His file is in the hands of the magistrates at the Paris prosecutor's office "for assessment".
Saturday, at 2 a.m., a young lawyer, aged 27, attached to a major Franco-American firm specializing in business law, Place Vendôme (Ie), was placed in police custody.
Originally, the lawyer, who lives in the 18th arrondissement, rode a bicycle, boulevard de Clichy (18th), zigzagging.
The police officers of the BAC (anti-crime brigade) at night from the 18th century police station were intrigued by its upheavals.
So they decided to control him.
The face-to-face quickly degenerated.
The tone is raised.
The lawyer, drunk, allegedly insulted the police, calling them "son of p...".
The cyclist was therefore brought back to the 11th century police station for "driving under the influence of alcohol, insults and intentional violence against a person holding public authority (PDAP)".
Placed in police custody, in a drunk tank, he was subjected to the breathalyzer.
Which turned out to be positive, at a rate of 0.54 g per liter of exhaled air.
Police violence or rebellion?
For his part, the lawyer filed a complaint, denouncing police violence.
The arrest would have been tough.
The doctor from the medico-judicial unit granted him three days of ITT (temporary total interruption) for “multiple dermabrasions” and “sprained left thumb”.
The Paris prosecutor's office has opened an investigation into the head of violence by a person holding public authority in a meeting.
The police denounce them, a rebellion and lodged a complaint for "aggravated violence on PDAP and driving under the influence of the alcoholic state".
The lawyer reportedly headbutted one of the officials and bit his hand.
During the hearings, the lawyer denied the rebellion and the outrages, however evoking "provocative remarks".
His police custody was lifted "without prosecution at this stage".
The investigation was closed and forwarded to the prosecution.
“I let justice take its course”, comments the lawyer, who believes that “this case has absolutely nothing to do with the exercise of my profession”.