it, but I'm nonetheless crushed by the weight of the sanction and the weight of responsibility the ruling places on me," Kerviel told Europe-1 radio.

At the same time, some observers began calling for the bank to let Kerviel off the hook for the 4.9 billion euros.

Government spokesman Luc Chatel told French radio RMC that this was a "gesture" the bank might consider.

"I responded very clearly that it wasn't up to the government," Chatel told reporters after the government's weekly cabinet meeting. "It was Socit Gnrale's decision to eventually make a gesture, but it wasn't our responsibility."

Kerviel maintained in court that the bank and his bosses tolerated his massive risk-taking as long as it made them money a claim the bank strongly denied, sayingKerviel took great pains to cover up his actions.

"I have the feeling they wanted to make me pay for everybody and that Socit Gnrale had to be saved," he said.

Of the verdict, he said: "It's difficult, obviously, when you get hit on the head with a club that way."

Kerviel is appealing the ruling and said he hopes "to prove once and for all that I wasn't the only one in the boat."

The bank says Kerviel made bets of up to 50 billion euros more than the bank's total market value on futures contracts on three European equity indices and that he masked the size of his bets by recording fictitious offsetting transactions.

The 4.9 billion eurofigure is the sum the bank said it lost unwinding Kerviel's complex positions in January 2008. It's a sum nobody realistically expects him to repay.

Kerviel said he is currently making about 900 euros($1,260 US) a month working part-time as a computer consultant and had to reduce his hours to concentrate on the trial.