Tuerie de Chevaline : une profileuse britannique a dressé un portrait-robot psychologique du tueur
Tuerie de Chevaline : "Paranoïa", "motivation interne"... Une spécialiste a établi le profil psychologique du tireur
The famous case of the Chevaline massacre is about to officially become a "cold case". The investigation into the mysterious assassinations of three members of a British family and a French cyclist on a forest road in Haute-Savoie in September 2012 is to be transferred to the new judicial division dedicated to "serial and unsolved crimes".
According to our information, on 18 July 2022 the Annecy prosecutor's office issued a request for the transfer of jurisdiction to this national court, which was created in March and is based at the judicial court in Nanterre (Hauts-de-Seine).
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However, this does not mean that the investigation has reached a dead end, according to the Annecy prosecutor, who evokes a conscious choice, without pressure, in line with the creation of a cold case unit with more means and time to identify a culprit. The case of the Chevaline massacre will thus be re-examined with a fresh eye by one of the three specialised investigating judges of the new Nanterre jurisdiction.
And the magistrate will be able to rely on an unpublished judicial document, which we reveal:
the psychological sketch of the killer. This was produced in July 2020 by a British "profiler", a consultant forensic clinical psychologist, after reading hundreds of thousands of court records, multiple interviews with French and English investigators and an analysis of existing criminological literature on "multiple killings".
"An internal motivation of his own that is entirely independent of the victims
He is probably 99% male, aged between 30 and 40," the expert concluded. (...) "I put forward the theory that the perpetrator of the Chevaline attacks acted on an internal motivation of his own that is entirely independent of the victims of this case," the expert concluded.
Like the French investigators, the British psychologist favours the idea of
a local and isolated act, possibly committed by a local killer with an unstable psychological profile.
She lists a few possible personality traits: "unemployed or in an unskilled job", "living alone" or solitary in "a closed family environment", "a former soldier" or a person with an attraction for weapons: "collector, hunter, club shooter or paramilitary".
An "expert" who meticulously "planned" and "organised" the killing
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During the express killing, the killer used a Luger P06 revolver, an old weapon made during the Second World War and prized by collectors, before disappearing. Seventeen of the 21 bullets fired hit their targets, leading the profiler to believe that an "expert" had meticulously "planned" and "organised" the killing.
"Significant psychological clues from the crime scene and subsequent investigations indicate that the perpetrator planned to kill several people in the Combe d'Ire car park and planned to flee," the profiler analyses. (...) It is unlikely that the car park was chosen at random. (...) The most plausible scenario is that the perpetrator had no connection with the victims and was unaware of their arrival at the car park at the time. A place that the killer could be "well acquainted with".
A random quadruple murder, in short. According to the expert, the killer kept the murder weapon (damaged by a blow to the head of one of the two survivors) and tried to repair it after the carnage.
For the psychologist,
there is a possibility that the killer was suffering from psychological disorders, even a form of "paranoia" and that he could have been driven by "hatred for a particular community or target".
In other words, a racist impulse, unless it was the desire to kill a cyclist. The expert does not rule out the possibility that the killer was also "driven by voices".
BBM
"we can reasonably assume that the author is someone from the area"