Rambouillet attacker suffered from ‘personality disorders’

The investigation into the most recent knife attack at the Rambouillet police station, which claimed the life of a 49-year-old white police officer, concluded that the terrorist had been radicalized in recent months and had suffered from “personality disorders”. Five people are still in police custody, including a cousin of the assailant.

“The radicalization of the aggressor seems hardly questionable,” the judge confirmed and added that the “the presence of certain psychological disturbances could be observed”.

The investigation, conducted by French intelligence, suggested that Djamel Gorchene became involved in radical Islam in the fall of 2020. In the context of the republication of the Mohammed cartoons by “Charlie Hebdo” and the assassination of Samuel Paty, he justified an armed response against those which offend the prophet. He also regularly listened to the speeches of Islamist preachers, in particular a sheikh in Qatar, supporting the resentment of Muslims against Western countries.

Due to “personality disorders” on February 19 and then on February 23, he saw a psychiatrist at Rambouillet hospital. A friend of Djamel Gorchene, who had provided him with an accommodation certificate when he arrived in France in 2009, also told the police that he had noticed that the future killer was “depressed” at the time. But his condition did not raise any particular concern according to the doctor, however, since he was prescribed treatment or hospitalization.

On Facebook, Djamel Gorchene followed the news of several Tunisian figures of Salafism.

The government has vowed to protect the police to avert similar attacks, but RN member Jordan Bardella dryly remarked: “We will protect the police by other police. Then we will protect the police officers who protect the police by Sentinel soldiers. And we will put up barricades to protect the Sentinel soldiers. What if we simply stopped importing terrorists?”

https://freewestmedia.com/2021/04/26/rambouillet-attacker-suffered-from-personality-disorders/