词条 | Patrice Alègre |
释义 |
| name = Patrice Alègre | image = | image_size = | caption = | alt = | birth_name = | alias = | birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1968|06|20}} | birth_place = Toulouse, France | death_date = | death_place = | cause = | conviction = Murder | sentence = Life imprisonment | victims = 5+ | beginyear = 1989 | endyear = 1997 | country = France | states = Midi-Pyrénées Île-de-France | apprehended = September 5, 1997 | imprisoned = }}Patrice Alègre (born June 20, 1968, in Toulouse) is a French serial killer who was sentenced to life imprisonment on February 21, 2002, with a minimum term of 22 years for five murders, attempted murder and six rapes. He subsequently obtained dismissal in four cases on July 3, 2008.[1] The Alègre case, properly asking, began in May 2003, after the reopening of several cold cases by the gendarmes of Homicide Cell 31 (the cell was ordered to investigate for possible victims of Alègre from 2000 to 2003 by Michel Roussel). BiographyPatrice Alègre was born on June 20, 1968, in Toulouse to father Roland Alègre, a police officer (he became a part of the CRS when Patrice was six years old), who was often violent and described as violent, and mother Michelle, a hairdresser who often cheated on her husband, sometimes right in front of Patrice's eyes.[2] He grew up in Saint-Geniès-Bellevue as an unwanted child, his mother being 17 at the time of his birth, unlike his brother who was born seven years later. His parents were always in perpetual conflict, with Patrice disgusted with his father, but idolized and adored his mother, despite sometimes being beaten by her. He had a difficult schooling and was dismissed from three secondary schools, before enrolling in the field of general mechanics. He was then entrusted to his grandmother for 14 years in the Izards district of Toulouse. In this neighbourhood, he left school after the fourth grade and fell into delinquency, theft and drug trafficking, finding himself on the street at the age of 13. He would later tell his psychiatrists that he had been sexually assaulted at the time. His father repeatedly tried to erase his offenses.[3] Patrice committed his first sexual assault at age 16.[4] Employed as a barman in the police station cafeteria, then at the buffet of the Gare de Toulouse-Matabiau, he found his prey in the station's district.[5] His first victim, Valerie Tariote, a waitress in the same cafe, was murdered on February 21, 1989.[6] This "urban predator" appraised and seduced women, but when they did not give him attention, he violated, strangled and undressed them, leaving them only their socks on.[7][8] In January 1988 he met Cécile Chambert, an official of bourgeois origin, with whom he had a daughter named Anaïs, born on July 23, 1989.[9] For seven years, they lived in a heated relationship that were alike the scandals Patrice's parents had.[10] Despite his relatively stability of his love life, he was increasingly immersed in crime. On February 16, 1995, after a new marriage dispute, Patrice "broke everything in the room" and "threw the girl against the wall". Cécile got the police involved and they left the apartament. Patrice then moved to his mistress Sylvie Prouilhac, manager of the discothèque Planète Rock in Toulouse, where he was hired as a bouncer, but was soon let off for causing fights that scared away customers.[11] On June 14, 1997, during a mechoui held in Foix, het met Mireille Normand, a 35-year-old woman living alone in a chalet in Verdun. Calling himself Franck, he offered her his services as a handyman in exchange for lodging. On June 19, he killed her. Three weeks later, Mireille's brother, Alain, worried due to not hearing anything from her in a long time, went to the cottage, discovering that it was ransacked. The search undertaken by the gendarmes allowed to find the body of Mireille buried in the garden. The autopsy showed that she had been strangled and raped. Patrice was soon identified by witnesses as the handyman of the cottage. From then on, the hunt for the serial killer began: he went on holidays in Spain, Germany and Belgium, before returning to Paris where he was accommodated by Isabelle Chicherie, a SNCF employee with whom he sympathized during his holiday in Spain. He raped, strangled and burned her body on September 4, 1997. The gendarmes then wiretapped Alègre's relatives, and convinced one of his friends to collaborate with the investigators, telling Patrice to meet at a drop-off point in Châtenay-Malabry, where he was arrested on September 5, 1997. His arrest remained relatively unnoticed since Princess Diana had died a few days earlier.[12] Chronology of the Alègre case
Other viewsThe Alègre affair is considered to be politically butchered. The murders were initially declared suicides before Alègre's arrest. Several witnesses claimed that the killer was protected for a long time by police officers and high magistrate Pierre Roche. Former gendarme Roussel noted that there were 191 unsolved murders in the region. The organization Stop to Forget brought together the victims' families, who continue to demand the truth from the case, referring to these disappearances as "camoflauged as suicides and covered by truncated, distorted and sloppy investigations".[18] Patrice Alègre was only able to be arrested thanks to the complaint of Emillie Espès, who fled after being raped by him on February 22, 1997, when she was 21 years old. The young woman, who was the only surviving victim of Alègre, has since committed suicide. References1. ^"Homicide 31: At the heart of the Alègre case, the former director of the investigation speaks", by Michel Roussel 2. ^[https://www.lexpress.fr/actualite/societe/justice/les-dessous-de-l-affaire-baudis_495280.html The bottom of the Baudis affair] 3. ^Patrice Alègre 4. ^{{citebook|author=Agnès Grossmann|title=Childhood criminals|publisher=Place Des Éditeurs|date=2012|pages=24-31|isbn=|language=French}} 5. ^{{citebook|author=Jean-Pierre Vergès|title=Serial Killers|publisher=Hachette Pratique|date=2007|page=87|isbn=|language=French}} 6. ^{{Citeweb|url=https://www.ladepeche.fr/article/2002/02/06/397352-le-calvaire-des-victimes.html|title=The plight of victims|author=Jean Cohadon|date=February 6, 2002|publisher=La Dépêche}} 7. ^{{Citeweb|url=http://www.lexpress.fr/actualite/societe/justice/l-homme-qui-aimait-tuer-les-femmes_494034.html|title=The man who loved to kill women|author=Marie Huret|date=February 7, 2002|publisher=L'Express|language=French}} 8. ^{{Citeweb|url=http://www.leparisien.fr/faits-divers/il-reperait-ses-proies-a-la-gare-de-toulouse-07-12-2001-2002640317.php|title=He spotted his prey on the Toulouse train station|date=7 December 2001|publisher=Le Parisien|language=French}} 9. ^{{Citeweb|url=http://www.liberation.fr/societe/2002/02/12/sept-ans-de-malheur-aupres-de-lui_393447|title="Seven years of bad luck for him"|author=Patricia Tourancheau|date=February 12, 2002|publisher=liberation.fr|language=French}} 10. ^{{citebook|author=Jean-Pierre Vergès|title=Serial Killers|publisher=Hachette Pratique|date=2007|page=127|language=French}} 11. ^{{citebook|author=Agnès Grossmann|title=Childhood criminals|publisher=Place Des Éditeurs|date=2012|page=57|language=French}} 12. ^1 {{citebook|author=Guillaume R. Erner|title=Patrice Alègre accused of a sixth murder|publisher=La Découverte|date=2006|page=102|language=French}} 13. ^{{Citeweb|url=http://www.liberation.fr/societe/2002/02/11/cinq-meurtres-et-toute-une-vie-de-violence_393268|title=Five murders and a whole life of violence|author=Patricia Tourancheau|date=February 11, 2002|publisher=liberation.fr|language=French}} 14. ^Gilles Souillès, "The Alègre case, the murdered truth", hugodoc editor 15. ^Emission [//fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faites_entrer_l%27accus%C3%A9 Get the accused] Patrice Alègre, blod and rumor, [//fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/France_2 France 2], 18/01/2015 at 22h40 16. ^Alègre case: Fanny and Patricia condemned for slanderous denunciation, [//fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/TF1 TF1] 17. ^{{citebook|author=Georges Fenech|title=Recidivist criminals, can we let them out?|publisher=Archipel|date=2009|page=54|language=French}} 18. ^"The 37 'forgotten' of the Alègre case" Article by Aziz Zemouri published March 10, 2006 in [//fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Le_Figaro Le Figaro] See alsoBibliography
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10 : 1968 births|Living people|French people convicted of murder|French rapists|French serial killers|Male serial killers|Murder in France|People convicted of murder by France|People from Toulouse|Prisoners sentenced to life imprisonment by France |
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