The utility shouldn't do that.
This is what
Christophe Hondelatte
thought when he discovered the cast of guests of
Léa Salamé
on Saturday evening in
“Quelle époque!
»
.
During the program, the journalist gave the floor, for just under twenty minutes, to
Charles Sobhra
j, known as "Le Serpent", who publishes his memoirs, co-signed with journalist Jean-Charles Deniau, accompanied by his lawyer Isabelle Coutant-Peyre, also on set.
The 78-year-old man was convicted of murders in Asia in the 1970s and imprisoned in Nepal for the past two decades before being released in December on health grounds.
“
Me, I refused to do that
”, explains Christophe Hondelatte Monday evening on Twitter.
"
We cannot receive a serial killer, and make him a 'star'
", estimates the specialist in various facts.
“
And do you know where I got this moral from?
From France 2, and from my appearance in “Fait Enter l’Accusé
”, he quips again.
Read also "I am not a serial killer and I will prove it": the criminal Charles Sobhraj said "the Snake" speaks exclusively in "7 to 8"
In another message, he recalls, through an excerpt from Charles Sobhraj's Wikipedia page, why the man was sentenced by the courts.
“
He invited the young hippie to a nightclub on Pattaya beach and put a sedative in her coffee.
With his accomplice, he then carried her to the beach, dressed her in a bikini and then strangled her
, ”we can read.
In defense of Léa Salamé, the journalist and presenter is not the only Frenchwoman to have questioned the one who inspired the Netflix series with Tahar Rahim.
Sunday February 5, Audrey Crespo-Mara devoted the “portrait of the week” of “Seven to eight” on TF1 to Charles Sobhraj.
Eleven minutes of interview.