Pierre Bonny

Pierre Bonny

Pierre Bonny in 1934
Born January 25, 1895
Bordeaux, France
Died December 26, 1944
Fort de Montrouge, France
Cause of death Sentenced to death
Nationality French
Occupation Policeman

Pierre Bonny (1895[1] December 26, 1944), born in Bordeaux, was a French police officer. As an inspector, he was the investigating officer on the 1923 Seznec case, in which he has been accused of falsifying the evidence.[2][3] He was praised as one of the most talented police officers in the country helping to solve the notorious Stavisky financial scandal in 1934.[4] In 1935 he was jailed for 3 years on corruption charges.

During the Second World War, Bonny joined the French Gestapo, known as the Carlingue. He was executed by firing squad in 1944.[5]

Besides the overwhelming memory of a traitor and unscrupulous collaborator, he commonly incarnates the figure of a corrupt man, the executor of the lower works of the Vichy regime.

He is held to be the basis for the character of Monsieur Philibert in Patrick Modiano's wartime-set novel La Ronde de Nuit.[6]

References

  1. Pierre Bonny entry at France Justice
  2. Between Justice And Politics: The Ligue Des Droits De L'Homme, 1898-1945, William D. Irvine, Leland Stanford Jr University, 2007
  3. The French Against the French: Collaboration and Resistance, Milton Dank, J. B. Lippincott Company, 1974, p.214
  4. Mug shots: an archive of the famous, infamous, and most wanted, Raynal Pellicer, Abrams, 2009, pp.125-127
  5. The French Against the French: Collaboration and Resistance, Milton Dank, J. B. Lippincott Company, 1974, p.221
  6. Vichy's Afterlife: History and Counterhistory in Postwar France, Richard Joseph Golsan, University of Nebraska Press, 2000


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