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https://www.leparisien.fr/oise-60/a...vue-02-08-2021-NBSKD2CGQJH7DKVRTQJADLANGU.php
On Monday, a 37-year-old man was sentenced to one year in prison for uttering death threats against Chambly gendarmes on the night of July 2-3.
“This is the first time in my 10-year career that I have encountered such a surge of hate.” At the bar of the Beauvais (Oise) court, this lieutenant of the gendarmerie declares: “He banged so hard against the cell door that we were afraid that it would give way,” indicates the officer, who will not not likely forget Morad A. anytime soon.
This Monday, this 37-year-old man was sentenced to one year in prison for uttering death threats and insults to gendarmes from the Chambly brigade. But also for having defended terrorism in front of the military, while he was in police custody.
On this Friday, July 2, Morad A. is heard by the gendarmes about death threats addressed to his ex-wife via social networks. If he denies the charges, police custody proceeds normally. But when he is told that it is going to be extended, he “freaks out” thinking about his children, whom he has not seen for 6 years because they are in detention. “As soon as I go crazy, I don’t think about anything,” he said today at the helm.
“I’m going to smoke you, put explosives on you”
Threats of death, insults to the gendarmes and their families … It is a trying night that begins for the police. “One of us took a pen and wrote it down.” After a while, the logorrhea turns into something more disturbing, when Morad A. begins to speak in support of terrorism. “Nothing to give a s**t about this life, I’m ready to go to kill these disbelievers,” he shouts, interspersed with reference to the Koran. “You will see what a real Muslim is. I’m going to smoke you, put explosives on you,” he blurted out from prison. “It was in a loop,” summarizes a gendarme present that night.
Minimizing the insults and threats, the defendant refutes the facts linked to the defense of terrorism. “It’s too much, it has been augmented. Why would I say that?” he asks, indicating that he is not a practitioner of Islam. For his lawyer, Me Domitille Risbourg, it should be seen “a verbal outburst that can happen to everyone.” “But he does not measure the consequences of what he says,” she said, citing “a difficult journey” from childhood to his multiple stays in prison. “As soon as he feels hemmed in, he explodes and has no limits,” she adds. Arguments that visibly convinced the court, which ordered that the sentence be carried out in the form of a “work release.”
On Monday, a 37-year-old man was sentenced to one year in prison for uttering death threats against Chambly gendarmes on the night of July 2-3.
“This is the first time in my 10-year career that I have encountered such a surge of hate.” At the bar of the Beauvais (Oise) court, this lieutenant of the gendarmerie declares: “He banged so hard against the cell door that we were afraid that it would give way,” indicates the officer, who will not not likely forget Morad A. anytime soon.
This Monday, this 37-year-old man was sentenced to one year in prison for uttering death threats and insults to gendarmes from the Chambly brigade. But also for having defended terrorism in front of the military, while he was in police custody.
On this Friday, July 2, Morad A. is heard by the gendarmes about death threats addressed to his ex-wife via social networks. If he denies the charges, police custody proceeds normally. But when he is told that it is going to be extended, he “freaks out” thinking about his children, whom he has not seen for 6 years because they are in detention. “As soon as I go crazy, I don’t think about anything,” he said today at the helm.
“I’m going to smoke you, put explosives on you”
Threats of death, insults to the gendarmes and their families … It is a trying night that begins for the police. “One of us took a pen and wrote it down.” After a while, the logorrhea turns into something more disturbing, when Morad A. begins to speak in support of terrorism. “Nothing to give a s**t about this life, I’m ready to go to kill these disbelievers,” he shouts, interspersed with reference to the Koran. “You will see what a real Muslim is. I’m going to smoke you, put explosives on you,” he blurted out from prison. “It was in a loop,” summarizes a gendarme present that night.
Minimizing the insults and threats, the defendant refutes the facts linked to the defense of terrorism. “It’s too much, it has been augmented. Why would I say that?” he asks, indicating that he is not a practitioner of Islam. For his lawyer, Me Domitille Risbourg, it should be seen “a verbal outburst that can happen to everyone.” “But he does not measure the consequences of what he says,” she said, citing “a difficult journey” from childhood to his multiple stays in prison. “As soon as he feels hemmed in, he explodes and has no limits,” she adds. Arguments that visibly convinced the court, which ordered that the sentence be carried out in the form of a “work release.”