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Monday, January 17, the gendarmes spear new excavations in the investigation into the disappearance of Delphine Jubillar. Soldiers from specialized operational excavations were called in as reinforcements alongside the gendarmes to inspect an area around a farm that burned down last April, in Cagnac-les-Mines (Tarn).
The small road leading to the farm is now at the heart of the investigations, and will be for a month. According to a fellow prisoner of Cédric Jubillar, he admitted to having buried the body of his wife Delphine near this farm, located in an isolated place two kilometers from the family home of Cagnac-les-Mines (Tarn). The farm has already been inspected at the start of the investigation, but to leave nothing to chance, the investigators are now deploying great means to search the place.
Thus, a military unit was dispatched to the scene. These men are trained to sift through perilous terrain, without damaging evidence. “Detection is done on the surface, approximately between two and five centimeters above the ground”, details Lieutenant-Colonel Richard. For its part, the gendarmerie called on two archaeologists equipped with geo-radar capable of detecting cavities in the ground and walls. The lawyer for Delphine Jubillar’s cousin wants to be cautious, because “Cédric Jubillar likes to lure investigators to false leads”.