13 Jan 2026

Former French police officers face jailtime for cocaine scheme

10:32 am on 13 January 2026
A photograph shows a police body-worn camera, attached on the clothing of a French police officer standing guard during a visit of French Minister of Education, Sports, and Olympic Games outside the Littre public school in Paris on January 16, 2024. Amelie Oudea-Castera, at the heart of a controversy surrounding the schooling of her children, visits the Littre public school on January 16, 2024 - from which she withdrew her eldest son to put him in private school - in the hope of putting an end to the Attal government's first crisis.

Two former French police officers will spend time in prison for replacing cocaine seizures. (File photo) Photo: AFP

Paris prosecutors requested six-year prison sentences for two former narcotics squad police officers who replaced confiscated cocaine with sugar paste.

The defendants, Thierry C, 60, and Christophe J, 50, were members of the French capital's nighttime anti-drugs taskforce but were expelled from the police following their arrests in December 2022.

Along with prison sentences, the prosecutor requested the confiscation of 600,000 euros (NZ$1.2m) from the bank account of Thierry C and a 200,000-euro (NZ$404,171) fine against Christophe J.

The court will make a decision on February 24.

Both men, one a commander and the other a sergeant, have already spent two years behind bars.

The pair admitted to replacing cocaine seizures on eight separate occasions between June 2020 and their arrest.

A total of nine kilograms of the drug with a market value of up to 630,000 euros (NZ$1.2m) was replaced with sugar paste.

Whether they intended to go on to sell the product is unclear.

The defendants said they had hidden the cocaine in the ceiling above the women's showers on the fourth floor of the taskforce's offices.

They said a breakup, anxiety related to Covid-19 and an unpleasant boss had pushed them into pilfering the illicit substance.

"They treat us like nobodies," Thierry C told the court.

Christophe J said their boss was "the worst person I've ever met in terms of management".

Both defendants said the birth of Thierry C's child had served as a wake-up call, prompting the pair to flush the stash down the toilet.

The prosecutor expressed reservations about how such a significant quantity of drugs had gone missing "without anyone doing anything about it. Nothing adds up."

-AFP