Jean-Claude Romand
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Jean-Claude Romand (born 11 February 1954) is a French spree killer and impostor who pretended to be a medical doctor for the World Health Organization for 18 years before killing his wife, children, and parents in January 1993, when he was about to be exposed.
In 1996, Romand was sentenced to life in prison for the 1993 murders. During his imprisonment, he worked to restore audio documents for the INA, and train other prisoners in audio restoration.<ref name="leparisien.fr">Template:Cite web</ref>
On 28 June 2019, Romand was granted conditional release and was released from prison under electronic monitoring to a Benedictine monastery, the Notre-Dame de Fontgombault abbey, whose monks agreed to receive Romand for 2 years. Reportedly having become very pious during his time in prison, Romand lived under strict conditions with the monks of the abbey, only being allowed to leave the premises for a few hours a day. Romand participated in the daily life of the 70 monks of the abbey during his time there, working in particular on agricultural work on the few hectares of the abbey estate, and was housed in the hotel section of the abbey.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Romand was released from the monastery in 2022 and is no longer required to wear an ankle bracelet. He lives in hiding in a village in Indre, with a retirement pension of about 800 euros per month. Romand remains obligated to continue to pay reimbursements to his victims. He is forbidden to contact the families of the victims, to appear in the media, or to appear in Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, Ile-de-France or Bourgogne-Franche-Comté areas. He is required to inform his judge when moving his residence, or when leaving Indre for a period of over two weeks.<ref name="leparisien.fr"/>
Romand has also been suspected to have played a part in the death of his father-in-law, Pierre Crolet, who fell from a staircase on 23 October 1988. Romand was the only witness to the alleged accident.<ref name=":3">Template:Cite web</ref>
Biography
Jean-Claude Romand was born on 11 February 1954 in Lons-le-Saunier and grew up in the village Clairvaux-les-Lacs in the département of Jura. He studied at the lycée of Lons-le-Saunier until his baccalauréat. In 1971, he registered at the classes préparatoires of Lycée du Parc in Lyon but dropped out after one term. Afterwards he enrolled as a medical student.Template:Citation needed
Romand told friends and family that he had passed the first and second year medical examinations in 1975, when in fact he had purposely avoided taking either. He never qualified as a doctor, which was not known to his parents.<ref name=":0">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name=":1">Template:Cite news</ref>
For 18 years, Romand posed as a successful medical professional and researcher in the World Health Organization (WHO).<ref name=":0" /> He claimed that he had researched arteriosclerosis and that he had contact with political figures.
In reality, he spent his days wandering and used the free information services of the local WHO building. He lived close by in Prévessin-Moëns, France. Periodically, he left for a supposed work trip but travelled only as far as Geneva International Airport and spent a couple of days in a hotel room there, studying medical journals and a travel guide about the various countries he lied about visiting. Romand lived off the money his wife and he had made by selling an apartment, from his wife's salary and from money given to him by various relatives, who were told that he was investing it in various hedge funds and foreign ventures.<ref name=":1" /><ref>Le Roman d'un menteur, France 2 documentary, 1999</ref>
Jean-Claude Romand is the only witness to the death of his father-in-law, Pierre Crolet, on 23 October 1988. Pierre had a fatal fall on the stairs of his house a few days after asking for reimbursement of part of his financial investment. When the rescuers arrived on the scene they claimed to have heard him stammer: "Jean-Claude m'a, Jean-Claude m'a..." ("Jean-Claude [missing verb]d me") before Jean-Claude intervened to put an oxygen mask on the face of his father-in-law. Pierre died of his injuries a few days later without waking up. The courts ruled it an accident and Romand was not prosecuted, later organizing his father-in-law's funeral and launching a fundraiser. He subsequently diverted all donations.<ref name=":3"/>
Actions on the night of the murder
On 9 January 1993, Romand withdrew 2,000 francs (equivalent to €Template:To EUR in Template:Inflation-year) and borrowed a .22 rifle from his father, for which he purchased a suppressor and gas canisters and asked for them to be gift wrapped. That night, according to the authorities, he beat his wife to death on the couple's double bed with a rolling pin. He left her body in bed, as if she were sleeping as normal. The next morning, Saturday, 10 January 1993, he woke his children, had breakfast and watched cartoons with them. He then made them go back to their beds, where he shot them both in the head.<ref name=":1" /><ref name=":2">Template:Cite web</ref> After these killings, the only people who could expose him were his parents and his former mistress, who wanted back the 900,000 francs that she had loaned him as a favour.
Around noon the same day, Romand travelled to his parents' house, where he joined them for lunch. Immediately after the meal, he repeatedly shot both of them and the family dog.<ref name=":1" />
In the evening, he picked up his former mistress, telling her they were invited to a dinner with the then-health minister, Bernard Kouchner. Pretending that they were lost, he made her get out of the car and attempted to strangle her with a cord, spraying tear gas into her face. When she fought back, he apologized and drove her back to her home, after making her promise never to tell anyone about his attempt to murder her. He then returned to his family home, which still contained the bodies of his dead wife and children.
That night, he sat and watched television before he poured petrol around the house, set it on fire, and took an overdose of sleeping pills.<ref name=":2" /> Whether this suicide attempt was genuine is doubtful, since some writers have pointed out that the pills he took were long expired and he had access to more effective barbiturates.<ref name="ReferenceA">L'Adversaire (The Adversary), Emmanuel Carrère book, 2000</ref> Furthermore, he started the fire at 4 o'clock in the morning, right around the time the road cleaners were passing by. They immediately alerted the local firefighters, who arrived in time to rescue Romand.
He survived the blaze but refused to talk to police during subsequent questioning.
Aftermath
Romand's trial for the murder of his family began on 25 June 1996. On 6 July 1996, Romand was found guilty and sentenced to life imprisonment with no possibility of parole for 22 years; he became eligible for parole in 2015.<ref name="ReferenceA"/> An appeals court in Bourges granted Romand parole in 2019; he had been imprisoned for 26 years.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> He was released into the custody of a nearby Benedictine monastery and had an electronic bracelet placed on him to ensure he did not try to escape.<ref name=":2" /> Romand is reputed to suffer from narcissistic personality disorder.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Documentary, fiction and scholarship
Template:BLP sources section French author Emmanuel Carrère corresponded with Romand during his imprisonment and wrote a book, L'Adversaire (The Adversary), based on the case.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Nicole Garcia directed a movie, L'Adversaire (2002), based on the book; actor Daniel Auteuil played the part of Romand (renamed Jean-Marc Faure in the film).
Two other films were loosely based on Romand's life: the French L'Emploi du temps (2001) (English title: Time Out) and the Spanish La vida de nadie (English title: Nobody's Life).
Romand's deception also formed the basis of the 'Subterraneans' episode of the BBC crime drama Waking The Dead (third episode of the fifth series in 2005). Episode 16 (season 1) 'Phantom' of Law & Order: Criminal Intent is also constructed around this story.
Philosopher Jean Baudrillard analyzed Romand's case in his book of essays The Intelligence of Evil or the Lucidity Pact. He describes Romand's secret life not as a dissimulation but as a genuine doubling: "To transfigure insignificance and banality, all that is needed is to turn them into a parallel universe. There is no simulation in all this." He also claims that such a long pretense would be impossible without some kind of complicity: "One can no more explain the silence of those around him than Romand's own silence. The deeper he gets into his stratagem, the deeper the others retreat into their absence of curiosity. It is genuinely a conspiracy."<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
References
- The Man Who Faked His Life, Channel 4 Documentary, 2005, director and producer Liz Tucker [1]
- 1954 births
- Familicides
- French murderers of children
- French people convicted of murder
- French prisoners sentenced to life imprisonment
- French mass murderers
- Impostors
- Living people
- People convicted of murder by France
- People from Lons-le-Saunier
- People with narcissistic personality disorder
- Prisoners sentenced to life imprisonment by France
- Conservatoire national des arts et métiers alumni