Drones seen buzzing above a French prison months ago may have been on a reconnaissance mission ahead of the helicopter escape of a notorious French criminal — his second breakout in five years.
France’s justice minister said Monday that several drones were spotted flying over Reau Prison south of Paris a few months ago. She speculated they were linked to the escape Sunday of career criminal and murder convict Redoine Faid.
Heavily armed men landed a helicopter in the one prison yard not covered by anti-aircraft netting on Sunday, used a grinding machine to break open the door of the visiting room where Faid was seeing his brother, and escorted the prisoner to freedom.
The commando-style operation appeared to have been meticulously planned. Nicole Belloubet, the justice minister, said investigators were examining whether the drones, sighted repeatedly in recent months, were linked to the jailbreak.
“Someone spotted this possible way out, and it could have been done using drones,” Ms Belloubet said.
Prison wardens had called for netting to be installed over the yard, but the minister said the reason it was not done was because convicts were not usually allowed into it.
French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe said 2,900 officers are now looking for Faid in a massive manhunt.
“Police forces are fully mobilized in order to find this person,” Philippe told RTL. “We know he is dangerous. We know he is a determined person and I want to find him as soon as possible.”
Faid’s brother was in custody Monday.
Faid, 46, is an avid fan of caper films, the author of a confessional book about his life of crime and a serial robber of banks and armored trucks.
He was serving 25 years for an attempted armed robbery in 2010 that led to a high-speed chase and a shootout with police that killed 26-year-old officer Aurelie Fouquet. Faid had already escaped prison once before, in 2013, by blasting his way out with explosives that were hidden in tissue packs.
“Redoine Faid is someone who has freedom in his DNA. He also has lawbreaking in his DNA,” Laurent-Franck Lienard, the lawyer for Fouquet’s family, told RTL radio on Monday. “If there was one inmate to keep a close eye on, it was him.”
French media reported that three men took the helicopter pilot hostage at a flying club in the Paris region.
The armed men set off smoke canisters to hide from prison video cameras and the helicopter touched down in the only part of the complex that was not covered by anti-helicopter netting, said a member of the prison guards’ union, Loic Delbroc.
The helicopter pilot was later released with no injuries. The helicopter was found burned out in a town north of Paris.
A wanted notice for Faid said he drove off in a utility truck.
Justice Minister Nicole Belloubet said authorities were urgently looking for gaps in the security system that allowed the brazen breakout. She said authorities were particularly focused on several drones that flew over the prison months ago.
Faid was a fan of Robert De Niro, Michael Mann and Steve McQueen, according to Frederic Ploquin, who met him several times while researching a book about the French underworld.
“He always tried to bring to reality all these things that he learned in the movies,” Ploquin told BFM television. “This escape is very much in his style.”
Faid’s departure is far from the first French prison escape via helicopter. In 1999, a helicopter dangled cords into an exercise yard at Marseille’s prison and plucked five inmates out, although one was killed and three were recaptured.
One of the most spectacular French aerial escapes occurred in 1986, when a seasoned criminal, Michel Vaujour, was plucked from La Sante prison in Paris by his lover aboard a helicopter.
Photos: AFP
Sources: ABC News; The Telegraph