Three of his former officials appear on Monday before the Marseille judicial court for “participation in a combat group”.
Tattoos on the body to the glory of III e reich, “anti -Communist rock” concerts with Hitlerian salvation, combat training and martial arts: the court
Correctional Marseille plunges, Monday, December 12, in the Skinhead and Honour Hexagon (BHH) universe, a group dissolved by the government in July 2019 for its neonazi ideology.
Three of his main officials, Loïc Delboy, Pierre Scarano and David Dumas, and an affidation, Jérémy Recagno, are tried for “participation in a combat group”, a crime rarely used, punished with three years in prison and D ‘A fine of 45,000 euros. Four other defendants are prosecuted for the detention and the trade of large -scale arms.
The survey begins with the explosive attack of a banking ticket distributor in Gémenos, near Aubagne (Bouches-du-Rhône), in September 2014. The gendarmes obtain information according to which the Coup would have been made by a band of Aubagnais delinquents using an explosive, C-4, out of the Toulon naval base by a sea fusilier, in whom two illegally held shotguns will be found.
The gendarmes date back to Jérémy Recagno, an Aubagne tattoo artist, sulfurous figure at the same time close to robbers and neonazi movements, as evidenced by former convictions for fights and blows against communist activists or anti -fascists. If today Jérémy Recagno claims to have found the faith in prison, after having swapped Mein Kampf against the Bible, he proposed, in the 2010s, his tattoos to the conventions of Blood and Honor Hexagon, French organ of an English movement whose Cotto takes up that of the Hitlerian Youth, “Blut und Ehre” (“Blood and honor”).
“It’s the commitment of my life”
Several of the defendants tried in Marseille are tattooed down to the chin. One of the members of the group displays a portrait of Hitler on his left thigh. In France, BHH brings together around twenty members, under the authority of Loïc Delboy, a Marseillais who, during his arrest in March 2016, worked as a team leader in a company operating coffee machine and automatic distributors. He previously spent five years in the army.
At his home, the investigators stop on a large canvas representing Hitler visiting the front. A gift from Belgian friends from Blood and Honour, he says. “I find this painting pretty, it is not necessarily because Hitler is on this canvas, otherwise I would have put a portrait of him,” he argues. On weekends, Loïc Delboy lends his muscles forged by a regular boxing practice to functions of nightclub vigil. Skinhead at 17, he takes his card at the National Front at 18, and when the gendarme asks him to position himself politically, he does not hesitate: “Far right to defend my country, it is the commitment of my life . “
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