The lawyer
defending the prime surviving suspect for the Nov. 13 Paris attacks said
on Sunday he would sue a French prosecutor for divulging Salah
Abdeslam's private admission that he planned to blow himself up with
fellow Islamic State militants. Speaking
two days after Abdeslam was captured during a police raid in Brussels,
his lawyer Sven Mary accused the lead French investigator of violating
judicial confidentiality by quoting Abdeslam's statement to a magistrate
in Brussels at a news conference in Paris on Saturday evening. "I
cannot let this pass," Mary told Belgian state broadcaster RTBF. Mary's
office was not immediately available for comment, but RTBF said he
would start legal proceedings on Monday. At
the Paris news conference, Francois Molins read from Abdeslam's
statement, saying: ""He wanted to blow himself up at the Stade de France
and, I quote, backed out." Molins also told
reporters in Paris that people should treat with caution initial
statements by the 26-year-old French national. The
gun and bomb attacks on a sports stadium, bars and a concert hall
killed 130 people and was the deadliest militant assault in Europe since
2004. Abdeslam, who was
caught by police in Brussels after an intense, four-month manhunt, spent
his first night in a high security prison in the northwestern Belgian
city of Bruges. He is due to appear
before a judge in Brussels on Wednesday, and RTBF quoted his lawyer as
saying he will not seek Abdeslam's freedom from police custody. (Reuters)
Paris suspect's lawyer to sue French prosecutor: media
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