25 Aug 2025

French judge charges suspect in River Seine quadruple murder

8:37 am on 25 August 2025
(FILES) This photograph taken in Choisy-le-Roi, on the outskirts of Paris, on 14 August, 2025 shows the Seine river where firefighters were called to pulled out four men's bodies from the river on August 13, 2025, after an alert was raised by a passenger travelling on the RER C train, who reported seeing a body floating in the Seine, according to police sources.

The bodies were found on 13 August 2025 in the river in the southeastern suburb of Choisy-le-Roi, after an alert was raised by a train passenger who reported seeing a body floating in the Seine, according to police sources. Photo: AFP / Bertrand Guay

A French judge has charged a homeless man, whose identity and nationality remain uncertain, for the murders of four men whose bodies were found in the River Seine just outside Paris, prosecutors said.

The bodies, some partially naked, were found on 13 August in the river in the southeastern suburb of Choisy-le-Roi. A passenger on a passing train saw one body floating in the river and the others were found later.

The suspect was detained on Wednesday and placed in pre-trial detention, the man's lawyer, Antoine Ory, told AFP.

A prosecution statement said that while his identity was "uncertain", he was a "homeless man aged about 20" whose nationality was "not established".

Prosecutors said the man had refused to answer questions about the killings but that investigators had established a link between the suspect and each of the four dead, an Algerian, 21, and a 26-year-old Tunisian - both homeless - a 46-year-old Frenchman, and another Algerian aged 21.

All four had been seen on the river paths where the suspect had been known to hang around, prosecutors said.

Two of the bodies were partially naked when pulled out of the river. Two showed signs of having been strangled.

The suspect had been detained once on 5 August in possession of documents that turned out to belong to one of the victims.

Ory said his client had "exercised his right to remain silent during police custody and before the investigating judge" but that "he will give his explanation later during the judicial inquiry".

-AFP