The remains of young boy who went missing last summer from a village in the French Alps were found this weekend, in the first major breakthrough in the case that has gripped France. Investigators are now trying to determine how he died.
Prosecutor Jean-Luc Blachon said genetic testing on bones found near the tiny village of Le Vernet showed they were the remains of Emile, who went missing on 8 July 2023.
The two-and-a-half-year-old had been with his grandparents in the village of 25 residents, where he had come to stay at their second home for the holidays.
The bones were reportedly found by a hiker, and Blachon said that forensic investigators were analysing them to determine the cause of death.
Police had opened a criminal investigation into a possible abduction, and had also considered the possibility that the boy fell or had an accident.
Around a hundred gendarmes from the criminal research institute and a team of sniffer dogs will be deployed on Monday to search the area.
Neuf mois après sa disparition, des ossements correspondant au corps du petit Emile ont été retrouvés à proximité du Haut-Vernet, une découverte mettant fin aux recherches de l'enfant, mais dont la cause de la mort reste toujours inconnue #AFP
— Agence France-Presse (@afpfr) March 31, 2024
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Revisiting the day
On Sunday police set up a roadblock on the only road into Le Vernet, and investigators started re-interviewing 17 people, including family members, neighbours and witnesses to revisit the moments before Emile went missing.
The last people to have seen him were two neighbours who saw him walking alone on a street.
A massive search was launched after he disappeared, involving police, soldiers, sniffer dogs, a helicopter and drones, which all failed to find any sign of him.
Time for mourning
"This heartbreaking news was feared," Emile’s parents said about the discovery of the bones in a statement released by their lawyer, Jerome Triomphe.
The statement said that the parents, both devout Catholics "now know on this Resurrection Sunday that Emile watches over them in the light and tenderness of God", adding that "the pain and sorrow remain".
(with AFP)