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DNA

DNA tests offer hope in 1984 French murder

AFP
AFP - [email protected]
DNA tests offer hope in 1984 French murder
Photo: Christian Guthier

French authorities Wednesday ordered new DNA tests in the hope of finding fresh evidence in the 28-year-old murder of a little boy that remains one of the country's most long-running unsolved mysteries.

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The killing of four-year-old Gregory Villemin – who was found tied up and drowned in the Vologne river in eastern France in October 1984 – sparked a long and convoluted legal saga that transfixed France for years.

Dijon prosecutor general Jean-Marie Beney said a court had agreed to a request from Gregory's parents – Christine and Jean-Marie Villemin – for new DNA tests to be conducted on the boy's clothing and shoes.

"The court granted the parents' request, supported by the public prosecutor, regarding complementary tests to search for DNA on (Gregory's) clothing" and his shoes, Beney told a press conference.

"The tests will be launched fairly quickly, in the coming weeks," he said, adding the tests were "fairly long and complicated" and would probably involve laser microdissection.

The death of "Little Gregory," as he became known, led to one of France's most notorious post-war murder mysteries, as police sought to untangle a web of family hatreds and local jealousies.

A day after Gregory's body was found, a letter arrived at the home of the child's parents -- who had been receiving anonymous hate mail since 1981 – claiming responsibility for the murder and calling it "revenge".

Bernard Laroche, a cousin of the child's father, was charged with the murder a month after the boy's death, based on evidence given by a teenage sister-in-law.

He was released after she withdrew her claims, only to be shot dead in March 1985 by Jean-Marie Villemin, who spent two and a half years in prison for the crime.

Christine Villemin was herself charged with the murder in 1985. But she was finally cleared eight years later and all charges against her dropped.

The case was wrapped up in 2001 after failing to identify either Gregory's murderer or the sender of the letters, but reopened in 2010 with the hope that new forensic techniques could shed light on the case.

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