Gwladys Laffitte, edited by Solène Leroux 8:08 p.m., May 03, 2022

The trial of the November 13 attacks continues, with this Tuesday the hearing of former anti-terrorism judge Marc Trévidic, in office from 2006 to 2015. He saw closely the rise of jihadism, which led to these attacks.

For nearly three and a half hours, he shed light on the court, while acknowledging his mistakes.

TESTIMONY

A former counter-terrorism investigating judge from 2006 to August 2015, Marc Trévidic saw firsthand the rise of modern jihadism which led to the November 2015 attacks. counter-terrorism justice at that time and admitted his mistakes.

Starting with the fact of having placed Samy Amimour, future Bataclan killer, under judicial control and not in prison, in April 2012. At the time, it was a "file among others", honestly explains the judge .

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At the beginning of 2010, "the anti-terrorist judicial system no longer works"

"And then there was the call from Syria in 2013. Everyone left, I've never seen that, it was a total exodus," he says again.

With a tight throat, the magistrate admits that at that time, "the anti-terrorism judicial system no longer works", overloaded, without means.

The "response times become very, very long, we listen to sound systems days later, we are in a situation of total insecurity", says Marc Trévidic, who seems to be reliving the era at the helm.

His observation at the time is providential: "All the signals are red, we have no way of avoiding what is looming."

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Now president of the Assize Courts at Versailles

"Today, where are we?" Asks a civil party lawyer.

"I don't know… The means arrived late, and a lot of people died, that's all I know", says Marc Trévidic, today president of the Assize Court in Versailles, far from business terrorists.