After the time of horror comes the time of investigation. And with it the persistence of nightmares and questions. Thursday, on the eleventh day of the trial for the attacks of November 13, 2015, the court heard from a renowned expert, Bertrand Ludes, director of the Paris Forensic Institute (IML). The opportunity to evoke one of the most difficult moments of legal proceedings: the moment when the need to base the investigation on the study of bodies collides with the pain of loved ones. Thursday, Me Jean Reinhart, lawyer of the association 13onze15 Fraternité Vérité and 114 civil parties, uncle of a victim of the Bataclan, calmly launched to Professor Ludes: "
Between the world which is yours and that of families, there is has an extremely heavy gap.
"
Read also
At the trial of November 13, the bravery of two police officers at the Bataclan
The witness's long hearing clearly illustrated this gap.
On the one hand, the essential world of forensic technology which bears witness - as much as the stories heard in recent days - to the deadly will of Islamist terrorists.
"
Description
This article is for subscribers only.
You have 73% left to discover.
To cultivate one's freedom is to cultivate one's curiosity.
Subscription without obligation
1 € THE FIRST MONTH
Already subscribed?
Log in