Topic: 8 Famous Criminals

Episode 5 (Jacques Mesrine)

Highlight: Jacques Mesrine was known as France's public enemy No 1, a pathologically violent gangster who claimed to have killed 43 people and staged a jailbreak from every prison he was sent.
#8FamousCriminals
Surprisingly, Mesrine was born in rather ordinary circumstances. He was not the product of a tough ghetto, nor did he emanate from a family steeped in crime; instead he was hatched on December 28, 1936, in the middle-class Parisian suburb of Clichy-la-Garenne,...
...where his father worked in the lace industry. He was a normal, happy child, but the first rumblings of discontent were seen when he was expelled from the esteemed Catholic school Collège de Juilly for “aggressive” behaviour.
Subsequently, he was drawn like a moth to a flame to Pigalle, the capital’s red light district, where he got his first taste of the criminal life. That all changed in 1956, when, aged 19, he was conscripted to fight in the Algerian War.
“It was Algeria that changed him,” stressed his tearful mother in an interview with French TV after his death. “He came back a different boy.”
The French Army, infamous at the time for the torture and execution of anyone even suspected of insurrection, nurtured Mesrine’s less palatable side, making him a commando and ordering him to commit atrocities that would be unimaginable to most.
“The tipping point was definitely the war,” attests Martine Malinbaum, Mesrine’s lawyer between 1976 and 78. “It gave him a taste for action and showed him that he wasn’t like everyone else.”
On his return to Paris in 1959, the disenfranchised former soldier was quickly able to weigh up the pros and cons of Gaelic morality. He had taken part in the criminal slaughter of a population in the name of imperial zeal.
He had seen his superiors charge teenage soldiers to execute women and children at point blank range. He was not a happy man
“After leaving the army aged 23, he decided to become a criminal,” explained Broussard in an interview for French TV in 2001. “He wanted, even then, to be king, to be number one, to have international standing.”
“He didn’t want to work in a factory,” adds director Jean François Richet. “So, he went to get money where you find money – in banks. He dreamed himself the life of a gangster with honour. He forged his own path."
Mesrine rose to the top of his game incredibly fast, displaying an amazing propensity to dispense his peculiar brand of justice and subsequent violence that amazed his contemporaries and was matched only by his facility to rob banks.
Yet all did not go according to his meticulous plan. In 1962, after marrying Maria de la Soledad, the mother of his three children, he was arrested and imprisoned for 18 months – none of which stopped him returning to his chosen career just a year later.
As a direct consequence of this incarceration, he split with his wife and met Jeanne Schneider. It was love at first sight, his first words to her purportedly being, “Me Tarzan, you Jane.”
Together they robbed all sorts of places, including a gambling den owned by gangsters, causing them to flee to Canada

After a botched kidnapping of textile and grocery millionaire Georges Deslauriers, the two were incarcerated in the Percé prison in Québec.
This institution proved a doddle for Mesrine – he engineered the pair’s escape and they fled to Texas where they were captured, extradited to Canada and condemned to 15 years in the Saint Vincent-de Paul penitentiary in Laval, the most secure lock-up in Canada.
After just three years, Mesrine absconded with dazzling aplomb, met up with his old chum, Québécois terrorist Jean-Paul Mercier, and 15 days later attacked the prison in an attempt to free the remaining 56 high-security wing prisoners.
Accused of killing two forest rangers in the attempt, he was declared Public Enemy Number One in Canada. He swiftly fled to Venezuela, after squeezing in a few spirited bank heists.
Returning to France in 1972, Mesrine wasted no time in returning to his old ways. “He developed his own style then,” explains Richet. “He would rob several banks in a row – waiting for the police sirens and then getting into the car to take down a bank on the next street over.”
Such flagrant disrespect did not go down too well with les flics and by March 8, 1973, he was caught again. But knowing he would be apprehended, Mesrine had already planned a daring escape. “What do you bet me,” he asked his police escort, “I’ll be out in three months?”
On June 6, Mesrine was taken to the Palais De Justice in Compiègne but, feigning an attack of diarrhoea, he located a gun concealed in the toilet cistern by an accomplice and hid it in his belt.
When asked to answer charges he grabbed the judge and, using him as a human shield, made his getaway in a hail of gunfire. 

Having enjoyed just a few months on the lam, he was grassed up by a former partner in crime and on September 28, the police cornered Mesrine again –
this time surrounding his apartment with hordes of officers. “He knew he was under siege,” said arresting officer Broussard. “So, I gave him the choice to come out unarmed or die. He asked if I was Commissaire Broussard with the beard and would I approach unarmed, which I did.
Mesrine was sentenced to 20 years in a high-security prison. While behind bars, he wrote letters to friends and talked openly of escape, which prompted La Santé, already the most secure prison in France, to build a new wing just to hold him.
Consequently, on May 3, 1978, the prison governor was tipped off that Mesrine was going to attempt escape two days later. He laughed it off as a practical joke. Indeed, Mesrine did not break out on May 5, because it was raining.
He postponed his escape until May 8 when he departed with notorious escapee François Besse. They were the first two men ever to escape from La Santé. Eight days later, the pair held up a gun shop in Paris before going to rob a casino in Deauville.
Incensed by his incarceration, Mesrine went on a publicity drive. In March, 1978, he granted interviews with Paris Match and Liberation, emphasising that he was rebelling against injustice and battling to abolish maximum security and solitary confinement.
Ever the publicity hound, he never missed an opportunity to pose for photos while brandishing his machine gun, his face often uncovered.

However, the tide was turning for Mesrine. Infuriated by a piece written by right-wing journalist and former policeman Jacques Tillier, ...
...he lured the scribe to a cave, undressed him, beat him senseless, shot him three times and left him for dead. To add insult to injury, Mesrine sent a wordy letter to Le Monde, accompanied by Polaroids of the naked, bloodied writer with his hands tied behind his back.
This time, the country was overcome with loathing. In one fell swoop, Mesrine had lost public support. 

Mesrine then attempted to kidnap the judge, M Petit, who had sentenced him to 20 years, demanding that if all top security prisons in France...
...were not closed he would begin assassinating magistrates. But the kidnapping of said magistrate backfired with Mesrine only just evading capture by running down the stairs and shouting to the oncoming police, “Quick! Mesrine’s up there!” as he sped past them.
After the kidnap of millionaire Henri Lelièvre, Mesrine received a ransom of six million francs, but he also attracted the unwanted attentions of French President Giscard d’Estaing who told his Minister of the Interior, “We really have to finish this Mesrine off.”
Just a few days later, he was controversially shot dead. The operation that ended Mesrine, even though pronounced a success by the police, caused an outcry. The question remains whether the much-loved miscreant was given the chance to capitulate or whether was he was gunned down
...in cold blood. “The police gave him the chance to surrender,”testified Broussard,for once seeming less than honest in his TV interview.“But instead of keeping still,he got down out of the way of the machine guns and reached for a little bag where he had two hand grenades.”
“I swear blind that the police told him to get out of the car after he was already dead,” maintained an eyewitness, Guy Penet, in an interview for the same program. “I heard, ‘Don’t move.
You’ve had it!’ after the gunfire. I have maintained that for 22 years, and that is what I saw.” 

After Mesrine died, the authorities found a cassette tape in a drawer in his apartment addressed to his last love, Sylvia Jeanjacquot.
“Hello darling,” he said. “If you read this I’ll have been killed by the police, which is nothing we didn’t expect. I died with a gun in my hand and, even though I might not have had the time to use it, if I had, I would have.”
Source: Dazed

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