her ex-husband, Adrien Czajczynski, and his new partner indicted

YOUTUBE MAVACHOU MavaChou’s ex-husband was indicted this Wednesday March 6 for “provocation to suicide”.

YOUTUBE MAVACHOU

MavaChou’s ex-husband was indicted this Wednesday March 6 for “provocation to suicide”.

JUSTICE – The death of harassed YouTuber MavaChou caused a wave of indignation on social networks. Adrien Czajczynski, the ex-husband of this influencer, real name Maëva Frossard, was indicted for harassment in the investigation into the circumstances of his partner’s suicide, first revealed The Parisian, this Wednesday March 6.

His new wife, Laura Czajczynski, was also indicted on February 27 as part of the judicial investigation carried out by an investigating judge in Epinal and opened against “harassment leading to suicide”.

Laura’s lawyer denies the accusations

“These indictments mean that there are serious and consistent indications that Adrien and his wife engaged in acts of harassment which led to the death of Maëva”declared to AFP Me Stéphane Giuranna, lawyer for the father of Maëva Frossard and Romain, her companion at the time of her suicide, in December 2021. “We are satisfied with the progress of the investigation procedure, which has been open for several years already”he added.

“My client firmly denies having committed the slightest fault”for his part reacted to AFP Me Laurent Mortet, Laura Czajcynski’s lawyer. “But we are delighted to finally be able to exercise the rights of the defense”he added, this indictment should allow him access to the file.

When asked, neither Adrien Czajczynski nor his lawyer, Me Renaud Gérardin, responded immediately.

Seize “this phenomenon to aggravate the sentences”

Aged 32 at the time of her suicide, Maëva Frossard, mother of four children, had gained relative notoriety on the internet (151,000 subscribers on YouTube, 80,000 on Instagram) where she had been recounting her life on video for years.

She had filed five complaints against her ex-husband or against X, for moral harassment and incitement to suicide, in the months preceding and the same day of her suicide. According to Stéphane Giuranna, these complaints “had given nothing”.

But the harassment suffered online by the young woman “is not an isolated fact”insists Stéphane Giuranna. “The legislator and the magistrates must seize this phenomenon to increase the penalties, because people who believe they are safe behind their screen allow themselves to say and do anything with dramatic consequences”.

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