“Don’t make me talk about that!”, Michel Boujenah interrupts Ophélie Meunier in her interview and says everything he knows about Pierre Palmade!

Like all those close to Pierre Palmade, Michel Boujenah does not digest the drama that occurred on Friday February 10. An accident caused by the ex-acolyte of Michèle Laroque, while he was under the influence of cocaine. Following the pileup, the 54-year-old artist was indicted for “manslaughter” and “involuntary injuries” with aggravating circumstances. Indeed, in this accident, a man and his son, in the vehicle hit by the actor, are still hospitalized and in serious condition, while a pregnant woman, also present in the car, lost her baby seven months…

A drama that has been reacting strongly for more than a week. No one can forgive Pierre Palmade, even his friends. The proof, with Michel Boujenah, guest this Saturday February 18 in the newspaper of Ophélie Meunier on RTL. The actor and humorist was taken by the emotion when the journalist questioned him on the subject. “Michel Boujenah, do you think he can get out of these addictions, Pierre Palmade? This isn’t the first time he’s been in detox…” she asked him before getting cut off by his guest.

See also: “For her it’s intolerable”: Pierre Palmade let go by Muriel Robin … who regrets having visited him in the hospital

Michel Boujenah moved by evoking Pierre Palmade

“I believe today, alas, it’s terrible, that it’s not about his addictions. I think he can’t get out of the situation he’s put himself in”replied Michel Boujenah, filled with emotions when he talks about the case. “The guilt in him must be incredibly strong. I don’t know how… It’s terrible”he continues.

The 70-year-old actor, disturbed by the subject, then asks Ophélie Meunier not to “talk about it” : “because it terrifies me”. “And it terrifies me because I know him, but it also terrifies me for all the people who suffer from all this: the victims and those responsible for the accidents”, he adds, still very moved. Subsequently, Michel Boujenah explained that he made “a lot of road” in his life. Of the “people on the road”he saw many, and very often dangers for other motorists. “I would see them and I was like ‘why don’t we arrest them?’…my God!”he lamented, still bewildered by the drama of Pierre Palmade, and the dramas he could have witnessed…

RF

source site-8