Former French president Nicolas Sarkozy has been found guilty of trying to bribe a judge and of influence-peddling.
He has been sentenced to three years in jail, with two years suspended.
However, he may not spend any time in prison as the presiding judge said she would accept allowing him to be tagged with an electronic bracelet outside of prison for the remaining year.
Sarkozy, who led France from 2007 to 2012, had denied any wrongdoing, saying he was the victim of a witch-hunt by financial prosecutors who used excessive means to snoop on his affairs.
Retired from politics but still influential among conservatives, Sarkozy has 10 days to appeal the ruling.
He is the second former president in modern France, after the late Jacques Chirac, to be convicted of corruption.
Prosecutors persuaded the judges that Sarkozy had offered to secure a plum job in Monaco for judge Gilbert Azibert in return for confidential information about an inquiry into allegations that he had accepted illegal payments from L'Oreal heiress Liliane Bettencourt for his 2007 presidential campaign.
This came to light, they said, while they were wiretapping conversations between Sarkozy and his lawyer Thierry Herzog after Sarkozy left office, in relation to another investigation into alleged Libyan financing of the same campaign.


Six killed in Swiss bus blaze after person reportedly sets themselves on fire
US says it destroyed mine-laying vessels as Trump warns Iran over strait
Britain working with allies to support shipping through Strait of Hormuz
Wildlife to replace humans on next series of UK banknotes
Five Iranian women's soccer players granted humanitarian visas in Australia
Almost 700,000 displaced after Israeli strikes on Lebanon, UN agencies say
British warship HMS Dragon departs for Eastern Mediterranean
One dead, several injured in Iranian attack on Manama building
