Skip to main content

Father of Toulouse killer sues

By the CNN Wire Staff
updated 12:51 PM EDT, Mon June 11, 2012
Relatives of Islamist extremist Mohammed Merah attend the burial of his body in a Toulouse cemetery.
Relatives of Islamist extremist Mohammed Merah attend the burial of his body in a Toulouse cemetery.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Mohammed Merah was killed March 22 by police
  • He had been sought in connection with 7 killings
  • The father says police could have captured his son alive

Paris, France (CNN) -- The father of Mohammed Merah filed a lawsuit Monday here alleging murder in the killing by police of his son in March in southern France, the father's lawyer said.

"I can confirm to you that this afternoon that there has been a lawsuit against unnamed persons for murder with aggravating circumstances concerning those who gave the orders at the top of the police," said Isabelle Courtant-Peyre, a member of the legal team representing Mohamed Benalel Merah.

The legal team that filed the complaint is led by Algerian lawyer Zahia Mokhtari, she said.

Mohammed Merah was killed March 22 by police after a 32-hour standoff at the apartment in Toulouse where he was holed up.

French gunman buried in Toulouse
Timeline of Toulouse standoff
Who is French shootings suspect?

He was wanted for the killings of three French paratroopers, a rabbi, and three Jewish children ages 4, 5, and 7. Two other people were seriously wounded in shootings blamed on him.

Benalel Merah had said in March that he was planning to sue because France could have captured his son alive, but instead chose to shoot him.

"I totally condemn what my son Mohammed Merah did in France," he said at the time, adding that he believed his son must have been tricked.

Merah was tracked down by police 10 days after the first shooting on March 11 and fatally shot as the standoff came to a bloody end.

Then-President Nicolas Sarkozy rejected Merah's father's accusation that the killing could have been avoided.

"As head of state, I would have preferred that Mohammed Merah be arrested alive. The police did a remarkable job, and I consider that any debate about that question is shameful," he told BFM-TV.

Merah's uncle, meanwhile, has denied statements made by French authorities that Merah was an al Qaeda sympathizer and that he had traveled to Afghanistan or Pakistan to train to use arms.

Azizi, the uncle, said Merah was a victim of an extremist group that he got to know while he was in jail.

Authorities have said they placed Merah, a petty criminal, under surveillance after he visited Pakistan and Afghanistan. Critics have asked why he was not being more closely watched.

He said that he had attended an al Qaeda training camp, according to Paris prosecutor Francois Molins, and was on the U.S. no-fly list for that reason, a U.S. intelligence official said.

Al Jazeera received video of the shootings but chose not to broadcast or distribute it. The video of the shootings on March 11, 15 and 19 was apparently recorded by a camera around the gunman's neck.

CNN's Alex Felton contributed to this report

ADVERTISEMENT
Part of complete coverage on
updated 10:26 AM EST, Wed February 6, 2013
Advocates say the exam includes unnecessarily invasive and irrelevant procedures -- like a so-called "two finger" test.
updated 7:09 PM EST, Tue February 5, 2013
Supplies of food, clothing and fuel are running short in Damascus and people are going hungry as the civil war drags on.
updated 1:01 PM EST, Wed February 6, 2013
Supporters of Richard III want a reconstruction of his head to bring a human aspect to a leader portrayed as a murderous villain.
updated 10:48 AM EST, Tue February 5, 2013
Robert Fowler spent 130 days held hostage by the same al Qaeda group that was behind the Algeria massacre. He shares his experience.
updated 12:07 AM EST, Wed February 6, 2013
As "We are the World" plays, a video shows what looks like a nuclear attack on the U.S. Jim Clancy reports on a bizarre video from North Korea.
The relationship is, once again, cold enough to make Obama's much-trumpeted "reset" in Russian-U.S. relations seem thoroughly off the rails.
Ten years on, what do you think the Iraq war has changed in you, and in your country? Send us your thoughts and experiences.
updated 7:15 AM EST, Tue February 5, 2013
Musician Daniela Mercury has sold more than 12 million albums worldwide over a career span of nearly 30 years.
Photojournalist Alison Wright travelled the world to capture its many faces in her latest book, "Face to Face: Portraits of the Human Spirit."
updated 7:06 PM EST, Tue February 5, 2013
Europol claims 380 soccer matches, including top level ones, were fixed - as the scandal widens, CNN's Dan Rivers looks at how it's done.
updated 7:37 AM EST, Wed February 6, 2013
That galaxy far, far away is apparently bigger than first thought. The "Star Wars" franchise will get two spinoff movies, Disney announced.
updated 2:18 AM EST, Fri February 8, 2013
It's an essential part of any trip, an activity we all take part in. Yet almost none of us are any good at it. Souvenir buying is too often an obligatory slog.
ADVERTISEMENT