Murders in : the suspect went to the gendarmerie

Murders in : the suspect went to the gendarmerie
Murders in Dunkirk: the suspect went to the gendarmerie

Drama in

What we know about the quintuple murder near

A man opened fire on five people this Saturday in less than two hours in the north of the country before going to the police.

Published today at 8:48 a.m.

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Five gunshot deaths, including migrants: a man opened fire on Saturday in the north of France, for reasons that are still unclear, before surrendering, the gendarmerie and prefecture said. We summarize the situation for you in four points.

Series of shots

The bloody series began in Wormhout (North), in Flanders between and Dunkirk, where a 29-year-old man was killed on Saturday around 3:15 p.m. by several gunshots, “in front of his home”, indicates the parquet.

The gendarmerie was deployed on the access road to the victim’s home, a farm away from the village. The victim managed a road transport company according to the Wormhout town hall.

“He was a business manager with around thirty employees” and a “young dad,” said the mayor without label of Wormhout David Calcoen, emphasizing the “immeasurable pain” of those close to him.

Then around 4:00 p.m., two security agents aged 33 and 37 who were patrolling their workplace were in turn killed by several gunshots in the outskirts of Loon-Plage in the direction of Dunkirk, specifies the prosecution .

The events took place in an industrial port zone where oil and chemical installations are scattered across vast grassy areas crossed by deserted roads.

A few minutes later, still on the outskirts of Loon-Plage, almost five kilometers further, two last men, who “could be of Iranian nationality aged 19 and 30” were also killed by bullets, indicates the prosecution.

According to the prefecture and the police, they are two migrants.

The profile of the alleged killer

The man who went to the gendarmerie on Saturday, accusing himself of five murders committed in the afternoon around Dunkirk, was not known to the police, and his motive remained unclear the day after the events.

The alleged killer, aged 22, was taken into police custody after presenting himself to the gendarmerie in Ghyvelde (North) on Saturday around 5:20 p.m., two hours after the first murder.

He “is unknown to the police services and the judicial authority”, and “several firearms were found in his car”, Dunkirk public prosecutor Charlotte Huet said in a press release on Sunday.

The pattern

The investigation was opened for “murders preceded, accompanied or followed by another crime” and “acquisition, possession, carrying and transport of category A and B weapons”, acts punishable by life imprisonment.

It was entrusted to the organized and specialized crime division (DCOS) of the interdepartmental service of the judicial police of the North (SIPJ 59), again according to the press release.

The prosecutor stressed that “numerous investigations are underway” in particular to “clarify the reasons which led the accused to commit these crimes”.

According to a source close to the case, among the avenues considered, there could have been a professional dispute between the alleged shooter and the companies in which the first three victims worked.

Tribute series

“There is astonishment within the city,” he added, hoping that “justice will quickly have elements to be able to unravel these facts which are unthinkable”.

Tributes flourished on Facebook to the two thirty-somethings, one known for having ensured the security of festive events at the Dunkirk carnival and the other for his voluntary commitment within the Loon-Plage club.

In Loon-Plage, red roses were placed at the place where the two migrants were killed, an embankment running along the railway line a few dozen meters from a camp made up of a few scattered tents. The police deployed in large numbers on Saturday evening had left the scene on Sunday.

“We do not understand at all why the two exiles were targeted,” Salomé Bahri, coordinator of the migrant aid association Utopia 56 in Grande-Synthe, near Dunkirk, told AFP. She deplored that “nothing was planned” for the other occupants of the camp: “neither psychological support nor shelter”, while “many witnessed the facts”.

The President (LR) of Hauts-de-France Xavier Bertrand deplored a “terrible tragedy” on people who died tragically.

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AFP/Myrtille Wendling

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