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Notorious French fugitive arrested 3 months after dramatic prison escape by helicopter

2:22
French gangster captured after 3-month manhunt
Ian Langsdon/EPA/REX via Shutterstock, FILE
ByPaul Pradier
October 03, 2018, 10:50 AM

PARIS -- Three months after a dramatic escape from prison by helicopter, French police announced they have arrested notorious gangster Redoine Faid.

Redoine Faid was arrested Wednesday at around 4 a.m. local time by French special forces in an apartment located in the city of Creil, in the northern suburbs of Paris, according to French authorities.

French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe reacted to the arrest in a tweet, saying “Redoine Faid’s arrest shows, once again, the professionalism of French police. Congratulations to investigators for their meticulous work, and to French special forces for arresting him without any incident.”

The July 9, 2018 screenshot of the Interpol website shows pictures of notorious French criminal, Redoine Faid, as part of Interpol's wanted notice.
Interpol via AP

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Four other individuals were arrested alongside Faid during the raid. Two other people were arrested during other police operations related to the investigation later this morning, Paris prosecutor Francois Molins said during a press conference.

Two weapons were seized, but no shots were fired and nobody was injured during the arrests, Molins added. He said 120 policemen participated in the raid to arrest Faid.

The arrest followed a massive manhunt, launched after Faid’s daring helicopter escape from the Réau prison, located in the south suburbs of Paris.

On July 1, three men wearing masks and dressed all in black hijacked a helicopter with its flight instructor and forced him at gunpoint to land in the Réau prison courtyard, French Justice Minister Nicole Belloubet said at the time.

"Two commandos entered the prison to look for Redoine Faid as the third man was staying with the helicopter instructor," Belloubet said. "The two men used a grinding machine to open the door to the visiting room where Faid was and picked him up and left."

Investigators transport an Alouette II helicopter allegedly abandoned by French prisoner Redoine Faid and suspected accomplices after his escape from the prison of Reau, in Gonesse, north of Paris, July 1, 2018.
Ian Langsdon/EPA/REX via Shutterstock, FILE

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The helicopter was found abandoned and torched in Garges-les-Gonesse, a town in the suburbs north of Paris. Faid was transferred to a waiting getaway car, which was also found ditched, police said.

Faid, 46, was serving a 25-year sentence in the Reau prison for a botched 2010 armed robbery in which French police officer Aurelie Fouquet, 26, died during a gun battle.

Faid was nearly arrested by French police a few weeks after his escape when he was identified on surveillance video from the parking lot of a suburban Paris shopping mall. Faid and an accomplice abandoned the vehicle and were able to walk away.

PHOTO: This picture taken on July 1, 2018 in Aulnay-sous-Bois, shows a forensic police officer investigating a car abandoned by French armed robber Redoine Faid at O'Parinor shopping mall parking after his escape onboard a helicopter from a prison.
This picture taken on July 1, 2018 in Aulnay-sous-Bois, north of Paris, shows a forensic police officer investigating a car abandoned by French armed robber Redoine Faid at O'Parinor shopping mall parking after his escape onboard a helicopter from a prison in Reau.
Geoffroy Van Der Hasselt/AFP/Getty Images

Mollins said Wednesday that Faid wore a full-face veil to move around undetected while he was on the run.

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(MORE: Notorious French fugitive reportedly seen on mall video 3 weeks after dramatic helicopter prison escape)

The July jailbreak was not the first time Faid had escaped a French prison. The most recent prison breakout came five years after Faid broke out of the Sequedin prison on April 13, 2013. In that escape he used explosives smuggled into him to blast through five prison doors, took four guards hostage and used them as human shields while making his way to a getaway car.

He was captured May 29, 2013, when authorities found him hiding at a hotel in Pontault-Combault, east of Paris.

Reacting to the news of his latest arrest, the French justice minister said Wednesday on French radio Europe 1, “Faid will go to a highly secured prison and will face extremely strict surveillance.”

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