Jean-Marc Reiser, indicted a few days after the disappearance of Sophie Le Tan, denies until now having murdered the young woman.

"A man with exceptional criminal danger", describes a psychiatrist who recently met Jean-Marc Reiser, the only suspect in the case of Sophie Le Tan. The body of the young woman, missing in September 2018 was found Friday in a forest in Alsace.

So far, and despite the discovery at his home DNA and traces of blood of Sophie Le Tan, Jean-Marc Reiser has always denied having murdered the student. He had, however, been indicted a few days after his disappearance. The suspect is a man "cold", "detached", says in his report another expert, psychologist, saying that the sexagenarian does not suffer from any mental disorder.

Suspected in another case of disappearance

Jean-Marc Reiser has already been convicted of several rapes, and suspected of the murder of Françoise Oman, a young woman who disappeared in the 1980s, whose body was never found. He had been acquitted for the benefit of the doubt. Given the latest events, new excavations could now be ordered in this forest Grendelbruch, which Jean-Marc Reiser knows perfectly since his childhood. Even though investigators and magistrates focus on the Le Tan case, they hope to solve both riddles.

The suspect is still described as having "situational intelligence", moving his pawns "like a chess player". This does not prevent the lawyer of the parents of Sophie Le Tan, Gerard Welzer, to hope that "his monstrosity is soon established".