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Marthe Hanau (1890 – 19 July 1935) was a
Frenchwoman The French people (french: Français) are an ethnic group and nation primarily located in Western Europe that share a common French culture, history, and language, identified with the country of France. The French people, especially the nati ...
who successfully defrauded French
financial markets A financial market is a market in which people trade financial securities and derivatives at low transaction costs. Some of the securities include stocks and bonds, raw materials and precious metals, which are known in the financial ma ...
in the 1920s and the 1930s.


Early life

Marthe Hanau was born in
Lille Lille ( , ; nl, Rijsel ; pcd, Lile; vls, Rysel) is a city in the northern part of France, in French Flanders. On the river Deûle, near France's border with Belgium, it is the capital of the Hauts-de-France region, the prefecture of the N ...
to the family of a Jewish industrialist. She married and later divorced Lazare Bloch. In 1925, she and Bloch, who remained business partners after their divorce, founded an economic newspaper, ''La Gazette du Franc et des Nations''. Hanau used the newspaper to dispense stock tips to financial speculators.


Fraud

Hanau's paper promoted mainly the stocks and securities of her own business partners, whose businesses were mere shells or paper companies. Still, the value of their stock kept rising when stockbrokers bought and traded them. Hanau expanded her investing advice network and later formed her own financial news agency, ''Agence Interpresse''. She even released short-term
bond Bond or bonds may refer to: Common meanings * Bond (finance), a type of debt security * Bail bond, a commercial third-party guarantor of surety bonds in the United States * Chemical bond, the attraction of atoms, ions or molecules to form chemica ...
s that promised 8% interest. Now, French banks and '' Agence Havas'', the rival financial news agency, turned against her. Banks began to investigate the nonexistent companies and soon were numerous rumours about Hanau's shady business practices. At first, Hanau managed to quell the rumours by
bribing Bribery is the offering, giving, receiving, or soliciting of any item of value to influence the actions of an official, or other person, in charge of a public or legal duty. With regard to governmental operations, essentially, bribery is "Corr ...
cooperative politicians. However, when charges continued to swirl around her, police arrested Hanau, Bloch and many of their business partners on 17 December 1928. They were charged with fraud and confined in Saint-Lazare Prison. By then, her investors had lost approximately 120,000,000 contemporary French
franc The franc is any of various units of currency. One franc is typically divided into 100 centimes. The name is said to derive from the Latin inscription ''francorum rex'' (King of the Franks) used on early French coins and until the 18th centu ...
s. The preliminary trial began 15 months later. Hanau protested that the court did not understand financial business, could return all the money and should be released on
bail Bail is a set of pre-trial restrictions that are imposed on a suspect to ensure that they will not hamper the judicial process. Bail is the conditional release of a defendant with the promise to appear in court when required. In some countrie ...
. When court denied the bail, she went on a
hunger strike A hunger strike is a method of non-violent resistance in which participants fast as an act of political protest, or to provoke a feeling of guilt in others, usually with the objective to achieve a specific goal, such as a policy change. Most ...
. Three weeks later, Hanau was moved to Cochin Hospital in Paris, where she was forcibly fed. When she was left alone, she made a rope out of bedsheets, climbed out of the window and returned to Saint-Lazare Prison. Paris Police Pefect Jean Chiappe, from Corsica, was afraid that she would die in his hands and requested for her to be released on bail. She was moved to a hospice, where she still announced that she would return all of the money, but not everybody believed her. Her trial began in earnest on 20 February 1932. During the trial, Hanau revealed the names of all the politicians that she had bribed and caused a scandal. Hanau received two years in prison, but the court credited her with the 15 months that she had already spent in prison. Bloch received 18 months, and the other partners were released with fines. When Hanau was released later that year, she bought the ''Forces'' magazine. In April 1932, she published an article about the shady side of the financial markets and quoted a
Sûreté (; , but usually translated as afety" or "security)"Security" in French is ''sécurité''. The ''sûreté'' was originally called ''Brigade de Sûreté'' ("Surety Brigade"). is, in many French-speaking countries or regions, the organizational ...
file about herself. Police arrested her, but she refused to reveal who had leaked the file except that it had been taken from Finance Minister
Pierre-Étienne Flandin Pierre-Étienne Flandin (; 12 April 1889 – 13 June 1958) was a French conservative politician of the Third Republic, leader of the Democratic Republican Alliance (ARD), and Prime Minister of France from 8 November 1934 to 31 May 1935. A milit ...
. She was sentenced to three months in prison for receiving classified information. She appealed, but after the appeal was rejected, she fled. She was soon arrested and returned to prison.


Death

Hanau committed suicide on 19 July 1935 by taking an
overdose A drug overdose (overdose or OD) is the ingestion or application of a drug or other substance in quantities much greater than are recommended.
of
sleeping pills Hypnotic (from Greek ''Hypnos'', sleep), or soporific drugs, commonly known as sleeping pills, are a class of (and umbrella term for) psychoactive drugs whose primary function is to induce sleep (or surgical anesthesiaWhen used in anesthesia ...
.


Legacy

A French movie, "La Banquière" ('' The Lady Banker''), by Francis Girod, was made in 1980, starring
Romy Schneider Romy Schneider (; born Rosemarie Magdalena Albach; 23 September 1938 – 29 May 1982) was a German-French actress. She began her career in the German genre in the early 1950s when she was 15. From 1955 to 1957, she played the central chara ...
as "Emma Eckhert", a thinly-fictionalized Hanau.


See also

*
6 February 1934 crisis 6 (six) is the natural number following 5 and preceding 7. It is a composite number and the smallest perfect number. In mathematics Six is the smallest positive integer which is neither a square number nor a prime number; it is the second small ...


References


Sources

* Janet Flanner, "The Swindling Presidente," ''The New Yorker'', 26 August & 2 September 1939.


External links

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Hanau, Marthe French fraudsters French female criminals 1890 births 1935 suicides 19th-century French Jews Alsatian Jews People from Lille Drug-related suicides in France