Man caught on video punching a woman in the face sentenced to 6 months in prison The attack was caught on video and went viral, sparking an investigation.

PARIS -- A 25-year-old man caught on camera punching a woman in the face in the streets of Paris last summer was sentenced to six months in prison today for "aggravated violence," according to French media reports.

The man received an additional six-month suspended jail term and was ordered to pay $2,300 in damages for attacking engineering student Marie Laguerre, 22, according to reports.

The individual arrested in August, identified by French media only as Firas M., also was ordered by a Paris court to take a course in gender-related violence.

"That's the most satisfying part of the verdict for me," Laguerre told a crowd of journalists outside the court today, an exchange that was broadcast on the French television channel LCI.

Laguerre said she thinks the verdict is "balanced."

In an effort to spotlight sexual harassment on the street, LaGuerre posted a video on Facebook last July of her being hit in the face by a man outside a cafe.

The video went viral and led to an investigation by local authorities.

"Last night, as I was coming back home in Paris, I walked past a man who sexually/verbally harassed me," Laguerre wrote in a post at the time. "He wasn't the first one, and I can't accept being humiliated like that, so I replied 'shut up.' He then threw an ashtray at me, before rushing back to punch me, in the middle of the street."

Laguerre has since launched a website called "Nous Toutes Harcelement," or "We are all harrased," that encourages women to share their stories about street harassment online.

The Paris court today condemned Firas M. for "aggravated violence" but determined that there was not sufficient evidence to convict him for sexual harassment, according to the French newspaper Le Monde.

Just a few days after the incident, French lawmakers approved a new bill that outlawed cat-calling, allowing fines of as much as hundreds of dollars to be handed out on the spot to street harassers. The new law could not be applied in this case as the incident happened before the bill passed.

"Few people are able to have their harasser facing justice. Every time we denounce these behaviors, it's progress," Laguerre told Le Monde.