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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
National
Tom Parry

Brit family brutally slain in Alps not gunman's primary target, ex-detective says

The massacre of a British family on holiday in the French Alps has baffled detectives for 10 years.

Why were they targeted? How did the mystery gunman track them down to the remote mountain spot near Lake Annecy they had driven to on a spontaneous trip? And what of the local cyclist shot dead alongside them?

Now a former detective on the case says the cyclist was the more likely intended target – with the British-Iraqi family killed as witnesses to his assassination.

Ex-DCI Mark Preston was Surrey Police ’s senior investigating officer on the murder of Saad al-Hilli, 50, of Claygate, Surrey, wife Iqbal, 47, and her mother Suhaila, 74.

The three were shot dead point-blank in their car in September 2012. Eldest daughter Zainab survived after being shot once in the shoulder and pistol-whipped.

Murder in the Alps starts on Channel 4 this weekend (Channel 4)

Youngest daughter Zeena, then four, was left unscathed as she hid unseen under her mum’s skirt in the back seat of the family car.

The cyclist, dad-of-three Sylvain Mollier, 45, from the nearby town of Ugine, was found dead on the ground. He had been shot first and last, and with more bullets than were used for any of the family, according to ballistics evidence, Mark confirms.

Yet when French prosecutor Eric Maillaud visited Surrey soon after he said the answer to the case lay in Britain.

Suspicion fell on Saad’s elder brother Zaid, with whom there had been a feud over inheritance.

Now Mark, who has since left the police, fears crucial lines of enquiry in the case were closed too soon. Ahead of a three-part documentary, Murder in the Alps, starting on Channel 4, he said: “Why were the al-Hillis killed?

The case his still not be solved ten years on (AFP/Getty Images)

“My view is that it was to cover and confuse any investigation, that Mollier was the target. That’s why the gunman used so many bullets. Whoever was in that car park was going to die.”

Mark admits he was surprised when the French prosecutor went public with his premature conclusions, leaving him little room to backtrack later if the evidence showed otherwise.

With all the attention being paid to the foreign family, whose Iraqi background made them more intriguing to his French counterparts, far less was done to probe the idea of Mollier being the person the gunman had intended to kill.

Saad Al-Hilli's family left home in Surrey for their favourite holiday spot in France in September 2012 (family archive)

Mark says: “With no motive against Saad or Iqbal being the target, and the evidence at the scene not suggesting the al-Hillis were the target, we’re then left with two theories: one is a lone gunman, or that Mollier was the target.

The lack of evidence or sightings suggesting a lone gunman was involved makes that far less of a possibility than that Mollier was the target, given he was shot first, most, and last.

“From my perspective, there wasn’t as much scrutiny of Mollier being the intended victim as there had been of the al-Hillis being the intended victims.

“I do think that the depth to which we delved into the al-Hillis got to the point where we could absolutely prove that they were not the targets. With Mollier, there were still questions.”

What actually happened at the scene of the killings is still shrouded in mystery (Phil Harris)

Saad’s brother Zaid was arrested in 2013 on Mark’s orders, though the ex-detective now says this was done mainly so the Iraqi-born accountant could be formally eliminated from inquiries.

Detectives focused on Saad and Zaid having a physical confrontation, and the fact Saad kept a Taser at the Claygate house.

In the documentary, Zaid, who now lives on the coast after leaving his flat in Chessington, Surrey, talks of his suffering after being accused so early on.

There were also theories that Saad might have been a spy because of his work as a satellite engineer, or even that he might have been killed because of their father’s former life in Iraq.

But Mark quickly came to the conclusion that none of these theories stood up to close scrutiny, but he followed them up to ensure no doubt was left.

Ikbal Al-Hilli and Saad Al-Hilli were gunned down in 2012 (family archive)

He says: “I knew that until we’d exhausted everything we could, the public, the French investigators, and some English investigators would never feel comfortable moving on to anything else.

“We had to close that door. I don’t like the impact it had on Zaid, but by the same token if we hadn’t done that he would still be an official suspect today.

“Would I do anything differently? No. Did I believe Zaid was responsible? No. Were there grounds for his arrest? Yes.

“I hope Zaid understands now why we did that.”

Mark’s focus moved to France and in June 2013, nine months after the murders, he visited the scene at Chevaline near the Swiss and Italian borders.

He says: “I had doubts about the al-Hillis being the target because of the geographical nature of the scene, but I couldn’t formalise those thoughts until I went there myself. I held that thought in reserve until I had been there.”

The al-Hillis had driven to the spot on the recommendation of the owner of a nearby lakeside campsite where they were staying in their caravan.

Mark says: “Even on the drive up I was thinking, ‘This just doesn’t feel right’, the idea of the al-Hillis being followed from the campsite – particularly later when we had it confirmed that it was a spontaneous trip.

“When I got to the scene I thought it was a far less likely theory that they were the intended target.”

He adds: “I think the gunman, in a sense, struck lucky in the amount of confusion caused by the make-up of the British-Iraqi family who happened to be on holiday. It massively helps the killer.

“They were shot in an execution style, the daughter was attacked, and on the face of it anybody would imagine they were the intended targets, with Mollier being a witness, rather than taking out one individual and dispatching potentially four witnesses.

“It’s not within our experience that that happens, but sometimes you’ve got to look out of the norm with investigations.”

He hopes the documentary might prompt someone who knows what really happened to come forward. He adds: “I was very surprised and disappointed we never got to thoroughly see the investigation against Mollier.

“There was a lot of reassurance from the French that they had undertaken a thorough investigation of Mollier being the intended target, but I never saw the documentary proof that that was the case. Certainly not to the same extent that we’d dealt with the al-Hillis.

“I think that time can be a critical factor in solving a crime like this. I feel somebody somewhere knows what happened. Time may prompt them to tell the police. Somebody’s guilt about two orphaned children, and the extraordinary stress to Zaid – who has lost his brother and been judged because he is of British-Iraqi ancestry – could prompt someone to do the right thing. That’s the hope”

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