Courrier de Lyon case

The "Courrier de Lyon" case is a famous French criminal case. It occurred during the French Revolution. During the night of 27 and 28 April 1796, a mail coach was ambushed outside Paris (commune of Vert-Saint-Denis) by several men who stole a large sum of money (7 million livres). The stage coach was supposed to go to Lyon from Paris, carrying money for the Army of Italy. Both the driver and the armed guard were brutally killed. A third man onboard (whose identity was never established) disappeared without a trace.[1]

Following investigations, six men (Couriol, Guénot, Richard, Bruer, Bernard and Lesurques) were arrested. After a trial, all of them were guillotined (except Guénot and Richard). Later, Joseph Lesurques was rehabilitated: he always claimed innocence (the other convicts also said he had nothing to do with the robbery). Due to a physical resemblance with one of the suspects, he probably was mistaken by witnesses.[2] Today, this case is remembered in France for being a famous example of miscarriage of justice.

In popular culture

The story was turned into two notable plays, a French version by Paul Siraudin and Louis-Mathurin Moreau and the 1854 play The Courier of Lyons by Charles Reade. There have been numerous film adaptations of these two works.The case is featured in a 1937 French movie L'Affaire du courrier de Lyon.

Reade's play was turned into a 1916 silent film The Lyons Mail and a sound version The Lyons Mail in 1931.

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 3/22/2013. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.