The former head of the International Monetary Fund Dominique Strauss-Kahn was released Friday from Rikers Island prison on a bail of cash million dollars and is staying in a housing temporary building in lower Manhattan belonged to the company responsible for monitoring security him 24 hours a day.
Under a contract of suretyship Wednesday approved, Strauss-Kahn, 62, will be allowed to stay in Friedberg of Stroz corporate apartments and will be monitored continuously by the company. Strauss-Kahn was initially remain there in the construction of Bristol Plaza until the luxury opposed tenants of the apartment building.
Current apartment of Strauss-Kahn is the Empire of 21 storey building located on Broadway 71, with a view of the cemetery of the Church of the Trinity.
Strauss-Kahn came shortly after his release from Rikers Island, and his wife journalist, American journalist Anne Sinclair, arrived later.
The crews and the reporters of the TV are implemented in a street alley. Security is heavy and would have been armed.
Strauss-Kahn should stay in the apartment for only three or four days then his family searches for a permanent residence in the city.
Bail, Strauss-Kahn is necessary to stay in New York and will not leave the Stroz Friedberg building except for medical emergencies.
Once a permanent location is found, it will be allowed to leave in certain circumstances, provided that the Crown is given six hours notice.
It was good news to the prosecution, who have been unable to convince the Court that Strauss-Kahn is a flight risk.
The former head of the IMF was arrested on Saturday a plane of Air France in Paris, a few hours after that the alleged sexual assault on a hotel maid took place.
The prosecution argued that Strauss-Kahn tried to escape once, and that he has the means and the incentive to flee again.
"He has the stature and the resources necessary to lead a life of ease and comfort in the parts of the world that are beyond this Court, Attorney for District Deputy John McConnell argued in court Thursday.
Dominique Strauss-Kahn, once famous in Europe as a possible candidate would be the next President, is now an internationally notorious after a woman of Chamber at the Sofitel Hotel in the city of New York has accused Strauss-Kahn would have his attacking and forcing them to submit to oral sex.
A grand jury put in charge of the former head of the IMF on seven counts - carrying up to 25 years in prison - including the costs of criminal sexual assault, attempted rape and sexual assault.
Law enforcement officials say Saturday last Strauss-Kahn is out of her bathroom of suite of $3,000 per night naked and attempted to rape the wife of West Africa of 32 years who was clean.
The district attorney, said that the forensic evidence appears to be consistent with his account.
ABC News confirmed that the police collected several elements of physical evidence of the hotel room, which are tested for DNA, including a swath of carpet.
Investigators say the suite door electronic reader downloaded information indicates the maid came in the room and never closed the door.
The hotel policy requires servantes leave the door open when cleaning. The door open, say, is proof that women entered the room work, not to engage in consensual sex.
Strauss-Kahn resigned from his position as Director General of the IMF Wednesday, saying: he wanted to, "to protect this institution which I served with honor and devotion" and to concentrate on the upcoming trial.
His next court appearance is set for June 6.
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