After the feminicide which occurred in Hayange in Moselle, the government ordered a report at the end of May from the inspection mission which unveiled it on Friday.

In this "final" report, the General Inspectorate of Justice and the General Inspectorate of Administration consider "that no professional misconduct can be noted in the decisions taken before the murder, all stakeholders having mobilized normally within the scope of their competence ”.

This is the second report on a feminicide in the space of a month, after the one on the tragedy that occurred in early May in Mérignac (Gironde), where a woman had been burned alive by her husband.

A long series of failures of the actors in this file had been pointed out.

"Absolute need to coordinate the action of local actors"

The Hayange drama occurred on the night of May 23-24.

The victim, a 22-year-old young woman, was stabbed to death by her companion in the middle of the street, a stone's throw from the then closed police station.

This murder, which occurred "in a difficult family and social context," "ends a relationship punctuated by incidents," notes the document.

"The seriousness of the facts, however, underlines the absolute necessity to coordinate the action of local actors at each stage of the treatment of domestic violence", insist the authors.

"Beyond (the) essential improvements, the mission considers that the multiplication of the respective directives of the Ministries of the Interior and of Justice risks complicating the action of the local services by leaving an ambiguity in the behavior to be adopted", they still believe.

"Unification of danger assessment grids"

Among the six recommendations it formulates, the mission considers "necessary, as it is a matter of a priority public policy, that a circular be co-signed by the two ministers" in order to present "a common definition of domestic violence, a unification of danger assessment grids ”as well as“ the modalities of a local coordination of the bodies intervening in the fight against domestic violence ”.

"This text would allow better sharing of information, greater readability for local actors and more efficiency of services", further estimate the authors of the report.

This suggests thinking about “greater involvement” of the departments “in spotting domestic violence”, in particular in conjunction with mayors and associations.

Electronic bracelet malfunction

Arrested the day after the crime, the murderer, a 23-year-old Serb, a political refugee, had been indicted for murder of a spouse and imprisoned.

Already known to the courts, sentenced to one year in prison for traffic offenses, he had benefited from a modification of the sentence and had been placed on May 13 in house arrest under electronic surveillance, with an electronic bracelet.

But the device has known "an unexplained malfunction to date" since it was torn off the evening of the tragedy without triggering "any alarm at the monitoring center", points out the report.

"Trivialization of this situation by the police services"

Regarding the requests for a modification of the sentence that could give rise to home detention, the report recommends that a "family environment investigation" be carried out from now on.

During a press conference held after the murder, the public prosecutor of Metz, Christian Mercuri, had already refuted any “dysfunction of the judicial services” in the aftermath of Hayange's feminicide.

The magistrate had, however, recognized that, "in an ideal world", the complaints lodged by the victim against her violent spouse should have been reported to the prosecution.

"The often confusing attitude of this couple, with confrontations followed, sometimes in the wake, of reconciliations, could lead to a trivialization of this situation by the police services", advance the report.

Society

Feminicide in Hayange: The suspect indicted for "homicide by spouse" and imprisoned

Miscellaneous

Moselle: The prosecutor "does not think" that there was "dysfunction of the judicial services" in the feminicide of Hayange

  • Lorraine

  • Women

  • Hayange

  • Investigation

  • Society

  • Justice

  • Murder

  • Feminicide