the profile of the suspect becomes clearer

the profile of the suspect becomes clearer

Hatred against the police, a fan of brawls, “ready to spin at any moment”… A few days after Matisse’s murder, we know more about the main suspect.

Born in 2009 in Kabul, Afghanistan, the young man suspected of the murder of Matisse in Châteauroux (Indre) this weekend presents a profile that is worrying to say the least. Although he was already known to be involved in at least two cases of violent theft, which occurred at the end of February and the weekend of April 20, Le Figaro paints this Tuesday the portrait of this 15-year-old teenager now indicted for murder in the Matisse affair.

Already placed under judicial supervision after the ambush in which he allegedly participated a week before Matisse’s death, “the only safety measure provided for by the Code of Criminal Justice for Minors given his age, with no previous conviction”, had moreover on this subject insisted the prosecutor in a previous press release, the teenager has lived for several years in the Saint-Denis district of Châteauroux, with his parents and his four brothers and sisters. Before the tragedy, the family home was already well known to the local police, who were regularly called there by the mother when the teenager’s father came home too drunk.

At least four new complaints filed against him since Matisse’s death

Law enforcement that the young man does not hold in his heart. When they came to the family’s home, it was not uncommon for the teenager to verbally attack the police, ordering them to “get out of the way”, indicates a source at Figaro. Hostility clearly displayed on his social networks via videos showing police officers outside his home and to which the teenager adds anti-police words.

In addition to his hatred of police officers, fighting is also one of the major recurring themes of his posts. “I’m going to beat their heads son, there’s nothing to stop me,” we can hear in one of the videos in which the young man portrays himself like a boxer in the ring, throwing punches in the empty. “He’s a ‘random’ person, we can’t predict his actions. We can laugh with him and an hour later he’s totally different,” confides to Figaro an acquaintance of the teenager who also describes him as “crazy” and affirms that he is “ready to spin at any moment”. According to him, the young man would tend to feel easily humiliated. Very brawling, he could be involved in other affairs, still notes Le Figaro according to whom no less than four new complaints have already been filed against him since Matisse’s death.

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