Metro

Ex-IMF head leaves TriBeCa house for doctor’s appointment

The skirt-chasing Dominique Strauss-Kahn left the Manhattan townhouse this morning where he’s being held under house arrest to go to the doctor.

A person familiar with Strauss-Kahn’s plans said the former IMF chief left his temporary home this morning.

The frisky Frenchman and his wife got into a black vehicle around 7:30 a.m. outside the $50,000-a-month town home in TriBeCa.

The house arrest agreement allows Strauss-Kahn to leave for doctors’ appointments, religious observances and court appearances.

Strauss-Kahn returned about two hours later.

The 62-year-old Strauss-Kahn is to be arraigned on June 6 on charges that he tried to rape a hotel maid earlier this month.

Strauss-Kahn allegedly chased her down the hallway and into his bedroom, grabbed her breasts, attempted to pull down her pantyhose, and forced her to perform fellatio before she tore free from his grasp and ran to tell her colleagues, who called the cops.

After leaving the hotel, the ex-banking big shot stopped for lunch with his daughter Camille, a Columbia University student, before grabbing a cab to JFK Airport.

The harried and horny political bigwig realized he had left one of his seven cellphones and called the hotel.

Police investigating the alleged rape attempt had already told hotel employees to ask him where he was and tell him they would deliver the cellphone.

He even had the gall to ask the pilot to delay the flight so the phone could be delivered, but was refused, according to Le Point.

Strauss-Kahn was indicted by a grand jury on seven counts, including attempted rape, criminal sexual assault and unlawful imprisonment.

The charges carry a sentence of up to 25 years in prison.

Strauss-Kahn is pleading not guilty. He was released from Rikers Island last Friday on $1 million cash bail, put up by his wealthy wife, Anne Sinclair.

On Thursday, Strauss-Kahn’s lawyers lambasted articles attributed to anonymous sources — in the police department, they say — as containing “a wide array of prejudicial information about Mr. Strauss-Kahn” and information his lawyers haven’t yet gotten themselves.

With AP