Since his incarceration in pre-trial detention in June 2021, Cédric Jubillar denies being the culprit in the disappearance of his wife Delphine Jubillar. His lawyers are indignant that their client remains behind bars when no evidence has been presented against the painter-plasterer. For the examining magistrates, the husband of the Tarn nurse did not reveal all his secrets and they asked for a psychiatric expertise. It has just been entered into the court file, The Parisian revealed several confusing passages about the complex personality of this suspect number 1. The doctor drew the conclusions of his two interviews with him, in order to best help justice in the face of this presumed culprit who is “well accessible to a possible criminal sanction” and “who was not affected byno mental disorder having abolished his discernment at the time of the facts“.
During two interrogations carried out for the first time in July 2021 then in October of the same year, a precise portrait of Cédric Jubillar, childhood love of Delphine née Aussaguel, husband since 2013 and father of their two children Louis and Elyah, is revealed. . For the psychiatrist, he is endowed with a “normal intelligence” and “constantly adapts to its interlocutor“. If He Shows Up Sometimes”angry“, he is also able to be “quickly seductiver“. His “understanding of relationship issues“is manifest and it appears”not easily destabilized“. Regarding the facts presented to him about the sudden disappearance of his wife on the night of December 15 to 16, 2020, he does not let see “no feeling of guilt“, “denies having been able to attempt the life of his wife and does not understand why he is implicated“.
The work of the psychiatrist is also to consider the hypothesis of his guilt, that the lawyers of the civil parties defend with regard to the testimonies of the relatives of the young woman aged 33 years. For the expert, the passage to the act could be explained by “his personality, his need for control and mastery associated with a feeling of failure that cannot be easily explained in view of the psychic scars left by his own history“. The craftsman had also shared the misfortunes of his childhood, despite a mother very attached to him: absent father and stepfather with whom the relationship was conflicting.
Finally, the specialist explains in his mission letter the weight of the divorce on the couple:the end of a family life which he held dear, perhaps a moment of personal collapse. In this hypothesis, he could have acted in a moment of projective anger, refusing this feeling of failure.” The couple was struggling according to all accounts, even if Cédric Jubillar – by pure provocation? – was able to claim the opposite. His wife suffered from her marital relationship and described her life as that of a “Bidochon” She had projected herself into another love affair a few months before her disappearance.
Cédric Jubillar remains presumed innocent of the charges against him until the final judgment of this case.