Quentin D., a 23-year-old nationalist student, died on February 14, 2026, from injuries sustained in a violent assault on Thursday evening in Lyon, on the sidelines of a conference by LFI MEP Rima Hassan. The Lyon prosecutor's office has reclassified the investigation as aggravated fatal blows. Numerous political reactions call for calm and justice.
On February 12, 2026, around 7:40 p.m., Quentin D., a 23-year-old mathematics student from Vienne (Isère), was assaulted near Quai Fulchiron in Vieux-Lyon. According to the identitarian group Némésis, for which he was informally providing security during a protest against Rima Hassan's conference at IEP Lyon, he was lynched by antifascist militants in overwhelming numbers. A friend alerted emergency services; Quentin was hospitalized at Édouard Herriot Hospital in a state of brain death due to a cerebral hemorrhage. He died on February 14, as announced by the Lyon prosecutor's office, which opened an investigation for aggravated assault, reclassified as aggravated fatal blows.
The family's lawyer, Me Fabien Rajon, denounced a 'methodically prepared ambush' by 'organized and trained individuals, in very large numbers and armed, some with masked faces.' The family calls 'for calm and restraint' and trusts the justice system. Némésis accuses members of the Jeune Garde, an antifascist group dissolved in 2025 by Bruno Retailleau and founded by LFI deputy Raphaël Arnault, whose parliamentary collaborator was reportedly identified among the assailants.
Emmanuel Macron reacted on X: 'No cause, no ideology will ever justify killing. The hatred that assassinates has no place among us.' He calls 'for calm, restraint, and respect.' Marine Le Pen denounces 'the unacceptable impunity of the barbarians responsible for this lynching' and demands rigorous condemnation. Interior Minister Laurent Nunez sent a telegram to prefects to strengthen vigilance around political gatherings.
From LFI's side, Raphaël Arnault expresses 'horror and disgust' and wishes 'that all light be shed.' Manuel Bompard condemns 'with the utmost firmness any physical violence.' Éric Coquerel points to a 'Lyon context' of extreme right-wing violence. Several LFI offices were vandalized. A rally in homage to Quentin is scheduled for Sunday, February 16, at Place de la Sorbonne in Paris.
Quentin, a convert to Catholicism, had no criminal record and defended his convictions non-violently, according to his close ones. A video relayed by TF1 shows a violent assault on three men, potentially linked to the incident.