Jean-Marie Bigard compares Pierre Palmade’s stroke to “intellectual suicide”: “It’s terrifying!”

On February 10, 2023, Pierre Palmade’s life changed completely. Indeed, the 54-year-old actor hit a vehicle coming opposite on the D 372 in Villiers-en-Bière, in Seine-et-Marne. An accident that left three seriously injured. Including a 38-year-old man, his 6-year-old son and his 27-year-old sister-in-law. The latter lost the baby she was expecting following the accident.

Hospitalized, interviewed by the gendarmes, and tried before time, Pierre Palmade is today a “free” man. “Free” but forced to stay in the hospital where he is receiving treatment after suffering a stroke on February 25, 2023. This Tuesday, March 21, Cyril Hanouna wanted to take stock of the state of health of the sidekick to Michèle Laroque. “Some people say it’s a very serious stroke, others less, I was told that apparently it was serious. And that it was not a small stroke”he recalled on set before giving the floor to Gilles Verdez.

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Jean-Marie Bigard, affected by the state of health of Pierre Palmade

“Your information is fully confirmed by the decision to say that, given his condition, it would be exceptional for him to be able to repeat the fact of taking a car and driving”, confirmed the columnist before specifying: “He could have been imprisoned but the judge said ‘given his condition it seems almost impossible to me that there is a repetition of the act’. So that corroborates your information”. Regarding the stroke, Fatou’s companion explains that the condition of Muriel Robin’s friend is judged “serious by medical experts” and so “by the investigating chamber”. In fact, Gilles Verdez confirms that it is not a question “from a small benign stroke from which we recover in three days”.

After having had the version of Gilles Verdez, Cyril Hanouna questioned Jean-Marie Bigard. “Do you have any news yourself or not at all?”he asked him before Pierre Palmade’s friend in the past replied: “No not at all”. The companion of Lola Marois continues and thinks that this AVC, for him, “It must be a kind of intellectual suicide”. “That is, a time when you can’t take what you are or what you’ve done. Something like that. And maybe you’re twisting a gut in your head and that’s surely what happened in Peter’s head”, he said. Jean-Marie Bigard then tried to put himself in the shoes of Pierre Palmade: “Do you realize, you wake up every morning saying to yourself ‘I am responsible for this…'”. A situation he judges “terrifying”.

RF

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