Dramatic music, a text that is cold in the back, but above all bogus. On Tiktok, a video falsely announces that the serial killer Guy Georges, sentenced in 2001 to life for the assassination and rape of seven young women in Paris between 1991 and 1997, was released.
“Watch out for you”, starts the video, against a background of dramatic music and with a photo of the criminal during his trial. The anonymous author of the video then said, again, that the man “is back” after being imprisoned. At no time is the video a source given for these “revelations”.
The video has been seen more than 250,000 times and has sparked worried comments.
FAKE OFF
Guy Georges was not released. He is incarcerated in the Alsatian prison of Ensisheim, where prisoners are imprisoned sentenced to long sentences. This is the case of Guy Georges, who was sentenced to maximum sentence in French law, the imprisonment of perpetuity accompanied by a safety sentence of twenty-two years.
He had been incarcerated since his arrest in 1998 and has been released since March 2020. To date, he has apparently made no request for parole*. In April 2024, Jonathann Daval’s mother, also incarcerated at the central house in Ensisheim, had confided that her son had “sympathized” with the serial killer as well as with other detainees.
At his trial, Guy Georges had launched that he should not be released because he was then going to start again, as Maître Florence Rault, lawyer for civil parties, recalls in a documentary from France 2. Martine Monteil, chef at the time of The criminal brigade describes it “like a killing machine. »»
Guy Georges, a marginal with a heavy criminal record who had grown up in a foster family, had ended up being confused by genetic research. He was found guilty of the assassination and rape of seven young women aged 19 to 32 in Paris. Two of them were attacked in parking lots, the others in their apartment. He had also been found guilty of an assassination attempt on an eighth young woman, who had managed to run away, and two other attacks.
Long nicknamed “SK1” for “Serial Killer 1” by the police who were looking for his identity, Guy Georges had created psychosis in the French capital.
* Contacted, the Paris prosecutor’s office did not follow up on our requests.
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