Man jailed in France three decades after cold-case murder of schoolgirl

LILLE, France (AFP) — A man convicted of murdering a schoolgirl in northern France more than three decades ago was on Thursday jailed for 30 years, in one of the country’s oldest cold cases to reach court in recent years.

The killing of 17-year-old Nadege Desnoix in 1994 in the Aisne region had for years remained unsolved until DNA evidence led to the arrest of Pascal Lafolie, now 58, in 2021.

Lafolie, who received the maximum sentence, will have to serve two-thirds of his term before being eligible for parole, according to the verdict delivered in the northern town of Laon.

He had denied the charges, saying on the opening day of the trial on Monday that while he admitted to having been at the scene, “I don’t admit to committing this murder.”

In late May 1994, Desnoix’s stabbed body was discovered under some foliage on a side road leading to her high school in the town of Chateau-Thierry.

Near her schoolbag were a nylon cord and a freshly picked rose. An autopsy revealed no signs of sexual assault.

Investigators looked into numerous leads, including her boyfriend and the notorious serial killer Michel Fourniret, but found no concrete evidence.

Genetic evidence was discovered on Desnoix’s clothing, but DNA databases of suspects and people convicted in other cases failed to find a conclusive match — until 2021.

That year, new tests revealed that Lafolie’s DNA, taken a few months earlier in a domestic violence case, matched that found on a hairband Desnoix was wearing when she died.

Lafolie, who has previous convictions for rape and sexual assault, initially confessed to investigators during questioning.

But he later retracted his statement and now says he is innocent.

Lafolie says he was driving his brother to an appointment in the area on the day they crossed paths with Desnoix.

He says he tried to stop his brother from harming the girl, prompting his brother to strike him repeatedly on the head, causing gaps in his memory.

But investigation has ruled out the involvement of his brother, who died a few months before Lafolie’s arrest.

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