Final verdict for François Thierry: one-year suspended prison sentence for complicity in the importation of 7 tons of cannabis
François Thierry, the former head of the French Central Narcotics Office, was sentenced to life imprisonment after waiving his right to appeal against a conviction. one-year suspended prison sentence pronounced for its role in the importation of 7 tons of cannabis resin in Paris in 2015.
This decision puts an end to a case which highlighted the legal and operational limits of French strategies to combat drug trafficking.
A conviction linked to a major cannabis import operation in Paris
The Bordeaux court found François Thierry guilty of «complicity in drug trafficking» in a high-risk operation in the heart of Paris. At the heart of the case was the guarded entrance to seven tonnes of cannabis resin, as part of a controlled delivery strategy aimed at tracking criminal networks rather than immediately intercepting shipments.
The operation was part of the so-called «Myrmidon» strategy, designed to enable law enforcement agencies to infiltrate trafficking networks with the help of informers, even if this meant temporarily tolerating large-scale drug flows. The court found, however, that the limits of this approach had been exceeded.
The main beneficiary of this operational framework was Sophiane Hambli, an informant who played a central role in several high-profile investigations and was tried in absentia. He was sentenced to a 20-year prison sentence and is still being held in Morocco.
Myrmidon« strategy in the spotlight
At the heart of the trial was the controversial police method known as «Myrmidon», developed under Thierry's direction at the head of the’Ocrtis between 2010 and 2016. This approach aimed to dismantle criminal organizations by infiltrating informants into the heart of trafficking networks, sometimes leaving shipments to proceed under surveillance.
In this case, the court concluded that this strategy had led to an unacceptable level of tolerance towards criminal activity. While the defense argued that the operation was part of a wider effort to dismantle organized networks, the court found that Thierry had helped facilitate large-scale drug importation without sufficient control mechanisms.
The incident generated even more controversy because of its scale: customs officers finally intercepted the 7 tonnes of cannabis resin stored in vans in an upmarket district of Paris. The seizure triggered tensions between the various law enforcement agencies, highlighting coordination failures within the French anti-drug trafficking apparatus.
A judicial outcome that redefines internal debates on policing
The sentence handed down to François Thierry, a one-year suspended prison sentence, The verdict was handed down in March, but is now final after he chose not to appeal.
During the trial, Thierry defended his actions, insisting that he had never intended to conceal operational details and that the mission was aimed at targeting high-level trafficking figures rather than small-scale seizures. He described the outcome of the 2015 operation as an «operational disaster», while maintaining that the logic behind the controlled infiltration remained, in his view, strategically justified.
His defense denounced what it considered to be a «unjust condemnation», arguing that law enforcement agencies sometimes have to operate in complex legal and operational gray areas to gain access to major criminal networks.
Beyond the individual conviction, this case has reopened the debate on the use of informers and controlled deliveries in strategies to combat drug trafficking in France. The balance between operational efficiency and legal responsibility remains a sensitive issue, particularly when large quantities of drugs are allowed to circulate under police supervision.
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