GENEVA (AP) - Roman Polanski will be quietly transferred from a Zurich jail to
house arrest in his Alpine chalet, Swiss authorities said Thursday,
adding that the process will last at least another day.
Polanski was being held in a Swiss jail a day after a court
granted him release on $4.5 million bail, the Swiss Justice
Ministry said. The 76-year-old director, who must wear an
electronic monitoring bracelet, will not be released Thursday,
ministry spokesman Folco Galli said.
The transfer would be handled discreetly, Galli told The
Associated Press.
"We don't want to show him off like an exotic animal," he said.
"It will not be a matter of hours ... The bail has to be
transferred, transport needs to be organized and the house arrest
must be organized."
The Swiss justice minister said she saw no reason to challenge
the surprise decision, but Galli said a final decision has yet to
be made on waiving an appeal. Authorities will also decide "in a
couple of weeks" whether to extradite Polanski for fleeing
sentencing in Los Angeles over three decades years ago, he
said.
The bail decision was a major win for the director of
"Rosemary's Baby," ''Chinatown" and "The Pianist" after a series of
legal setbacks following his Sept. 26 arrest as he arrived in
Zurich to receive a lifetime achievement award at a film
festival.
He has been held in a Zurich-area prison, believed to be in
Winterthur, but Warden Walter Vogt told the AP on Thursday that
Polanski "could be here or he could be in Bern," Switzerland's
capital.
Polanski was accused of raping the 13-year-old girl after plying
her with champagne and a Quaalude pill during a modeling shoot in
1977. He was initially indicted on six felony counts, including
rape by use of drugs, child molesting and sodomy, but he pleaded
guilty to the lesser charge of unlawful sexual intercourse.
In exchange, the judge agreed to drop the remaining charges and
sentence him to prison for a 90-day psychiatric evaluation. The
evaluator released Polanski after 42 days, but the judge said he
was going to send him back to serve out the 90 days.
Polanski then fled the United States on Feb. 1, 1978, the day he
was to be sentenced, and has lived in France since.
The court last month rejected Polanski's first bail offer, with
his Gstaad chalet as collateral.
Before Wednesday's decision, Polanski offered a bank guarantee
that would cause him to sacrifice his family's home in Paris if he
flees justice again.
"I am very happy and relieved," Mathilde Seigner, Polanski's
sister-in-law told Le Parisien daily, adding that the director's
imprisonment had "enormous consequences on a psychological level"
for his children. After Polanski's release, "we're going to drink a
nice glass of Champagne and toast together," she said.
Polanski claims the judge and prosecutors in the U.S. acted
improperly in his case. His attorneys will argue before a
California appeals court next month that the charges should be
dismissed regardless of whether Polanski is extradited.
For the duration of the extradition procedures, it appears
Polanski will be confined to his $1.6 million chalet surrounded by
snowcapped peaks on the outskirts of Gstaad, one of the most
exclusive winter resorts in the world. Celebrities such as
Elizabeth Taylor and Roger Moore have called the town home, and it
remains popular with celebrities and royalty.
In the village famous for its discretion, some people weren't
pleased with all the attention.
"I don't want to talk about what he did," said Martin von
Gruenigen, a retired dairy farmer, as he walked his dog in front of
Polanski's home. "I have little contact with the rich. Life is
quiet here, but there are things I don't like at all here. Like the
rich buying all the houses, so we locals can't afford to buy a
house."
Polanski's "Milky Way" is a large chalet with a stunning view of
the surrounding Alps, including the strikingly snowcapped Ruebli
peak. The three-story building with a white stucco wall topped by
the brown wooden upper floors appeared deserted Thursday.
The court said Polanski would be subjected to "constant
electronic surveillance" at his chalet and an alarm would be
activated if he leaves the premises or takes off the bracelet.
The filmmaker is still seen a high flight risk, according to the
court.
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AP writers Frank Jordans in Gstaad, Ronny Nicolussi in
Winterthur, Balz Bruppacher in Bern, Eliane Engeler and Alexander
G. Higgins in Geneva, and Jenny Barchfield in Paris contributed to
this report.