While the investigation around the kidnapping of little Mia continues, investigators are interested in a new protagonist, Rémy Daillet-Wiedemann.

This 55-year-old Frenchman and former member of the Modem, today known for his conspiratorial theses, readily insurrectionary, is suspected of having influenced the kidnappers.

This is a new twist in the investigation around the kidnapping of little Mia.

While the girl and her mother, who had ordered her kidnapping, were found in Switzerland on Sunday, the five alleged perpetrators of the kidnapping were indicted in Nancy.

But now, another man is at the heart of the investigations.

Rémy Daillet-Wiedemann, a 55-year-old Frenchman and former political figure in Haute-Garonne, is suspected of having influenced, or even financed, the kidnappers.

And on the web, the latter has been sharing his conspiracy theses for several years. 

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The kidnapping of Mia, a crazy epic conceived "like a military operation"

"I decided to take power in France, to restore this country", proclaims the fifty-something in one of his videos posted on the internet.

Dark suit on a black background, he sets out his plan for "a peaceful and popular coup".

Never very far from conspiracy, against 5G, for France's exit from Europe, he presents himself as a man of decisions. 

"He was very mythomaniac"

It is also through politics that it all started for Rémy Daillet-Wiedemann.

In the 2000s, he thus joined the management of Modem in Haute-Garonne.

Contacted by Europe 1, the deputy Jean-Luc Lagleize remembers "a boy who spoke easily", but who was also "very mythomaniac", who "very wanted to be brilliant". 

"I know that he intended to run for the national presidency of the Modem. And to try to annoy François Bayrou, he had registered a national council by trying to blackmail. It was in his madness", tells again the local elected. 

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Too extreme, too megalomaniac, Rémy Daillet-Wiedemann ends up being excluded from the party.

But he continues his fight on social networks and develops a conspiratorial proselytism.

One of his fights: to put an end, he says, to the abusive placement of children.

Was it in this context that he was involved in the kidnapping of Mia?

His name would in any case be cited by several of the respondents.