He would have been 14 today.

The Advocate General of the Versailles Court of Appeal demanded a fine of at least 60,000 euros this Friday against the elevator operator Otis after the death of a 7-year-old child in one of his elevators in Mantes-la-Jolie ( Yvelines), in 2015.

Prosecuted for "manslaughter", Otis had already been sentenced to a fine of 60,000 euros in 2018, a conviction confirmed on appeal.

But the judgment was quashed in 2021 after the company appealed for a procedural defect.

The case was therefore retried on Friday at Versailles.

“Frequent but not permanent adjustments”

On October 10, 2015, Othmane, 7, went shopping in the popular district of Val-Fourré, in Mantes-la-Jolie, south-west of Paris.

While taking the elevator, the wheel of his scooter got stuck in the doors and the handlebars then got stuck under his neck, causing him to asphyxiate.

“We have recklessness, criminally culpable negligence” on the part of Otis, estimated this Friday the general counsel, for whom the company did not implement everything in its power to avoid the accident.

The Advocate General notably pointed to "frequent but not permanent adjustments" made by Otis on the elevator doors.

“Neither the HLM lessor nor Otis took the decision to decommission it.

For her part, the elevator operator's lawyer pleaded that Otis organized recurring checks, while denouncing the damage to the doors by the inhabitants.

Decision on June 24

"It's my son who died, he's not a cat," the child's mother said at the bar, a large photo of her son in her arms.

"He would have been 14 today," she added, tears in her voice, looking Otis' rep in the eye.

The latter argued that the doors were not faulty, contrary to the findings of the expert.

Otis had, several weeks before the accident, sent an estimate to the lessor to change the doors of the elevator, remained unanswered.

“There is no problem, but we advise to change the doors”, quipped one of the lawyers of the family of Othmane, Charles Morel, noting the “contradictions” of the representative of Otis.

The social landlord, now liquidated and released at first instance, was omnipresent in the speech of the representative of Otis, who affirmed not to deny the civil liability of the company but wished that it be shared between the two organizations.

The decision will be known on June 24.

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