The police unions, whose rally last week had turned to the trial in lax justice, find Thursday Eric Dupond-Moretti for a Beauvau of security.

In particular, they demand greater severity against police attackers.

After the boos, the hushed lounges.

The police unions meet on Thursday the Keeper of the Seals Eric Dupond-Moretti for a security Beauvau devoted to relations with the judicial authority.

Last week, the gathering of police officers had turned to the lax trial of justice and the minister had been booed copiously by the demonstrators.

On the side of the police as magistrates, the points of tension are numerous. 

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"Justice poses a problem for us today in relation to its functioning, its decisions and the means it can have. We must give strong signals", summarizes at the microphone of Europe 1 Fabien Vanhemelryck, secretary general of Alliance . 

Several measures announced by Prime Minister Jean Castex after the murder of Brigadier Eric Masson in Avignon have already been voted on by the deputies: the extension to 30 years of the security measure for those sentenced to life imprisonment for a crime on a policeman or a gendarme, the limitation of the reductions of sentence for the attackers of the police forces and the end of reminders of the law.

Measures still insufficient according to the unions, which also demand minimum sentences for these same aggressors. 

The quality of criminal proceedings "decreases", denounce the magistrates

Opposite, the magistrates also address criticisms to the police.

They denounce in particular the fact that the quality of criminal proceedings has declined in recent years.

"There are units in the field who are called upon to carry out proceedings and who have more difficulty in carrying out an investigation, writing up reports or making reports to the public prosecutor or to the examining magistrate. ", explains Sarah Massoud, national secretary of the magistrate's union. 

But for Isabelle Trouslard, national secretary of Synergie-Officiers, if the quality of procedures is declining, it is because it becomes more and more cumbersome.

"At the beginning of the 1990s, a police custody record was ten lines long, today it is two pages long. The procedure becomes completely focused on form to the detriment of substance."

The subject will be addressed during the Beauvau de la sécurité by the police unions, who would like to see the criminal procedure simplified. The ministers, them, "will insist on the daily relationship between the police and the justice", indicates the entourage of Gerald Darmanin.