his daughter Sophie reacts to the revelations of Paris Match

NEWS
LETTERS

fun, news, tips… what else?

In its issue of February 10, Paris Match reveals the extent of the debts which Dominique Tapie would have inherited following the death of her husband. On Instagram, Sophie Tapie reacted with a poem.

In the columns of Paris Match from this February 10, we learn that Dominique Tapie would be ruined. Following the death of her husband, Bernard Tapie, on October 3, 2021, she now finds herself with no less than 600 million euros in debt. This sum is essentially linked to the conviction of the former deputy in the Crédit Lyonnais affair. Worse still, the wife of the deceased is forced to move from his mansion in Saint-Germain-des-Prés since Bernard Tapie had sold it to François Pinault. The latter would have asked him to leave the premises.

Faced with all these revelations, Dominique Tapie remained silent. But the couple’s daughter, Sophie, wanted to react to the content of the investigation: on Instagram, she published an “open poem” as she calls it, intended for the journalist behind the paper, Sophie des Déserts. “Oh you prodigious author, how did you sink so low? Eight glossy pages so laborious, so far from your old books“, can we read in his story. The singer does not mince words.

Latest news

Sophie Tapie is very angry

Visibly disgusted, Sophie Tapie continues this poem: “I imagined you more talented, the pen gripped between three fingers. This is a very dangerous weapon that can do so much damage. A machine gun of sticky ink, which splashes, which defiles, which grinds. What does dirtying matter, you the daring one, you aim for the legion of low blows.“The 33-year-old woman ended her speech with a few verses to evoke the discretion in which the family would have liked to handle this affair:”Ah, all this beautiful juicy info picked by hand for months, for you they seem delicious, but disgust more than one believe me. Because people’s souls are not hollow, and dignity cannot be bought. Suffering is often silent, and out of modesty it does not spread out.

Maylis Casse

source site-35