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CrimeFrance

French man who escaped prison in cellmates' bag rearrested

Roshni Majumdar with AFP, dpa
July 14, 2025

A prisoner escaped from a French jail after he fit himself into a bag carried out by his fellow inmate, who was released last week. Authorities have now arrested the escapee.

An exterior picture of the Corbas prison near Lyon, southeast France
The man escaped from Corbas prison near Lyon, southeast FranceImage: picture alliance/dpa/MAXPPP

A man who escaped from a French prison last week was recaptured early Monday morning, according to France's public prosecutor.

The man broke out of prison by hiding in a bag carried out by a fellow inmate released last week.

The 20-year-old escaped from Lyon-Corbas prison in southeast France and was recaptured after an extensive investigation.

The matter came to light about 24 hours after the incidentImage: JEAN-PHILIPPE KSIAZEK/AFP

How did the inmate escape?

According to French television channel BFMTV, the escapee was arrested at around 6 a.m. local time (0400 UTC/GMT), as he left a cellar in Sathonay-Camp, a commune on the outskirts of Lyon, in southern France.

The prosecutor's office said in the that statement his accomplice had not been found or arrested yet, noting that nobody had been injured during the operation this morning.

Local media reported that the escapee was serving at least two prison sentences and was under investigation for organized crime.

According to Le Parisien newspaper, the man who was set to be released asked prison staff for a trolley to carry bags out of the prison to his car.

The inmate, according to the report, escaped in a large laundry bag that was among the belongings carried out. 

How common are prison breaks in France?

Sebastien Cauwel, the director of France's prison administration, told BFMTV last week that the escape was extremely rare.

"This is an extremely rare event that we have never experienced in this administration and which clearly reveals a whole series of serious dysfunctions," he said Saturday.

Cauwel said he launched an internal investigation as soon as he was aware of the situation, which came to light 24 hours after the man escaped.

"This facility has an occupancy rate of 170%. This clearly makes working conditions more difficult for our staff," Cauwel noted.

"What this incident reveals is rather an accumulation of material errors, possibly faults, which the investigation will bring to light," he said.

Edited by: Kieran Burke

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