This article is from the source 'guardian' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.

You can find the current article at its original source at https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2019/may/31/briton-convicted-of-murder-french-film-maker-ian-bailey-sophie-toscan-du-plantier

The article has changed 2 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.

Version 0 Version 1
Briton convicted of 1996 murder of French film-maker in Ireland Briton convicted of 1996 murder of French film-maker in Ireland
(about 2 hours later)
A British man has been convicted of the murder of a French film-maker in Ireland more than 20 years ago. A court in France has found Ian Bailey, a British former journalist, guilty of murdering Sophie Toscan du Plantier, a French film-maker who was battered to death in Ireland.
Former journalist Ian Bailey, 62, was convicted in his absence of killing 39-year-old Sophie Toscan du Plantier following a trial of only three days after the Irish authorities twice refused to extradite him. The cour d’assises in Paris on Friday sentenced Bailey to 25 years for the brutal murder in west Cork in 1996, an infamous cold case that has confounded Irish authorities and divided public opinion over Bailey’s guilt or innocence.
Toscan du Plantier’s body was found on an isolated hillside in Toormore, near Schull, west Cork, two days before Christmas in 1996, a Paris court heard. She was the wife of celebrated cinematographer Daniel Toscan du Plantier, and her death had been one of Ireland’s most famous unsolved killings. Toscan du Plantier’s relatives embraced after the verdict was read out. Her only child, Pierre-Louis Baudey-Vignaud, hailed the ruling. “It is a victory for justice, it is a victory for the truth and now Ireland will have to extradite Ian Bailey.”
Bailey, who lived near Toscan du Plantier, was arrested twice in connection with the death but was never charged, amid allegations of incompetence and corruption against the local police. Bailey, 62, denies any involvement. He lives in Ireland and did not attend the week-long trial and was convicted in absentia. But the family of Toscan du Plantier, who was 39 when she was killed, are likely to see the conviction as long overdue and will hope it paves the way to potential extradition.
Marie Farrell, the only witness to put him at the scene at the time of the killing, later retracted her evidence, claiming she had been groomed and bullied by investigators into giving false evidence. “All they’ve done is convict an innocent man who had nothing to do with the crime,” he told the Guardian, speaking from his cottage near Bantry, County Cork, minutes after the verdict was announced. “All they’ve got is a pyrrhic victory.”
The case has taken many twists and turns over the years, including Bailey bringing a successful defamation case against newspapers in 2014. He has repeatedly denied any involvement in the murder. He paraphrased some Beatles lyrics “Have you heard the news today? Oh boy” and said he was trying to keep his spirits high. “The sun has come out, I’m good,” he said.
Frustrated by the lack of progress in Ireland, the French authorities started their own investigation in 2008 even exhuming Toscan du Plantier’s body in the hope of finding further forensic evidence. The former freelancer, who used to run a small news agency in Cheltenham that supplied stories to the Sunday Times, had predicted he would be “bonfired” in Paris. He compared his limbo he is notorious in Ireland yet has never been charged there to medieval torture. His solicitor, Frank Buttimer, called the proceedings in Paris a “show trial”.
More soon The conviction is expected to lead to a new French arrest warrant and renewed extradition attempt. Irish courts have rejected two previous attempts to extradite Bailey, citing flaws in the French requests.
Irish police identified Bailey as the prime suspect soon after Toscan du Plantier’s battered body was found outside her holiday cottage, three miles from his own cottage, on 23 December 1996.
He had cuts on his face and hands, a record of violence against his partner, Jules Thomas, and admitted to having left his cottage – to an adjacent shed to write an article, he said – on the night of the murder. However there was no forensic evidence linking Bailey to the scene and a key witness retracted testimony, saying police had improperly pressured her.
Irish prosecutors decided there was insufficient evidence to press charges.
French authorities transplanted the case to Paris, where it was heard by three judges. Under French law a person suspected of murdering a French citizen in another jurisdiction can be tried in France.
Baudey-Vignaud, the victim’s son, visited west Cork earlier this month to urge witnesses to testify, saying his mother was not a ghost. “She is the victim of human cruelty and violence which has no place here.”
He added: “Sophie fought like a lioness against the most atrocious violence there is … I can’t bear the thought of her blood seeping into your soil.”
The public prosecutor, Jean-Pierre Bonthoux, said the Irish prosecutor had examined the evidence on “a segmented basis” rather than in its entirety. “He concluded each segment was zero and when he added segment to segment, he was adding zero to zero and got zero rather than looking at the bigger picture.”
Bonthoux accused Bailey of cowardice and insulting the French justice system by failing to come to France. Bailey said he had no plans to leave west Cork.
A 13-part podcast titled West Cork has shone new light on the case. The director Jim Sheridan is making a documentary.
UK newsUK news
FranceFrance
EuropeEurope
IrelandIreland
newsnews
Share on FacebookShare on Facebook
Share on TwitterShare on Twitter
Share via EmailShare via Email
Share on LinkedInShare on LinkedIn
Share on PinterestShare on Pinterest
Share on WhatsAppShare on WhatsApp
Share on MessengerShare on Messenger
Reuse this contentReuse this content