Agence France-Presse
September 13, 2013 11:15
Self-defence ruled out for French jeweller who shot thief
A French jeweller who shot dead a teenager fleeing his shop with stolen gems was Friday facing a likely murder charge after a prosecutor decided he had not acted in self-defence.
In a case that has triggered a national outcry, Stephan Turk, 67, appeared before two examining magistrates who must decide whether to formally indict him for homicide, a crime that carries a 30-year prison term.
Nice prosecutor Eric Bedos told a press conference here that he had requested that Turk, who has no previous record of criminal activity, be placed under house arrest and electronically tagged while a murder investigation proceeds.
"On the basis of the investigation so far and what we have noted and heard, my belief is that the evidence shows that this gentleman's deliberate act resulted in the death of this wrongdoer," Bedos told a press conference in the Riviera city of Nice, where the shooting happened on Wednesday morning.
"Even in circumstances such as these, life absolutely has to be preserved," he said, arguing that Turk's life had not been in immediate danger when he fired his unlicensed handgun.
The jeweller fired just moments after having been held up at gunpoint, punched and kicked and forced to open his safe by two robbers wearing motorcycle helmets.
As the robbers made off on a scooter, Turk emerged from his shop and fired three shots, fatally wounding one of the two thieves. The victim, an 18-year-old who has been identified only by his first name, Anthony, had a string of previous convictions.
Bedos revealed that the jeweller disputed the notion that he acted voluntarily, arguing that there had been extenuating circumstances because he had just been subject to extreme violence.
Turk has been the subject of an extraordinary outpouring of support on the Internet, with nearly half a million people having "liked" a Facebook page set up to defend him by Friday afternoon.
The reaction to his case appears to reflect widespread exasperation in France with current levels of gun crime and a perception that the perpetrators of violent robberies get off too lightly.
"He should have killed them both," was among the comments posted on the "Support the Jeweller of Nice" Facebook page.
Another contributor wrote: "The jeweller will be tagged straight away while the robber had 13 convictions and was free and untagged... soon he will be condemned to death and his killer will be a martyr."