Hartford Courant

Paris terror attacks trial

20 charged in 2015 rampage that killed 130, hurt hundreds

- By Lori Hinnant and Nicolas Vauxmontag­ny

Trial begins for 20 men charged in attacks that killed 130 in 2015.

PARIS — The trial of 20 men accused in a series of coordinate­d attacks on Paris in 2015 that spread fear across Europe and transforme­d France opened Wednesday in a custombuil­t complex embedded within a 13th-century courthouse.

Nine Islamic State group gunmen and suicide bombers struck within minutes of one another at several locations around Paris on Nov. 13, 2015, leaving 130 people dead and hundreds wounded. It was the deadliest violence to strike France since World War II and among the worst terror attacks to hit the West.

The worst carnage was at the Bataclan concert hall, where three men with assault rifles gunned down scores of people and grabbed a handful of hostages. Others targeted the national soccer stadium, where the president was attending a game, as well as cafes filled with people on a mild autumn night.

The lone surviving attacker from that night, Salah Abdeslam, is the key defendant — but he has refused to speak to investigat­ors, denying them answers to many of the remaining questions about the attacks and the people who planned them. Abdeslam’s brother was among the suicide bombers.

When asked to state his profession, he declared he was “a fighter for Islamic State” after intoning a prayer.

Abdeslam, who fled the night of the attacks after ditching his car and a malfunctio­ning suicide vest, is the only defendant charged with murder. The other defendants present face lesser terrorism charges.

The presiding judge, Jean-louis Peries, acknowledg­ed the extraordin­ary nature of the attacks, which changed security in Europe and France’s political landscape, and the trial to come. France only emerged from the state of emergency declared in the wake of the attacks in 2017, after incorporat­ing many of the harshest measures into law.

“The events that we are about to decide are inscribed in their historic intensity as among the internatio­nal and national events of this century,” he said.

Dominique Kielemoes, whose son bled to death at one of the cafes, said hearing victims’ testimonie­s at the trial will be crucial to both their own healing and that of the nation.

“The assassins, these terrorists, thought they were firing into the crowd, into a mass of people. But it wasn’t a mass — these were individual­s who had a life, who loved, had hopes and expectatio­ns, and that we need to talk about at the trial. It’s important,” she said.

Of the 20 men charged, six will be tried in absentia.

Abdeslam will be questioned multiple times — but it remains to be seen if he will break his silence beyond the sort of allegiance he offered Wednesday to Islamic State groups.

“We were expecting it, and we were prepared for it and in fact, we’re not expecting anything from him,” Kielemoes said after Abdeslam first appeared.

The same IS network that hit Paris went on to strike Brussels months later, killing another 32 people.

Authoritie­s have gone to extraordin­ary lengths to ensure security at the trial, building a new courtroom within the storied 13th-century Palais de Justice in Paris, where Marie Antoinette and Emile Zola faced trial, among others.

Survivors of the attacks as well as those who mourn their dead Wednesday packed the complex’s rooms, which were designed to hold 1,800 plaintiffs and over 300 lawyers.

For the first time, victims can also have a secure audio link to listen from home if they want with a 30-minute delay.

The trial is scheduled to last nine months.

The month of September will be dedicated to laying out the police and forensic evidence. October will be given over to victims’ testimony. From November to December, officials, including then-french President Francois Hollande — who was at the Stade de France on the night of the assaults — will testify, as will relatives of the attackers.

In the wake of the attacks, France changed: Authoritie­s declared a state of emergency and now armed officers constantly patrol public spaces. The assaults sparked soul-searching among the French and Europeans more broadly since most of the perpetrato­rs were born and raised in France or Belgium. And they transforme­d forever the lives of all those who suffered losses or bore witness to the violence.

“Our ability to be carefree is gone,” Kielemoes said.

For Jean-luc Wertenschl­ag, who lives above the cafe where his son died and who rushed downstairs soon after the first gunshots to try to save lives, it has even changed the way he moves around the city where he was born and raised. He never leaves home without the first aid gear he lacked that night, when he ripped off his shirt to stanch the bleeding of a victim.

“What we did that evening with other people, to provide assistance to the people wounded during the attack, was a way to stand against what these monsters had tried to do to us,” he said.

Among those scheduled to testify is Hollande, who gave the final order to police special forces to storm the Bataclan.

Hollande said he would speak “not for the sake of French politics, but for the victims of the attacks.”

 ?? THOMAS COEX/GETTY-AFP ?? French police forces escort a convoy thought to be taking Salah Abdeslam to court Wednesday.
THOMAS COEX/GETTY-AFP French police forces escort a convoy thought to be taking Salah Abdeslam to court Wednesday.

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