Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Retired officer’s DNA cracks cases

- NICOLAS VAUX-MONTAGNY

PARIS — One of France’s biggest unsolved criminal cases appears to have been cracked — and the decades-long hunt for a suspect in multiple rapes and killings during the 1980s and ’90s led to a former police officer.

Prosecutor­s announced late Thursday that DNA from a 59-year-old retired officer correspond­ed to genetic traces found at the scene of multiple crimes.

The crimes began with the rape of an 8-year-old girl in 1986 and continued with five other rapes, a kidnapping and four slayings, mostly of underage girls.

After 35 years of digging, investigat­ors determined that the suspect had worked as a gendarme in the Paris region between 1986-94 and summoned 750 current or former officers for questionin­g this week.

One, identified in French media as Francois V., did not show up, and was declared missing by his wife, according to a statement by the Paris prosecutor’s office. He was found dead in an apartment in the Mediterran­ean seaside resort of Grau-du Roi from an apparent medication overdose.

A letter was found near his body saying he had committed gruesome, unspecifie­d crimes, according to Paris police. After DNA testing, the prosecutor’s office confirmed that his genetic profile correspond­ed to that found at several crime scenes.

The 8-year-old girl who is the first known victim was approached in the elevator of her building on April 8, 1986, by a man who identified himself as a police officer, then took her to the basement and raped and strangled her. The girl, Sarah, lost consciousn­ess, but did not die.

A month later, an 11-year-old girl named Cecile was raped and killed in the basement of her Paris apartment building.

Her half-brother crossed paths with the suspect and described him to investigat­ors, allowing production of a police sketch that hung for years in many police stations around France. But police had no leads, so the investigat­ion was closed in 1992.

In 1996, a new judge reopened the case and ordered a genetic analysis of the evidence, which made it possible to get the suspect’s DNA.

The same genetic profile was found in several other cases: the killing of a 21-yearold German au pair and her employer in 1987; the rape of a 14-year-old girl in 1987 in Paris; the kidnapping and rape of an 11-year-old girl in a forest in Mitry, in the eastern suburbs of Paris, in 1994; and the killing of a 19-year-old woman in 1994 in another forest.

Investigat­ors looked in all directions over the years but couldn’t find the perpetrato­r. Magistrate­s moved on, and others took over the case.

Francois V. had worked as a gendarme and a police officer, and as a town councilor in the town of Prades-le-Lez in southern France. After this week’s developmen­ts, police are now checking his DNA for possible links to other unsolved crimes.

The prosecutor’s office praised the “courage and determinat­ion” of investigat­or Nathalie Turquey, whose efforts to keep the case alive helped provide answers at last for loved ones of the victims.

 ?? (AP file photo/Michel Euler) ?? After 35 years, investigat­ors determined that the suspect had worked as a gendarme in the Paris region.
(AP file photo/Michel Euler) After 35 years, investigat­ors determined that the suspect had worked as a gendarme in the Paris region.

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