Man goes on trial in France for cold-case murder of schoolgirl

photo shows municipal police and a national police insignia on the vests of officers during a visit by the Interior minister focused on municipal police, in at the city hall of Sartrouville, nortwest of Paris, on September 2, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 22 September 2025
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Man goes on trial in France for cold-case murder of schoolgirl

LILLE, France: A man accused of murdering a schoolgirl in northern France over three decades ago goes on trial on Monday, 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 faces up to 30 years in prison if convicted by the criminal court in the town of Laon. A verdict is expected on Wednesday.
“It’s a miracle that we have got this far,” Arnaud Miel, a lawyer for the victim’s mother, told AFP.
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.

- ‘Memory lapses’ -

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.
“His ability to remember is not complete; these events date back more than 30 years,” his lawyer, Justine Devred, told AFP.
“He admits to having been there, he remembers being there with his brother, but then he has memory lapses,” Devred said.
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.
The investigation has ruled out the involvement of his brother, who died a few months before Lafolie’s arrest.


The father of a US-based Hong Kong activist is convicted under national security law

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The father of a US-based Hong Kong activist is convicted under national security law

  • This is the first case of its kind under a 2024, homegrown national security law
  • Kwok was arrested in April 2025 and was accused of having attempted to obtain funds from an insurance policy under his daughter’s name
HONG KONG: The father of a US-based activist wanted by Hong Kong authorities was convicted Wednesday for attempting to deal with his daughter’s financial assets in the city, in the first court case of its kind brought under a homegrown national security law.
Kwok Yin-sang’s daughter Anna is the executive director of the Washington-based Hong Kong Democracy Council. Authorities in 2023 offered 1 million Hong Kong dollars (about $127,900) for information leading to her arrest and later banned anyone from handling any funds for her — widely seen as part of a yearslong crackdown on challenges against Beijing’s rule following the massive, anti-government protests in 2019.
Kwok, 69, was arrested in April 2025 under the security law, locally known as Article 23 legislation, enacted a year before. He was accused of having attempted to obtain funds from an insurance policy under his daughter’s name. He pleaded not guilty.
Acting principal magistrate Cheng Lim-chi found him guilty on Wednesday, saying Kwok must have known his daughter was an absconder and he was attempting to handle her assets.
According to previous hearings, Kwok bought the insurance policy for Anna when she was a toddler and she gained control of it when she reached 18 years old. The father in 2025 wanted to cancel the policy and get funds from it, the court heard.
Kwok’s lawyer, Steven Kwan, pleaded for a lesser sentence for his client, saying there was no evidence to show his client was trying to get the money to send to his daughter. He suggested the judge consider a 14-day prison term.
While the maximum sentence for his charge is seven years of imprisonment, but his case was heard at the magistrates’ courts, which normally hands down a maximum sentence of two years.
His sentencing is scheduled for Feb. 26.
Authorities have accused Anna Kwok of demanding for foreign sanctions, blockade and engaging in other hostile activities against China and Hong Kong through meeting foreign politicians and government officials.
“Today, my father was convicted simply for being my father,” said the younger Kwok on X. “This is transnational repression.”
She said his charge was founded on “incoherent fiction” and she had not received or sought funds from her father or anyone in Hong Kong. She added that the moves from the city’s government will not discourage her from carrying on her activism.
Amnesty International Hong Kong Overseas spokesperson Joey Siu said the conviction was apparently politically motivated.
“It also sets a dangerous precedent, designed to terrify and silence others who continue to speak out about Hong Kong issues from overseas,” she said in a statement, calling for Kwok’s release.
The police’s bounties targeting overseas-based Hong Kong activists, including Siu and pro-democracy former lawmakers Nathan Law and Ted Hui, have drawn criticism from the US and the UK governments.
In 2025, Washington sanctioned six Chinese and Hong Kong officials who it alleged were involved in “transnational repression” and acts that threaten to further erode the city’s autonomy. It said Beijing and Hong Kong officials have used Hong Kong’s national security laws extraterritorially to intimidate, silence and harass some activists who were forced to flee overseas.
Weeks after that, China said it would sanction US officials, lawmakers and leaders of nongovernmental organizations who it said have “performed poorly” on Hong Kong issues.
After Beijing imposed a 2020 national security law on the city, many leading activists were arrested or silenced. Others fled abroad and continued their advocacy for Hong Kong, a British colony that returned to Chinese rule in 1997.
Both China and Hong Kong governments insist the security laws were crucial for the city’s stability.