As expected, Maître Seban, representing the families of Virginie Bluzet, Vanessa Thiellon, Carole Soltysiaket and Nathalie Maire, young women murdered in Saône-et-Loire in the 1980s and 1990s, was received this morning by the prosecutor, Patrice. Guigon. .
Four unsolved cases whose only appeal today is a request for foreclosure at the “Cold Case” center in Nanterre.
But faced with the slow pace of these transfers and hoping to influence a quick decision, two associations, “Christelle” de Blanzy with its president, Marie-Rose Blétry and “The truth for Anthony” gathered on the steps of the courthouse. of Chalon-sur-Saône, this Friday morning.
The “Christelle” association wanted to be associated with the approach of Anthony Lambert’s family who, in another context, has been waiting for almost 6 months for us to give him an investigating judge to investigate the misconduct that led to Anthony’s death.
“Justice must move” was the phrase within the two associations.
When Master Seban left, the faces of the association members quickly darkened. “That’s not what we hoped for, we are always against administrative reasons, so I got a little angry because justice doesn’t respect families,” says the lawyer.
The prosecutor of Chalon and the “Cold Case” center in Nanterre agreed to transfer the files, “but, adds Maître Seban doubtfully, an email is missing”.
Then we leave for a ride, in this period the months pass, the practices grow old and the unsolved cases take dust.
Three judges have succeeded in the Anthony case, “a new one has just been appointed but still for administrative reasons the decisions are slow in coming”, the lawyer specifies. “There is still a boy who died of cold! He adds.
The associations and master Seban do not intend to stick to these incomplete explanations. “We will return next month to the court of Chalon.”
JB