Two defendants sentenced, one released, for the burglary of the Marquinhos family

Only one of the three defendants will have succeeded in convincing the correctional court of Versailles. Two men were sentenced on Wednesday for the burglary of the family of the Brazilian player of PSG Marquinhos, in March 2021 in the Yvelines, and a third released.

Throughout the hearing, Samba G. and François S., released, claimed their innocence at the bar. Amir E., imprisoned in connection with another case, had refused to attend his trial. The latter, aged 24, was sentenced to seven years in prison with continued detention for theft with violence, forcible confinement and criminal association. Of Egyptian nationality, he also received a permanent ban on French territory. During her indictment, the prosecutor had described him as a “nauseating” individual raging “in similar cases” across “all of Ile-de-France”.

Samba G., 30, was sentenced to five years in prison, three of which were suspended on probation for possession of a weapon and criminal association. The investigators suspected him in particular of having provided the vehicle used to go to the scene of the burglary.

Chosen victims

Only François S., 30, tried for theft with violence, kidnapping and criminal association, was released. His DNA and that of Samba G. had been identified inside hoods found in the vehicle probably used on the evening of the burglary. “My client’s DNA was mixed with another and was present in a much smaller quantity,” his lawyer, Me Sevin Kasay, told the press after the hearing. “I have nothing to do with that, I don’t know Marquinhos, I don’t even watch football,” assured François S., black sweater and pants, during the debates.

Samba G., leather jacket and small goatee, for his part explained that as the “former owner” of the car, he had forgotten a balaclava. “I am chilly, in winter I always wear a hood,” he said, adding that he “never set foot” in the Yvelines. During the hearing, the prosecutor spoke of a “particularly well-organized collective expedition” and a “matured project” for the “specifically targeted” victims.

A young man aged 17 at the time of the events had been sentenced in the same case last September by the juvenile court to two years’ imprisonment, including twelve months accompanied by a suspended probation, for theft with violence and aggravated theft. The Versailles prosecutor’s office appealed this decision. The minor, who is no longer detained because the sentence covered pre-trial detention, had been acquitted by the prosecution court for criminal association.

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