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=== Legal purges (''Épuration légale'') === {{Main|Épuration légale}} Keenly aware of the need to seize the initiative and get the process under firm judicial control, de Gaulle appointed Justice Minister [[François de Menthon]] to lead the Legal Purge (''[[Épuration légale]]'') to punish traitors and clear away traces of the Vichy regime. Knowing that he would need to reprieve many of the 'economic collaborators'—such as police and civil servants who held minor roles under Vichy to keep the country running—he assumed, as head of state, the right to commute death sentences.<ref name="Fenby-2010" /> Of the near 2,000 people who received the death sentence from the courts, fewer than 800 were executed. De Gaulle commuted 998 of the 1,554 capital sentences submitted before him, including all women. Many others were given jail terms or had their voting rights and other legal privileges taken away. It is generally agreed that the purges were conducted arbitrarily, with often absurdly severe or overly lenient punishments being handed down.<ref name="Werth" /> Less well-off people who were unable to pay for lawyers were more harshly treated. As time went by and feelings grew less intense, a number of people who had held fairly senior positions under the Vichy government—such as Maurice Papon and [[René Bousquet]]—escaped consequences by claiming to have worked secretly for the resistance or to have played a double game, working for the good of France by serving the established order.<ref name="Werth" /> Pétain received a death sentence, which his old protégé de Gaulle commuted to life imprisonment, while [[Maxime Weygand]] was eventually acquitted. There was a widespread belief, particularly in the years that followed, that de Gaulle was trying to appease both the Third Republic politicians and the former Vichy leaders who had made Laval their scapegoat.<ref name=Werth />
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