He is one of the key figures in the prosecution in the disappearance of the Tarn nurse.
The former fellow prisoner of Cédric Jubillar, indicted for almost a year for the murder of his wife, spoke for the first time in an interview with
Parisian
.
The man who presents himself as a confidant of the accused, claims to have spoken to the gendarmes only so that “
the truth
comes out ”.
Read alsoThe Jubillar affair, between media passion and judicial quagmire
This 37-year-old Corsican nicknamed “Marco” certifies to our colleagues that he is “
not a snitch who would have monetized his information in return for I don’t know what early release and who would have acted in his personal interest.
However, according to our information, the justice system chose to release this particularly dangerous detainee the day after his hearing by the investigators, even though it had refused to do so ten days earlier.
But the person concerned claims to have “
collaborated with the justice system in the hope that the truth will come out, and that Delphine's children will one day know where their mother is.
(...)
I would simply have liked the same thing to be done for me if my mother had disappeared.
“He claims to have obtained nothing in exchange for his confidences”
only trouble
“.
“He swears against his son
”
At the Toulouse Seysses remand center, where the two detainees were placed in solitary confinement in two neighboring cells, "Marco" says he heard Cédric Jubillar talk about his case several times and presents him as an egocentric man: "
He talks a lot about him and his behavior does not please me at all.
His wife who disappeared, he calls her all the time 'the other', as if she had no first name.
Still according to his words, the plasterer painter would hold harsh words with regard to his children: “
I never feel the love of a father.
On the contrary, he swears at his son and says that he must have been brainwashed by the people who take care of him.
»
On the disappearance of the mother, this witness affirms that Cédric Jubillar would have asked him “
for details on the burial of corpses
”.
And to add: “
He was worried about the possibility that a buried body would end up being discovered because of the weather or the animals.
"Marco" would then have suggested to him to direct the suspicions on the wife of Delphine's lover.
“
I tell him that if the body is discovered near their home, with traces of DNA and blood that we could pick up in their garbage cans, it will necessarily be laundered.
»
A promise of money?
At the beginning of October, Cédric Jubillar would have given him "
letters with coded messages to deliver to him in person
"
.
“
Certainly, the messages are slipped into an envelope stamped in his name, but this envelope is not closed.
It's very clear: Cédric asks me as a favor to go see her.
“Marco” evokes here the new companion of Cédric, Séverine L., who would have had information on the place where the body of Delphine is buried.
In exchange for his help, Cédric would have promised him a financial reward after the sale of the family home in Cagnac-les-Mines.
Read alsoCédric Jubillar denies the murder of his wife in the face of an ex-convict accusing him of having confessed
More than six months after the supposed revelations of "Marco" to the gendarmes, the investigation has not progressed.
The track of the burned farm near Cagnac-les-Mines did not give anything and Delphine's body is still not found, which, in the eyes of the defendant's defense, proves that the confidences of "Marco" are not not to be taken seriously."
“
They defend Cédric Jubillar, it is normal for them to say that,
reacts the person concerned.
I only repeated what I heard from Cédric.
(...) I gave the investigators details that I could not invent and which were not known to the public at the time of my speaking to them.
»