• This Tuesday, Cédric Jubillar's lawyers will appeal against his detention after his indictment for the murder of his wife Delphine.

  • Steam in the car, cries heard by neighbors… They want to deflate each of the clues that led the investigators to the husband.

  • This hearing comes after the revelation that Cédric Jubillar had threatened to kill his wife a few weeks before his disappearance and that his own mother, after a grueling custody, was able to doubt his innocence.

" She gets on my nerves.

I'm going to kill her, I'm going to bury her and no one will find her ”.

Here is what Cédric Jubillar would have said one autumn morning, at the end of October-beginning of November, to his mother, in a parking lot.

According to the revelations made by

Le Parisien

 this Sunday evening, Nadine F. confirmed during her police custody that this sentence had indeed been pronounced by her son.

And, stunned by the evidence presented to her by investigators, she even begged him to confess the truth during a confrontation.

Without success.

Cédric Jubillar, indicted and imprisoned on June 18 for "murder of a spouse", still claims his innocence.

This Tuesday, his lawyers will request his release during a hearing before the investigating chamber of the Toulouse Court of Appeal.

"No really conclusive element", according to the defense

And this death threat, pronounced a few weeks before Delphine Jubillar disappears without a trace, will not fail to fuel the debates.

"He was able to pronounce a cookie-cutter sentence, but what interests us is not what he said but what he did", explains to

20 Minutes

Alexandre Martin who, with Jean- Baptiste Alary and Emmanuelle Franck, defend the 33-year-old drywaller.

"We are going to demonstrate that with a very objective and professional look at the case, none of the elements put forward is really conclusive," adds the defense.

It intends in particular to return point by point to the “serious and concordant elements” delivered by the public prosecutor of Toulouse on June 18, just after the indictment of Cédric Jubillar. Among them, “the cries of distress of a woman” heard by two neighbors - a mother and her daughter - at 11:07 pm, the evening of the disappearance. "These cries were not heard by neighbors much closer and from which it appears from the depositions that they were well awake at that time", underlines Alexandre Martin. The mist on the window of Delphine's car observed by the gendarmes on their arrival at the Jubillar home around 4:50 am? "Fog in a car with the window left open is a non-argument," retorts Alexandre Martin.

It also seems that Cédric Jubillar turned off his cell phone during the famous night, which he never did.

"His cell phone simply did not emit any activation sign from the time he said he went to bed, around 11 pm, until he woke up around 4 am [3h54 according to the prosecution]", defuses the lawyer.

As for the speed with which the husband warned the gendarmes that morning, which calls out to the investigators, in the context of a couple in the process of separation.

"We will produce the transcript of exchanges which show a real concern," announces the defense.

Delphine Jubillar, a 33-year-old nurse, mother of two, vanished from her home in Cagnac-les-Mines, in the Tarn, on the night of December 15 to 16, 2020. The trail of spousal homicide is preferred by investigators.

Society

Delphine Jubillar case: Washing machine, pedometer… The clues which led the gendarmes to suspect the husband of the missing nurse

Miscellaneous

Disappearance in the Tarn: Cédric Jubillar indicted and imprisoned in the investigation into the murder of his wife Delphine

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  • Justice

  • Disappearance

  • Jubillar case

  • Society