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French pensioner, 82, opens fire on police after declaring “Macron has been deposed” in garden standoff
By Willow Tohi // Jun 25, 2026

  • An 82-year-old retired craftsman shot two French gendarmes after declaring President Macron deposed and a revolution underway.
  • The man's wife called police after he took a hunting rifle into the garden claiming the government had fallen.
  • France's elite GIGN tactical unit was deployed to negotiate the surrender near Nogent-le-Rotrou.
  • Two officers were wounded in the legs; both survived and were hospitalized.
  • The suspect was hospitalized for a bullet wound to his hand and faces psychiatric evaluation before questioning.

Standoff erupts after retiree declares government collapse

An 82-year-old retired craftsman opened fire on French police Saturday after becoming convinced that President Emmanuel Macron had been deposed and a revolution had begun, prompting the deployment of France's elite GIGN tactical unit to end a nearly 12-hour standoff at his rural property.

The incident began when the elderly man's wife called authorities to report that her husband had taken a hunting rifle and gone into the garden, reportedly convinced the French government had fallen. Five gendarmes arrived at the property near Nogent-le-Rotrou in north-central France, approximately 140 kilometers southwest of Paris.

Elderly revolutionary's "verbal delirium" precedes gunfire

According to prosecutors, the retiree declared "It's a revolution" and "Macron has been deposed" before opening fire on responding officers. The man, who has no known criminal record and retired from his craft approximately 20 years ago, hid behind a cedar tree with his rifle as officers attempted negotiations.

One of the man's daughters guided gendarmes to his location before officers moved her to safety. Prosecutors reported the suspect fired three times, striking two gendarmes in the legs. Officers returned fire, prompting the man to retreat into the basement of his home.

Both wounded officers survived. One was transported to Chartres hospital while the other was taken to the Percy military hospital in Clamart. Prosecutors confirmed neither officer's life was in danger.

GIGN negotiators end garden uprising

The standoff concluded shortly before 11 PM local time when GIGN negotiators persuaded the 82-year-old to surrender. The suspect was transported to Le Mans hospital for surgical removal of a bullet lodged in his hand.

Prosecutors described the man as suffering from "verbal delirium" during the incident. He has not yet been questioned in detail due to his hospitalization and mental state. A psychiatric examination is scheduled to determine whether the octogenarian was of sound mind at the time of the shooting.

Historical context: France's growing civil unrest

The incident occurs against a backdrop of increasing civil unrest across France, where pension reforms, rising living costs and political polarization have fueled public discontent. Macron's administration has faced repeated protests, including the "Yellow Vest" movement that paralyzed French cities for months beginning in 2018.

This event marks an escalation in which an elderly citizen—typically among France's most stable demographic—has resorted to armed confrontation with authorities based on belief in a political conspiracy. The deployment of GIGN, France's equivalent of a hostage rescue team, to subdue a single pensioner reflects the seriousness with which French authorities treat armed civilian resistance.

Investigation continues amid questions of mental competency

The suspect remains in custody while hospitalized, with his health deemed compatible with such measures. Prosecutors have not released the man's name and said detailed questioning must wait until he is medically and psychologically cleared.

A psychiatric evaluation—scheduled for the day following the incident—will determine whether the retiree understood his actions and can be held criminally responsible for the shooting.

A warning sign for French stability

The image of an 82-year-old retiree—a lifelong craftsman with no criminal record—believing so thoroughly in the collapse of his government that he would take up arms against police represents an alarming development in France's political climate. While psychiatric evaluation may explain this individual's actions, the broader context of declining trust in institutions and rising civil unrest suggests French authorities face a population increasingly willing to challenge state authority. The wounded officers will recover; the deeper wounds to France's social fabric may take far longer to heal.

Sources for this article include:

RT.com

X.com

AgenziaNova.com



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