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Three in court over attack on Brigitte Macron's great-nephew

The three men are accused of attacking Jean-Baptiste Trogneux, a great-nephew of Brigitte Macron, the wife of the French president, during an "impromptu" street protest outside the Trogneux chocolate shop in Amiens, northern France.  

La rédaction de Mediapart

This article is freely available.

Three men have appeared in court in France accused of attacking Brigitte Macron’s great-nephew outside her family’s chocolate shop, reports The Guardian.

The accused were among eight people arrested after Jean-Baptiste Trogneux, 30, was beaten up while reportedly trying to protect the windows of the store in Amiens in the Somme last month.

The alleged assault happened during what was described as an “impromptu protest” in the town shortly after Macron’s husband, the French president, Emmanuel Macron, had given an interview on primetime television.

An earlier hearing, postponed to give the defence more time to prepare, heard a group had gathered and placed rubbish bins in front of the business, a chocolate shop called Jean Trogneux founded in 1872 by Brigitte Macron’s great-grandfather. When Trogneux, who lives above the store, asked them to leave, it is alleged at least one person in the group hit him, leaving him with injuries requiring four days off work.

A neighbour living opposite the shop said he was watching television when he was alerted by the sound of a fight. “When I arrived, they were in the process of knocking him to the ground,” he told the court. “There were three people beating someone, they were in the process of massacring him. I identified [the victim] as my neighbour opposite.”

The three men, aged 20, 22 and 35, are charged with “deliberate group violence”, which they deny. A fourth accused, a minor, will appear in the children’s court at a later date.

Read more of this report from The Guardian.