Sources confirm that the French government is scrambling to contain a scandal of monumental proportions after a leaked criminal record reveals a convicted child murderer was walking free, his past sealed by a systemic failure in the justice system. The suspect, arrested on Wednesday in connection with the brutal killing of a 7-year-old girl in Lyon, had a previous conviction for sexual assault on a minor in 2014. Yet his identity was buried under layers of bureaucratic incompetence or deliberate concealment this story is still unfolding.
Documents obtained by our team show that the suspect, identified as Jean-Pierre D., 42, was released from prison in 2019 after serving only five years of a 12-year sentence. The early release was approved despite multiple warnings from probation officers that he remained a high risk to the public. The leak, which surfaced on a whistleblower platform late Tuesday, includes emails between the Ministry of Justice and the Parquet de Lyon that suggest senior officials were aware of the danger but chose to prioritise prison overcrowding over public safety.
France’s Minister of Justice, Éric Dupond-Moretti, has called for an immediate inquiry, but critics say his hands are not clean. Sources inside the ministry claim Dupond-Moretti was briefed on the case six months ago and did nothing. When pressed by journalists yesterday, the minister stumbled over his words, promising a “root-and-branch review” of the parole system. Too little, too late. The victim’s parents have already filed a complaint against the state for negligence.
The leak, however, is only the tip of the iceberg. Our investigation has uncovered that this is not an isolated incident. A cache of confidential files, shared by a source with direct access to the Ministry of Justice’s internal database, reveals that at least 47 violent offenders with similar backgrounds have been released early since 2018 without proper oversight. The ministry has admitted to a “data management error” but insists that only a handful of cases were mishandled. The documents we have seen tell a different story.
This is where the story takes a darker turn. The same source has provided evidence that the ministry has been systematically deleting or altering criminal records of high-profile cases to meet European Union targets on prison population reduction. The EU has been pushing member states to cut incarceration rates, and France has been falling behind. But tying EU quotas to public safety is a dangerous game. One senior judge, speaking on condition of anonymity, described it as “a bureaucratic murder”.
Meanwhile, the opposition is demanding Dupond-Moretti’s resignation. Marine Le Pen of the National Rally has called for a parliamentary commission, while the left-wing La France Insoumise accuses the government of “institutionalised cover-up”. The president, Emmanuel Macron, has remained silent, but our sources say he is furious and has ordered a purge of the ministry’s top echelons. The question is whether this is genuine reform or just a PR exercise.
One thing is clear: the system failed a child. And the people who let that happen are still in power. This story is not going away.









