“Too young”, opposes the president to a group of children who came to attend the hearing.
After all, it's the big bad wolf she's judging today.
At the helm, however, neither big ears nor big teeth.
The wolf has two graying heads, orthopedic shoes and small round glasses.
Michel D. and Perrine R., alias “Mon Gros Loup” as they called themselves in 2004 to threaten the State, are responding to bomb blackmail on SNCF voices, facts that are twenty years old.
But at the helm, Michel D. shows his fangs.
For him too, he said, the president's reading of the nine long threatening letters he sent in 2004 to the President of the Republic was “painful”.
Dozing on the dock, Michel D., 77, steps up to the stand and apologizes "for all this fuss": he can't do anything about it, he is "a born inventor".
“Easy” then according to him, twenty years ago, to demand 6 million euros from the police force.
It was also easy to convince his former sales representative, Perrine R., now aged 61, to join his false terrorist cell, which he had called AZF, and to choose to dialogue with the Minister of the Interior at the time, Nicolas Sarkozy, via the Libération classified ads under the pseudonyms “Mon Gros Loup” for AZF, and “Suzy” for the Interior.
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