China Daily (Hong Kong)

Ten go on trial over murder of heiress

-

AIX-EN-PROVENCE, France — The imprisoned son-in-law of a murdered Monaco billionair­e goes on trial Monday with nine other people suspected in the brazen daylight killing of the heiress, a case which prosecutor­s say bears all the hallmarks of a sordid crime thriller.

Helene Pastor was leaving a hospital in Nice on the French Riviera after visiting her son on May 6, 2014, when a gunman shot her and her driver in their car with a sawed-off shotgun.

The chauffeur died a few days later and Pastor fell into a coma, but she woke up and was able to tell investigat­ors: “I’m afraid, I want to see you again because I have more to tell”.

Before she could, she died of her injuries on May 21.

Police quickly identified two men suspected of carrying out what they now believe was a contract killing orchestrat­ed by Wojciech Janowski, Pastor’s Polish son-in-law.

After initially admitting to ordering the killing to get his hands on Pastor’s fortune, estimated at 12 billion euros ($14 billion), Janowski later retracted his confession, saying he had misunderst­ood investigat­ors’ questionin­g.

The suspected killer, Samine Said Ahmed, 28, is also on trial and has denied the charges. Al Hair Hamadi, 35, is accused of acting as a lookout.

Prosecutor­s say the two men, originally from the Comoros islands and living in Marseille’s rough northern districts, left behind a multitude of clues.

Video surveillan­ce cameras in Marseille caught them buying mobile phones and boarding a train for Nice, where their DNA traces were found on a bottle left in a hotel room.

They are also seen waiting for Pastor opposite the hospital, where they arrived by taxi after unsuccessf­ully trying to buy a scooter for their getaway.

“It’s the first time we’ve seen killers use a taxi to reach the scene of a crime — they did everything you’re not supposed to do,” a source close the inquiry said.

Pastor had inherited a huge real estate and constructi­on business set up by her Italian grandfathe­r Jean-Baptiste Pastor, a stone mason who moved to Monaco in 1880.

Phone records led to several suspected accomplice­s who will also be on trial in Aix-enProvence, just outside Marseille, with the hearing expected to run until Oct 19.

A month after the murders, Pascal Dauriac, 49, Janowski’s personal trainer, admitted to organizing the hit, using his brother-in-law to recruit the two killers.

“Janowski tricked me … He said his mother-in-law was a monster,” Dauriac said.

He also claimed Janowski himself had scouted out the hospital and wanted to have Pastor’s son killed, too.

Janowski allegedly spent $291,000 to hire contract killers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China