Would Delphine Jubillar have had enough of the “Bidochon life” she led with Cédric in Cagnac-Les-Mines and would she have decided to drop everything to go live abroad? It is a thesis that had actually been put forward shortly after the disappearance of the Albi nurse, who has not given any sign of life since the night of December 15 to 16, 2020.
François Vignolle, police-justice journalist for M6, had explained why this scenario of voluntary disappearance had been considered probable by certain investigators after the remarks of the 34-year-old painter-plasterer when the police arrived at their house in the Tarn. The day after his disappearance, Cédric Jubillar would have been particularly worried and anxious about the disappearance of his wife and would have raised this hypothesis with great determination. “She would have gone abroad sending a postcard saying ‘everything is fine‘” says François Vignolle adding that the mother of Louis and Elyah “would have left with her booklet A“and had some”fed up with his life and fed up with his children“.
However, Cédric’s thesis was very quickly swept away by Delphine’s friends and relatives who “loved his children” according to them. “She had just had a daughter, she had a job she loved“, explains the journalist on M6. A neighbor questioned by the chain even declared: “his children are his whole life. I don’t see her leaving and leaving her children, especially a baby.“. Indeed at the time of her disappearance, little Elyah was only 18 months old and her son was six years old.
An unlikely thesis, especially since Delphine, born Aussaguel, had herself lost her parents at a very young age and did not want to put her children through such trauma. “It’s weird…“concluded the neighbor, not at all convinced by the thesis of the voluntary departure of the nurse who worked in a clinic in Albi.
Cédric Jubillar remains presumed innocent of the charges against him until the final judgment of this case.