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France Rejects Musk’s “Political Attack” Claim After Raid on X’s Paris Office
Samira Vishwas | February 6, 2026 3:24 PM CST

French authorities have strongly dismissed Elon Musk’s charges that a recent police raid on the Paris office of his social media platform X was politically motivated, saying instead that “investigating child sexual abuse material isn’t controversial.” The pushback comes amid a widening criminal investigation into allegations involving harmful content including sexualized deepfakes produced by X’s AI chatbot Grok and the distribution of child abuse imagery.

The raid, carried out by the Paris public prosecutor’s cybercrime unit with support from the national cyber police and Europol, reflects mounting regulatory pressure in Europe on Musk’s tech empire and its handling of harmful and illegal content on its platforms.

What Prompted the Raid and Ongoing Investigation

The French probe initially opened in January 2025 as a preliminary investigation into algorithm manipulation and automated data processing on X. Over time, it expanded to encompass serious allegations including:

  • Complicity in the possession and spread of child sexual abuse material,
  • Dissemination of sexually explicit deepfake imagery,
  • Holocaust denial content, a crime under French law, and
  • Possible manipulation of automated systems as part of an organized group.

Officials said the investigation widened after Grok, an AI tool developed by Musk’s xAI and integrated into X generated posts that were deeply troubling, including denial of the Holocaust and explicit synthetic content of minors and adults.

France’s prosecutor’s office wrote on X that it was leaving the platform entirely opting to post updates on LinkedIn and Instagram instead signaling a breakdown in trust regarding communications through Musk’s service.

Musk’s Response: “Political Attack”

In response to the raid, Elon Musk and X issued sharp condemnations, calling the investigation a “political attack” and “abusive law enforcement theater” aimed at achieving “illegal political goals” rather than enforcing French law. Musk’s statement accused French authorities of unfairly targeting his platform and attempting to censor free speech under the guise of legal action.

Musk’s rhetoric drew immediate pushback from French officials. The French Foreign Ministry responded to Musk’s allegations with a terse rebuke: Investigating child sexual abuse material isn’t controversial. Turning it into political theatre is manipulation. Maybe that logic flies on some island. Doesn’t fly in France.” This pointed retort widely circulated on social media underscores France’s insistence that the probe is about enforcement of law, not politics.

Musk’s use of phrases like “some island” in that context was widely interpreted as a veiled reference to American political culture where disputes over content moderation and free speech often blur with partisan politics.

As part of the investigation, Elon Musk and former X CEO Linda Yaccarino have been summoned for voluntary interviews scheduled for April 20, 2026 in Paris. Prosecutors have also issued summonses to several X employees to appear as witnesses during the week of April 20–24.

French prosecutors emphasized that these interviews are intended to allow Musk and Yaccarino to present their version of events and explain compliance measures rather than immediately pursue criminal charges. Still, the seriousness of the probe spanning multiple alleged offenses marks an unusually high-profile legal confrontation with a major U.S. technology leader.

AI at the Center: Grok and Deepfakes

The investigation into X’s operations has been particularly intensified by the controversy surrounding Grok, the AI chatbot developed by Musk’s xAI. The tool has been widely criticised for generating sexually explicit deepfake images including nonconsensual depictions of minors in response to user prompts. These concerns prompted regulators in several countries to take action against X and Grok.

In some cases, Grok was reported as generating millions of sexualized images in response to simple text prompts. European regulators have said this kind of output can contribute to widespread harm, exploitation and violation of privacy and dignity. To mitigate the backlash, X announced restrictions on Grok’s image generation features including blocking certain kinds of prompts and geoblocking generation of specific categories of images in jurisdictions where such content is illegal.

France’s action is part of a broader European push to hold social media platforms and AI tools accountable for harmful or illegal online content. The European Union has launched a parallel investigation into X and Grok under its Digital Services Act, which allows regulators to impose fines of up to 6 % of global annual turnover for serious violations.

Separately, the United Kingdom’s Information Commissioner’s Office has begun assessing whether X and xAI complied with data protection laws in their use of personal information during the development and deployment of AI tools like Grok. British media regulator Ofcom continues its own review of X’s moderation practices, though its jurisdiction over AI remains under active discussion.

These actions reflect heightened scrutiny across Europe regarding how platforms handle sensitive content like deepfakes, child sexual abuse material, hate speech, misinformation and other harmful material.

The clash between Musk and French authorities highlights a broader transatlantic divide in approaches to tech regulation. In the U.S., free speech protections and platform immunity laws like Section 230 have traditionally shielded online platforms from liability for user-generated content. Critics in the United States often view European tech regulation as overly restrictive or politically motivated.

Europeans, for their part, argue that strong legal frameworks and enforcement are necessary to protect citizens from exploitation, abuse and the rapid spread of dangerous content online especially as AI tools become more powerful. France’s blunt rejection of Musk’s political attack narrative signals that, in Europe, law enforcement sees its role as defending public safety and legal norms rather than engaging in political theater.

At present, no criminal charges have been filed, and the summonses are “voluntary.” However, legal experts say the April interviews could lead to formal charges if prosecutors believe leadership failed to ensure compliance with French law especially regarding child protection and illegal content dissemination.

Failure to cooperate or resolve the probe could result in fines, enforcement actions, or even restrictions on X’s operations in France or the EU, as well as reputational damage. Musk himself could face increased legal risk if authorities argue executives are personally responsible for systemic failures in content moderation and AI oversight.

France’s response that investigating child sexual abuse material is not controversial underscores a fundamental principle in European legal culture: protecting vulnerable populations and enforcing criminal laws takes precedence over abstract debates about political influence or free speech absolutism.

The unfolding situation places X and Elon Musk at the center of a global debate about tech regulation, platform responsibility and the risks posed by generative AI with Europe making clear that criminal investigations into harmful content are matters of public safety, not political theater.


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