1986 Paris police station attack

The far-left Direct Action (AD) terror group detonated a bomb at the headquarters of the Brigade de répression du banditisme (BRB) police division in Paris, France, on 9 July 1986. It killed the division's chief inspector, Marcel Basdevant, and injured 22 other officers. The group claimed responsibility two days later.[1][2]

1986 Paris police station attack
Part of terrorism in France
Quai de Gesvres in 2012, street of the police station
LocationQuai de Gesvres, Paris, France
Coordinates48.8570°N 2.3486°E / 48.8570; 2.3486
Date9 July 1986
4:00 pm
WeaponsIED
Deaths1
Injured22
PerpetratorAction directe

The bomb is thought to have contained 10 kg of explosives and was planted in a restroom on the third floor. It caused major damage to the building, which was still new.[3] Maxime Frérot, a member of Action Directe's Lyon branch, was arrested in 1989 for the attack. He was eventually sentenced to serve 23 years in prison.[4][5]

On the same day, the West German Red Army Faction (which was allied with Direct Action) assassinated Karl Heinz Beckurts in Bavaria.[6]

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.