×Close Les grands reporters Brendan Kemmet et Stéphane Sellami se plongé dans l histoire du grand banditisme français pour en tirer un récit haletant.
Bienvenue dans la saga secrète du grand banditisme français : Brendan Kemmet et Stéphane Sellami, grands reporters spécialistes des royaumes obscurs, nous embarquent dans le monde ultraviolent de la « Maghreb Connection ». De Pigalle à Belleville, du Vieux-Port de Marseille jusqu’à la corniche d’Oran, en Algérie, le livre nous plonge dans les coulisses fascinantes de la pègre, entre trafics et règlements de comptes.
Through the bars of his prison window Rédoine Faïd can see far off into the cloudless sky. It s early on a sunny Sunday in July 2018, and for now, the morning is quiet and ordinary at the Réau penitentiary, 25 miles southeast of Paris. But Faïd can envision what s coming he can see it all unfold like the movie he s been scripting for months in his mind.
Outside his cell, two guards approach. These are the solitary confinement quarters: a controlled unit within the maximum-security prison where notable or potentially dangerous criminals are held. Few prisoners in France are as notable as the 46-year-old Faïd, who officially ranks among the country s highest-risk inmates. A notorious thief the architect of a flurry of dazzling heists and blockbuster robberies in the 1990s that targeted banks, jewelry stores, and armored cars Faïd became more infamous still in 2013, when he blasted out of the Sequedin prison, near Lille, where he d been serving time after a botched robbery, using