FranceLink

Elderly French couple under investigation over 1984 child murder

The great aunt and uncle of Grégory Villemin, a four-year-old who was found dead in a river in eastern France in 1984, have been placed under investigation investigation for "kidnapping leading to death" as a gendarmerie cold-case review attempts to pierce one of the most high-profile French murder mysteries in the last 50 years.

La rédaction de Mediapart

This article is freely available.

To support Mediapart subscribe

A couple in their 70s were put under investigation in France on Friday over the grisly murder of their four-year-old great nephew over 30 years ago, reviving memories of an infamous case and sweeping news of an impending election off the front pages, reports US News & World Report.

The discovery in a river of Grégory Villemin's body in October 1984, bound hand and foot, led to a revenge killing, and the murder has remained unsolved even though it has been reopened several times.

Now the arrest of Jacqueline and Marcel Jacob, following forensic improvements in criminal investigation, has gripped the nation once more and is dominating newspapers and TV news bulletins even as France prepares for a final round of elections on Sunday.

Grégory's body was found in the Vologne river near his home in a remote village in eastern France.

The "Grégory Affair" was reopened most recently in 2008, when French detectives found DNA traces on a letter, raising hopes that advances in DNA identification might help identify the killer at last.

The letter in question was one of a series of anonymous and threatening ones sent to Grégory's parents before and after Gregory's death, claiming to be from the killer.

Jean-Jacques Bosc, prosecutor in Dijon, said that thanks to improved methods in the study of handwriting in conjunction with other evidence, the couple - aunt and uncle to Grégory's father - were now under investigation for "kidnapping leading to death."

"The people who took part in that kidnapping are the authors of the crime," Bosc told reporters at a news conference on Friday, adding that investigators believed the original suspect in the case, their nephew Bernard Laroche, now dead, was also involved.

Being put under formal investigation in France can be a step on the way to charges, but it does not necessarily lead to a trial. The couple's lawyers and a lawyer for Laroche's widow said their clients denied any involvement, and that they would contest the investigation.

Laroche was charged with the murder of Grégory soon after it took place, but he was later freed after evidence against him was thrown out by prosecutors.

Convinced that his cousin Laroche was the murderer, Grégory's father Jean-Marie Villemin shot him dead in 1985 and served four years in jail for the act.

Grégory's mother, Christine Villemin also became a suspect because witnesses said they had seen her at the post office on the day that one of the mysterious letters was sent.

Read more of this Reuters report published by US News & World Report.