While awaiting trial in September 1924, Seznec wrote to his lawyer Marcel Kahn: “For the typewriter, I never saw it before it was introduced to me … and, admitting that I would have needed a typewriter, I had one on my own provision, which I had lent to M. Duchêne. I would therefore have stopped buying them, especially since I had no intention of trading in them. Needless to say that the place where I was reported to have [hidden] this machine was open to everyone and without any closure and even my employees could perhaps attest that they frequented this attic very often and that they did not ever see a typewriter [there]. Surely then this machine, if at least it was found in this place, was brought after my arrest, because before it was not there, it is still a stroke of revenge.”
Guillaume Seznec
Crooked cop Pierre Bonny
Pierre-Marie Quéméneur
Prosecutors presented unsubstantiated
evidence that Seznec had bought the Royal second-hand (though it was only four
years old) on June 13, 1923, in Le Havre, 255 miles north of Seznec’s home town
of Morlaix, but the court also heard that Seznec had lent his car to a young
Breton farmer for three days from June 12.Quéméneur had disappeared on May 25, 18 days earlier. His body was never found. Letters produced as evidence showed Seznec was not in Le Havre on June 13, but instead in Brest and Saint-Brieuc. Seznec maintained he had never been to Le Havre, and there was a statement from Brest typewriter agent Joseph Auguste Batude that he had gone to see Seznec in Morlaix on May 30. Batude claimed Seznec had asked him, “if it would be possible to change the American keyboard of a machine for a French keyboard”. Batude testified that he replied, “the operation would be expensive and difficult”. One witness said he saw Seznec boarding a train in Paris on June 13, carrying the typewriter under his arm. “How do you know it was a typewriter?” asked Kahn. “The police magistrate told me,” came the reply, sending the courtroom into uproar. Kahn responded by saying, “The defence might not be buying all the witnesses,” a suggestion the prosecution was.
Seznec's home in Morlaix, where the Royal typewriter was found.
There have been 14 subsequent
reviews of the Seznec case, all of which have added considerable substance to the suspicion
the case against Seznec was manufactured. In 1948 Yvonne Chapelain de la
Villeguérin, widow of Colonel Moreau-Lalande, Bonny's superior during World War
I, stated that Bonny told her late husband in 1936 that he “found himself obliged
to deposit the typewriter … where it was found [by gendarmes].” Of course, the
type in a document supposedly signed by Quéméneur and found after his
disappearance matched that of the “planted” typewriter*. Henriette Sallé,
mistress of Georges de Hainault, one of the witnesses to the alleged purchase
of the typewriter by Seznec, said in 1953 that de Hainault confessed to her that
he had given false testimony under pressure from Bonny. Louise Héranval,
another witness to the purchase of the typewriter by Seznec in 1923, retracted
her testimony in 1993. (*The document related to the sale by Quéméneur of the mansion
Traon-ar-nez at Plourivo in the Côtes-d'Armor to Seznec at a very low price.) Seznec on trial at Quimper, capital of the Finistère department of Brittany.
Bonny (1895-1944) was
jailed in 1935 on corruption charges and later became known as a traitor and
unscrupulous Gestapo collaborator, the executor of the lower works of the Vichy
regime. He was executed by firing squad on December 26, 1944. Seznec's post-war
defence, based on later testimonies, showed Bonny had orchestrated the
conspiracy against Seznec and was the author of false witness statements presented at Seznec's trial. Seznec and his wife Marie Jeanne Marc on their wedding day on July 18, 1906.
Guillaume Seznec, born in
Plomodiern in Finistère on May 1, 1878, had in 1923 entered into an arrangement with Quéméneur
to raise funds for the purchase of seven-seater 60hp Cadillacs left behind in
France by American forces after World War I. In 1922 a Breton newspaper ran an advert
inserted by a Parisian businessman seeking the vehicles. The plan was to sell
the cars to the Soviet Union, which during the Russian Revolution was urgently
placing orders in the West for items such as cars (and typewriters). Quéméneur
disappeared during a trip from Rennes, the capital city of Brittany, to Paris
with Seznec, which started on the morning of May 24, 1923 in a Cadillac owned
by a man called Lesneven. Seznec returned to Morlaix on May 28, but Quéméneur was
never seen again. Even in the absence of a body, an eight-day trial was held at
Quimper, capital of the Finistère department of Brittany, and Seznec was found
guilty of the murder of Quéméneur on November 4, 1924. With remission on a pardon
from General Charles de Gaulle for good behavior, Seznec returned to Paris on
July 1, 1947. In 1953 he was reversed into by a van that then drove off and Seznec
died of his injuries on February 13, 1954. Fourteen attempts to clear his name since
have all failed.In December 2018, a 90-year-old Norman woman claimed that her father, Georges Morand, secretly buried a corpse in the village of Saint-Lubin-de-la-Haye at the request of one of his friends, Raymond Lainé. The latter was trying to hide the body of someone he killed in Houdan, where Seznec said he had dropped Quéméneur off at a train station on May 25, 1923, before Seznec headed back to Morlaix. This murder mystery continues to tantalize people in France, and in many other parts of the world.
1 comment:
Hello Robert:
This is an amazing posting. It has sparked my interest in the crime and with Pierre Bonny.
Wonder bit of research.
Thanks,
John
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