"Charlie Hebdo" trial: "Fredo killed his first and last burial"


Frédéric Boaso's wife, a maintenance technician who died in the attack on the weekly, testified on Tuesday before the Special Criminal Court in Paris.
Wednesday January 7, 2015, Frédéric Boaso left home very early, at 4.30 am. Working as a maintenance technician, the long way from his village near Fontainebleau (Seine et Marne), he should join two colleagues, Jeremy Ganz and Claude Bhutan, on a new assignment at 10 rue Nicholas Appart in Paris.

There are three of them in the warden's inn, looking for a code on their computer, when the door suddenly opens. Two masked men direct them with their rifles, and one of them shouts, "Charlie? Where's Charlie?" And withdraw. Frederick Boisseau collapsed. "Jeremy, I'm touched. Call Catherine. I'm going to die. Tell my kids that I love them."

Jeremy Guns has a lot in his heart. He said so suddenly at the Bar of the Special Criminal Court in Paris, Tuesday 8 September. "I blame the media. We talked for hours and hours about others. But there is no Fredo. Fredo was the first to be killed and the last to be buried. We are only alimony. Fredo is the father of the family. He woke up in the morning to feed his family. Lambda."

"Today I bear witness to him"
This Wednesday, Catherine Gervasoni, his seventeen-year-old companion, was at home, like every Wednesday, to care for their two sons, ages 11 and 13, when she received the call from Jeremiah. “We were shot. Fred was injured. Turn on the TV, you will see.” Catherine GERVASONI The train at Fontainebleau station went to Paris to Nicolas Appér Avenue. She testified, "I asked for news from Frederick everywhere. I couldn't wait. When I saw I wasn't given a hospital name, I understood."

She went to Medico-Legal Institute, to no avail, returned to Nicolas-Appert Street, left again for Medico-Legal, and returned to Nicolas-Appert Street. Interrogated by a policeman. "I should know, I'm not leaving. He told me," I'm sorry. He is one of the victims. "I was running for five hours."

Items are reserved for our subscribers. I also read in the "Charlie Hebdo" trial the statements of survivors and the weight of the dead.
Catherine Gervasoni never spoke before testifying in front of the assize court. "I focused on the children. I lived only through them and for them. Now they are balanced. They are fine. Today I bear witness to him, knowing that he is a good person and does not deserve to be passed over in silence."

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