A French court in Nanterre that is hearing a case against Marine Le Pen for sharing violent images on her Twitter account has ordered a psychological assessment of the leader of the far-right party National Rally (formerly the National Front), in order to determine whether she is "capable of understanding remarks and answering questions." Furthermore, the psychologist examining her is tasked with ascertaining whether her mental health may pose a risk to the public.

The case against Le Pen began in March, after she was stripped of her parliamentary immunity. She is on trial for violating French laws regarding the distribution of messages that "incite terrorism or pornography or seriously harm human dignity."

Accusations of totalitarian tactics

Though the law requires psychological assessments in such cases, Le Pen voiced outrage at the decision and said she would defy the order: "I'd like to see how the judge would try to force me to do it." She also posted an image of the court order on her Twitter account with the words: "It's genuinely STAGGERING. This regime is REALLY starting to be frightening."

She concluded the Tweet with her initials, shorthand to signify that she wrote the message, not a staff member.

Le Pen, who has said the case against her is a violation of her freedom of expression, claims the government of France is employing the tactics of defamation that totalitarian regimes use to discredit political opponents in an attempt "to make them look crazy."

Gruesome images

In the wake of the November 2015 Paris terror attacks, in which 130 people were killed by men claiming allegiance to "Islamic State" (IS), Le Pen posted a number of violent images depicting IS atrocities. She posted the images in response to a journalist's comparison between her far-right party and "Islamic State," which is also known as Daesh.

The images featured the body of beheaded American journalist James Foley; a man in an orange jumpsuit being run over by a tank; and a captured Jordanian pilot being burned alive in a cage. Le Pen captioned the images with the words: "Daesh is this!"

Under scrutiny

Le Pen and her populist party have long insisted they are being unfairly persecuted by France's courts and political establishment as a means to marginalize them. Le Pen and her party have been the subject of a number of investigations, including over the misuse of EU funds.

If convicted, Marine Le Pen faces up to three years in jail and a fine of €75,000 ($87,000).

js/msh (AFP, Reuters)