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Darmanin has decreed a one-month moratorium, but the officials of the PJ, who fear being cut off from their often complex investigations, are not giving up.
By Nicholas Bastuck and Antoine Boitel
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THomas, 42 years old, including twenty years in “the big house”, is group leader at the anti-narcotics office of the judicial police of Marseille (Bouches-du-Rhône). “I live PJ, I eat PJ, I sleep PJ and I don’t complain because I feel like I’m useful where I am. What I’m asking is just to be able to continue doing my job. ” Opposed, like most of his colleagues “PJistes” (the police officers of the PJ), to the reform currently in the pipes place Beauvau, he joined the National Association of the Judicial Police (ANPJ) a few weeks ago, created outside the trade union sphere – a first – and of which he is today the representative for the Paca region. Purpose of the association, as indicated in its statutes: “To defend and promote the place of…
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