The president (
premier président) of the Court of Audit is appointed by Order-in-Council of the
Cabinet. Once appointed, the president of the Court and division presidents have security of tenure. The Court has its own
Office of the Prosecutor - with a Chief Prosecutor, Chief Deputy Prosecutor, and two deputy prosecutors - that represents the Government before the Court. The Court is split into seven divisions, each with nearly 30 judges ordinary and deputy judges and headed by a division president. Jurisdiction is split between the seven divisions generally by subject matter, e.g., finance, health and social security, and so forth. The Court's president is
Pierre Moscovici since June 2020. He took over
Didier Migaud who himself took over in 2010 following the death of
Philippe Séguin. Other judicial officers are generally split into three groups by rank: • puisne judges (
conseillers-maîtres) • consider, hear, and adjudicate cases in panels • deputy judges (
conseillers référendaires) • divided into 2 classes; handle case management • Auditor-
Masters (
auditeurs) • divided into 2 classes; preside over hearings, collect evidence, audit, and report All judicial officers are graduates from the National Administration Academy (''École nationale d'Administration
) or recruited from the Office of the Comptroller-General (inspection générale des Finances''). ==Jurisdiction and duties==