Jean Daubigny


Jean Daubigny was a French civil servant.
In his highest role, he served as.

Biography

Born in Troyes on 18 May 1948, Daubigny was the son of a school principal. After he attended the Sciences Po and the École nationale d'administration, he entered the prefectural corps, his first post serving as. He went on to serve as,,,,,, and Prefect of Paris. After serving as prefect of Loire-Atlantique, he was appointed director of Minister of the Interior Manuel Valls's cabinet. He then replaced as Prefect of Paris. He was then replaced by Jean-François Carenco on 1 April 2015. He was considered very affable and diplomatic, which caused his slow decision-making and brevity in Valls's cabinet.

Controversies

In 1983, Daubigny, while serving as chief of staff to the Prefect of Police, ordered the destruction of the second series of samples from the, which led to a complaint being filed against him for destruction of evidence. However, while the courts ruled that the evidence should not have been destroyed, there was no malicious intent found behind Daubigny's actions.

Tax evasion case

On 16 November 2016, Daubigny was arrested in connection with a tax fraud case. He and his wife allegedly failed to file their income taxes with the authorities for several years, evading approximately €190,000, as well as allegedly failing to pay local housing and property taxes. In September 2017, he was tried for tax fraud from the years 2011 to 2014, with previous years having surpassed the statute of limitations. The charges potentially carried a one year suspended prison sentence and a €50,000 fine, though he claimed that a blockage prevented him from opening administrative mail; he had not declared his income in 2016 or 2017 and had not asserted his pension rights even though he no longer worked. On 3 November 2017, he was sentenced to an eight month suspended prison sentence. In 2019, he was barred from wearing the Legion of Honour for three years.

Death

Daubigny died on 2 July 2024 in Troyes at the age of 76.

Decorations