Murder of Christelle Bancourt

Last updated
Christian Marletta affair
Location Marseille
DateJune 1982 – March 1985
Attack type
Kidnapping, rape, aggravated murder

Christian Marletta was accused of rape, murder and dismemberment of Christelle Bancourt, [1] a twelve-year-old girl, in Marseille. Marletta was convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment in 1985. [2] He was released in 2006.

Contents

Disappearance

Christelle Bancourt had gone missing at around 6:20 pm on June 10, 1982 while she was close to the "Le Bois Fleuri" social services agency while she was going to the dentist. No one saw or heard anything.

Bancourt murdered after being kidnapped

Marletta had said that he went to the Bois Fleuri foyer, where he saw Christelle. Then, he said, he came back some time later and saw the girl again. Christian Marletta, who knew her, offered to bring her home and a few minutes later they had a slight accident, during which Christelle fell and passed out.

Christian Marletta brings Christelle home to take care of her. He puts her on her bed and Christelle looks at him strangely because she knows she shouldn't be there. Then seized with a feeling of panic, Christian Marletta, according to his confession, would have strangled Christelle until she was no longer breathing. He then allegedly took her to the bathroom to undress her, then decided to skin her body with knives and a chopper. On the other hand, Christian Marletta denies the rape, when the police tell him that Christelle has been raped.

Christian Marletta says at the same time that he left the garbage bags in the parking lot of a supermarket and that the other garbage bags were thrown into the sea at Pointe Rouge, south of Marseille. The police searched the Bay for hours, but found nothing.

Investigation

In the meantime, a week after Christelle's disappearance, a human trunk is discovered in a garbage bag in the parking lot of the Carrefour le Merlan hypermarket, about ten kilometers from the "Le Bois Fleuri" home. The autopsy shows that the trunk would belong to a girl aged 8 to 10 years: even if Christelle was 12 years old, she was younger than her age. Moreover, the young girl would have been raped and sodomized and the butchering allows to affirm that it is a professional who carried out this work.

The police then go to seek out suspect Christian Marletta. After being questioned, he denies being responsible for Christelle's disappearance. The police then take him to the morgue to confront him with Christelle's body Back at the Police Station, the police presented him with the garbage bags in which Christelle's trunk was discovered. Christian Marletta admits that these trash bags belong to him and confesses to having murdered Christelle.

Discovery of body and aftermath

In July 1982, an arm, a leg as well as a head were found near Pointe Rouge and after examination the head turned out to be that of Christelle Bancourt. The autopsy performed on June 17, 1982 on the other members of Christelle's body revealed that she was killed no later than 36 hours before the discovery of the body (on June 15, 1982) and no earlier than 4 days before (on June 13, 1982). For the defense lawyers, if Christelle was killed between June 13 and June 15, 1982, that exonerates Marletta since the latter was in Lot 3.

During the investigation, the police learned that Christian Marletta was accused in 1980 of having practiced sexual touching on Christelle's twin sister, Chantal. At the time, the director of the home did not believe Chantal and there was no investigation. However, according to Chantal, Christelle was undoubtedly murdered because Christian Marletta wanted revenge for this accusation.

Christian Marletta is imprisoned in the Baumettes prison after having repeated his confessions twice before the Public Prosecutor and the Examining Magistrate. In prison, Christian Marletta receives a visit from several psychiatric experts, to whom he tells several versions. He first says that he did not kill Christelle and that he discovered her body in front of her door. Panicked, he would have cut up the body before throwing the remains in Pointe Rouge and in the supermarket parking lot. In another version given to the examining magistrate on July 5, he said he received a phone call ordering him to throw away the body parts, otherwise his wife and son would have serious problems. Its lawyers emphasize the absence of reconstitution and the rejection of several requests for documents.

The Trial

On March 12, 1985, the trial of Christian Marletta began. This one seems foreign to the file and despite the testimony of his friends and his family, who make him a laudatory portrait, he does not convince anyone when he declares not to have killed Christelle. Defense lawyers argue that Marletta's apartment was clean when the police searched it: if Christian Marletta had killed Christelle, splashes of blood would have been found on the wall or on the floor while he was not. there weren't any. Apart from a flap of skin found in the shower, there is no material evidence to accuse Christian Marletta.

Marletta declares that he no longer knew what he was doing and that he broke down in the face of pressure from the police, especially when he was taken to the morgue to face Christelle's corpse. In addition, for the police Marletta is guilty, because only the murderer knew the exact location of the garbage bags and the latter described the place where the human remains were.

Prison time and aftermath

Marletta was finally sentenced to life imprisonment on March 15, 1985 by the Aix-en-Provence Assize Court, [3] and was imprisoned in Arles prison, Christian Marletta asks for a review of his trial with the help of Gilbert Collard. An association was formed in its favor, including the Human Rights Committee of Châteauroux, which provides its support. His cassation appeal was dismissed on October 30, 1985.

Christian Marletta was released from prison in 2006, and is now leading a new life with his partner whom he met in prison

TV documentary

On a documentary titled Enter the accused, that was presented by Christophe Hondelatte, in January 2008 and September 2009. [4] Christian Marletta had written to Christophe Hondelatte to ask him to renounce the broadcast of the program considering it defamatory and harmful to his reintegration on his release from prison. The program noting both the elements that overwhelm Christian Marletta and the gray areas pointed out by the defense and other unusual methods used by the Marseille police at the time, his request was not heard.

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Court of Cassation (France)</span> Highest judicial court in France

The Court of Cassation is the supreme court for civil and criminal cases in France. It is one of the country's four apex courts, along with the Council of State, the Constitutional Council and the Jurisdictional Disputes Tribunal.

In France, a cour d'assises, or Court of Assizes or Assize Court, is a criminal trial court with original and appellate limited jurisdiction to hear cases involving defendants accused of felonies, meaning crimes as defined in French law. It is the only French court that uses a jury trial.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Christian Vanneste</span> French politician

Christian Vanneste is a French politician. He served two terms as a deputy in the French Parliament (2002-2012), representing the Union for a Popular Movement (UMP).

The Seznec Affair was a controversial French court case of 1923–1924.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Palais de la Cité</span> Palace in Paris, France

The Palais de la Cité, located on the Île de la Cité in the Seine River in the centre of Paris, is a major historic building that was the residence of the Kings of France from the sixth century until the 14th century, and has been the center of the French justice system ever since, thus often referred to as the Palais de Justice. From the 14th century until the French Revolution, it was the headquarters of the Parlement of Paris. During the Revolution it served as a courthouse and prison, where Marie Antoinette and other prisoners were held and tried by the Revolutionary Tribunal. Since the early 19th century, it has been the seat of the Tribunal de grande instance de Paris, the Court of Appeal of Paris, and the Court of Cassation. The first of these moved to another Parisian location in 2018, while the other two jurisdictions remain located in the Palais de la Cité as of 2022.

Gilberto Antonio Chamba Jaramillo is an Ecuadorian serial killer, convicted of murdering nine people in Ecuador and Spain.

Patrick Tissier is a French serial killer and rapist who was convicted of killing three people from 1971 to 1993 in the southern regions of France. His case, along with that of Christian Van Geloven, led to a reform in the penal code in regard to the treatment of child murderers.

Louis Poirson, nicknamed "Rambo", is a French rapist and serial killer.

Vincenzo Aiutino is a French serial killer popularly known as "the man with fifty affairs". Convicted of three murders in the Longwy commune, he was sentenced to life imprisonment on 6 March 1998, along with 18 years of preventive detention without parole.

Pierre Fernand Bodein is a French criminal and spree killer who, since 1969, has alternated stays between psychiatric hospitals and prisons. Nicknamed "Pierrot le fou" meaning "Pierre the fool", his criminal record includes seven convictions, three of which are murders, including violent rapes. He is the 11th child of a family of 16 children, descending from a Yenish community.

Marcel Henri Barbeault is a French serial killer who murdered eight people in Nogent-sur-Oise in the 1970s. He is responsible for the murder of seven women and one man. Because his crimes were always in the evening or early in the morning, he was given the nickname The Shadow Killer.

Jacquy Haddouche was a French serial killer. He was convicted of three murders committed between 1992 and 2002, and was sentenced to life imprisonment with a 22-year lock-in period.

Alfredo Stranieri, known as the "Classified Ads Killer", is an Italian-born French criminal and serial killer, who met his victims through classified ads in which he presented himself as a potential buyer of properties or used cars.

Nikolai Borisovich Fefilov, known as The Urals Strangler, was a Soviet serial killer. Between 1982 and 1988, he killed seven women and girls in Sverdlovsk, with six of the murders involving rape.

Patrick Trémeau is a French serial rapist, active in the 11th and 20th arrondissements of Paris during the 1990s. Nicknamed The Parking Rapist, he prowled mainly at night, attacking women in underground car parks under the threat of a knife, before raping them.

Mamadou Traoré, known as The Bare-Handed Killer, is a Senegalese-born French serial rapist and murderer, responsible for assaulting at least six women, killing two of them, between April and October 1996.

Luc Tangorre, known as the Marseille Southern Districts Rapist, is a French serial rapist whose crimes were highly publicized in France. He has been sentenced twice, the first time in 1983, to 15 years imprisonment for nine sexual assaults and rapes committed in Marseille.

Christian Van Geloven was a Dutch kidnapper, rapist and double murderer, responsible for the murders of two young French girls on October 19, 1991, in Elne, Pyrénées-Orientales. For his crimes, he was sentenced to life imprisonment with 30 years of preventive detention on March 25, 1994, for the two killings, which he served until his cancer-related death in prison.

Roland Cazaux, known as The Cat, is a French serial rapist.

Paul Anselin was a French military officer and politician who served as mayor of Ploërmel from 1977 to 2008.

References

  1. "Châteauroux : conférence de presse Maître Collard - affaire Marletta - Vidéo Dailymotion". Dailymotion. 2010-10-25. Retrieved 2021-10-31.
  2. Cour de Cassation, Chambre criminelle, du 30 octobre 1985, 85-92.109, Publié au bulletin , retrieved 2021-10-31
  3. "Cour de Cassation, Chambre criminelle, du 30 octobre 1985, 85-92.109, Publié au bulletin | Legifrance". archive.wikiwix.com. Retrieved 2021-10-31.
  4. Cour de Cassation, Chambre criminelle, du 30 octobre 1985, 85-92.109, Publié au bulletin , retrieved 2021-10-31