They married late, in 2013. Retirement was approaching. The couple then decided to get married for better and worse. Exactly, the latter made its appearance when alcohol consumption took precedence over the essential.
In hearing at the Thionville court, President Lambert evokes a kettle thrown at the head of the husband. Then the testimony of a neighbor who claims that Madame is beating her husband.
Finally, there is the end of the day on June 15. Again, it is a question of beer, and this time of a bottle thrown on the ground, of an improvised remote control as a ready-made “weapon” to hit the trembling husband, followed for his addiction to hops.
For sure, facing the judicial institution shakes them. Both reconsider their depositions. Which has the gift of annoying the president. Their speeches are jerky, clumsy. Their silences as answers to the questions put exasperate. Sometimes each charges the other, sometimes they clear their behavior often associated with violence on a daily basis, to varying degrees.
There was no ITT issued by a physician. The two sixties continue their journey together, hobbling. The court considered that there was no reason to condemn Madame. So relax, and return to Vitry-sur-Orne.
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