Agnes Leroux Casino Nice

  
Maurice Agnelet leaving court in Rennes yesterday

Agnelet has always denied murdering Le Roux, the heiress to the Palais de la Mediterranee casino in Nice. She disappeared months after becoming embroiled in a hostile takeover bid of her mother's. 36-year murder riddle of heiress Agnes Le Roux and her lover Maurice Agnelet. The heiress to the Palais de la Mediterranee casino in Nice. Le Roux disappeared several months after she was at.

  • Find the perfect Agnes Le Roux stock photos and editorial news pictures from Getty Images. In front of the palace in Nice. The 'Casino Wars' of the 1970s closed.
  • In 1977, 29-year-old Agnes Le Roux was the heiress of the Palais de la Mediterranee, a popular casino in Nice, France. The casino was operated by Le Roux’s mother, who refused to allow her daughter to withdraw her inheritance.
Agnes Leroux Casino Nice
Maurice Agnelet leaving court in Rennes yesterday

A FORMER RIVIERA lawyer was convicted today of killing a glamorous casino heiress 36 years ago, after a legal battle that has gripped France.

Maurice Agnelet, 76, was sentenced to 20 years in prison in his third trial for the killing of his then mistress, Agnes Le Roux. She disappeared in October 1977, aged 29. Her body has never been found.

Agnelet showed no emotion as the verdict was read in the court in the northwestern town of Rennes.

Agnelet was initially acquitted of the murder but convicted on appeal in 2007 to serve 20 years — a verdict that was later overturned by the European Court of Human Rights.

His retrial in Rennes has seen a number of shocking new revelations, including testimony from Agnelet’s own son who said he believes his father committed the crime.

Renée Le Roux, 85, the mother of Agnes Le Roux, in court. Source: AP/Press Association Images

Guillaume Agnelet, 45, told the court on Monday that his mother had confided to him that his father had killed Le Roux in her sleep during a camping trip in Italy and then dumped the body by the side of the road.

He said his father had also confessed in the 1980s to knowing the location of the corpse.

Italian police launched their own probe after the accusation.

Agnelet’s ex-wife and the mother of Guillaume, Annie Litas, rejected the accusations during her own tearful testimony, accusing her son of suffering from psychological problems.

Before the end of the trial on Friday, Agnelet apologised to Le Roux’s family for his “attitude” since her death.

Mistress’s false alibi

He said he was sorry for any hurt “I may have caused the family with my attitude and my statements since Agnes’s unbelievable and tragic disappearance”.

Maurice Agnelet Source: AP Photo/David Vincent

In a three-hour closing statement on Thursday, prosecutor Philippe Petitprez said there was no other explanation for Le Roux’s disappearance than her killing by Agnelet.

“Maurice Agnelet is the one at the middle of this. Everything brings us back to Maurice Agnelet,” he said. “I am sure that Maurice Agnelet is guilty.”

In his closing statement, defence lawyer Francois Saint-Pierre had urged the jury to acquit, saying there was no concrete proof of Agnelet’s involvement.

“With no evidence, no crime scene and no witnesses, everything is interpretation,” he told the jury. “Having a motive has never been proof of committing a crime.”

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Agnelet has always denied murdering Le Roux, the heiress to the Palais de la Mediterranee casino in Nice.

She disappeared months after becoming embroiled in a hostile takeover bid of her mother’s casino.

Agnelet had seduced Le Roux and persuaded her to vote against her mother at a board meeting in June 1977 and to allow the casino to be sold to a rival owner.

Money from the transaction — three million francs, worth the equivalent of about €1.7 million in today’s money — first went into a joint account in the couple’s name and later ended up solely in Agnelet’s hands.

Agnelet was initially the prime suspect in the case but produced an alibi when another mistress claimed he was with her in Switzerland at the time.

The woman, Francoise Lausseure, later admitted she had lied and the case was reopened.

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by André Téchiné

synopsis

Nice, 1976. Agnès Le Roux, daughter of the owner of the Palais de la Méditerranée, falls in love with a beautiful lawyer ten years his senior Maurice Agnelet. It has other links, she loves to madness. Against a background of war casinos, he connects with Fratoni, sour competitor of his mother, who offers him three million francs to take control of the casino. Agnes accepts but resents his betrayal. Maurice away. After a suicide attempt, the young woman disappears...

Agnes Leroux Casino Nice Hotel

international title: In the Name of My Daughter
original title: L'Homme qu'on aimait trop
country: France
sales agent: Elle Driver
year: 2014
genre: fiction
directed by: André Téchiné
film run: 116'
release date: FR 16/07/2014, NL 07/08/2014
screenplay: André Téchiné, Cédric Anger
cast: Catherine Deneuve, Guillaume Canet, Adèle Haenel
cinematography by: Julien Hirsch
film editing: Hervé de Luze
art director: Nathalie Roubaud
costumes designer: Pascaline Chavanne
music: Benjamin Biolay
producer: Olivier Delbosc, Marc Missonnier
production: Fidélité Films, Mars Films, Canéo Films
backing: Région Ile-de-France, Centre National de la Cinématographie (CNC), Région Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur
distributor: Mars Films Distribution, Filmfreak Distributie