One week after the fatal lynching of 23-year-old Quentin Deranque in Lyon, seven suspects were charged Thursday evening, six with voluntary homicide and one with complicity by instigation. The accused, aged 20 to 26 and linked to the ultraleft movement, were placed in provisional detention. The case has sparked intense political debate on violence and ties to La France insoumise.
Quentin Deranque, a 23-year-old nationalist militant, was lynched on February 12, 2026, on the sidelines of a conference by LFI MEP Rima Hassan at Sciences Po Lyon. He died two days later from a traumatic brain injury. The investigation, opened for voluntary homicide, led to the arrest of eleven people on Tuesday and Wednesday, with seven presented to an investigating judge on Thursday.
Lyon's prosecutor, Thierry Dran, announced during a press conference that six suspects were charged with «voluntary homicide, aggravated violence, and criminal association». The seventh, Jacques-Élie Favrot, 25, parliamentary assistant to LFI deputy Raphaël Arnault, was charged with «complicity in murder by instigation, aggravated violence, and criminal association». All were placed in provisional detention due to a «risk of public disorder».
Aged 20 to 26, the suspects are mostly students or employees, with no major judicial records except two. Three admitted belonging to the ultraleft movement, and several are close to Jeune Garde, an antifascist group founded in 2018 by Raphaël Arnault and dissolved in June 2025. «Two refused to speak; the others acknowledge their presence at the scene and some admit striking blows, but deny homicidal intent», Thierry Dran specified.
Favrot's lawyer, Me Bertrand Sayn, stated that his client «did not deliver direct blows likely to have caused the death». Identification of all participants remains incomplete, according to the prosecutor.
Politically, the case embarrasses LFI: two of Arnault's assistants are involved, and calls for his exclusion are multiplying. From New Delhi, Emmanuel Macron urged extreme parties to «clean house» in their ranks, calling to avoid «any spiral of violence». Justice Minister Gérald Darmanin proposes ineligibility penalties for those convicted of physical violence. Quentin's parents call for calm, while tributes are planned in Lyon on Saturday, without a ban at this stage.
The debate focuses on political violence: 76% of French people believe the PS should no longer ally with LFI, according to an Odoxa poll for Le Figaro.