In a shocking case that has gripped southern France, a former butcher turned pizza chef, Philippe Schneider, along with his partner Nathalie Caboubassy, stands accused of the brutal murder and dismemberment of Georges Meichler, a reclusive 57-year-old living in the remote village of Brasc. The chilling details of the crime, involving robbery, ritualistic cooking, and scattered remains, have left the community reeling as the trial unfolds.
Georges Meichler, 57, lived a quiet, isolated existence in a stone house tucked away in the forests of Brasc, southern France. Without electricity or running water, his simple life raised no suspicions—until he vanished. Neighbors grew concerned when they stopped seeing him, and his daughter received an odd text message claiming he had left for Brittany with a friend. “It wasn’t like him to text,” she told investigators, sparking a missing persons probe.
Police quickly zeroed in on Meichler’s van, spotted 24 miles away near a council building in Camarès. Behind the wheel were Schneider, 69, and his partner Caboubassy, 45. A search of the vehicle revealed a gruesome scene: bloodstains and bags filled with human remains, pointing to a crime far darker than anyone had anticipated.
When questioned, Schneider made a chilling admission to authorities: “What I’m going to tell you is horrific.” He confessed to tying and gagging Meichler during a botched robbery, which led to the victim’s death by suffocation. Schneider’s account grew even more disturbing as he described dismembering the body with a butcher’s knife, a skill honed from his days as a butcher.
In a macabre twist, Schneider admitted to burning Meichler’s head, hands, and feet to destroy evidence. He scattered other remains across the region, hoping to erase traces of the crime. Most shocking of all, he claimed to have cooked parts of the body in a pot with vegetables, allegedly as part of a Nepalese religious ritual to mask the smell of decomposition.
A 25-year-old gravedigger, also on trial, added another layer to the grisly tale. He testified that Schneider instructed him to cook the remains until the flesh “fell off the bone,” with orders to claim it was “food for the dog” if anyone asked. His involvement has raised questions about how deeply he was entangled in the crime.
Schneider’s lawyer, Luc Abratkiewicz, argued that his client takes “full responsibility” for the crime. He painted a picture of a man driven by alcohol and cannabis addiction, claiming the murder stemmed from a desperate plan to steal “a few thousand euros.” The defense hopes to frame Schneider’s actions as a tragic lapse rather than premeditated evil.
Psychological evaluations presented in court described Schneider as a manipulative figure with a history of controlling behavior, trauma, and deviant tendencies. These insights have painted a complex portrait of a man whose past may have shaped his horrifying actions, raising questions about his mental state at the time of the crime.
Nathalie Caboubassy, Schneider’s partner, has firmly denied any involvement in the murder or its cover-up. Facing charges of complicity, she insists she played no role in the crime, leaving the court to untangle her true level of involvement in the chilling events.
The small village of Brasc, nestled in the quiet hills of southern France, has been left reeling by the gruesome details of Meichler’s death. The case has shattered the tranquility of the region, with residents struggling to process the horror that unfolded in their midst.
As the trial nears its conclusion, all eyes are on the verdict expected on May 22. The court must weigh Schneider’s confession, Caboubassy’s denial, and the gravedigger’s testimony to deliver justice for Georges Meichler, whose life was cut short in an act of unthinkable violence.
This post was published on May 20, 2025 5:42 PM
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