Park Predators - The Shootings (Part 1)
Episode Date: June 3, 2025When an entire family is nearly annihilated while camping in the French Alps, it takes a team of international detectives to search for an elusive killer. Questions about the victims’ backgrounds sw...irl and rumors about who the gunman could be abound. This is Part One of a two-part series detailing the 2012 Lake Annecy murders in France.View source material and photos for this episode at: parkpredators.com/the-shootings-part-1 Park Predators is an audiochuck production. Connect with us on social media:Instagram: @parkpredators | @audiochuckTwitter: @ParkPredators | @audiochuckFacebook: /ParkPredators | /audiochuckllcTikTok: @audiochuck
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Hi, park enthusiasts. I'm your host, Delia D'Ambra.
And the case I'm going to tell you about today is a crime that I think is fair to say remains one of the most violent and baffling modern mysteries in Europe.
It took place at Lake Annecy, France, in 2012.
But the investigation spreads as far across the globe as Great Britain, the Southern United States, and the Middle East.
There isn't one victim, or two, or even three.
There are six.
Four were murdered, and two barely made it out alive.
Before I get too far ahead of myself though,
it's important to understand the geographic area where this case happened.
Lake Annecy is the second largest lake in France, and it's situated in the
Haute-Savoie region in eastern France that borders Switzerland along the French Alps.
Heavens country, as I like to call it. A lot of tourists visit the lake because it has
super clean water and lots of opportunities to enjoy recreational activities. The website
for Lakes France states that the lake draws its water from several surrounding
rivers that flow from nearby mountains as well as an underwater source more than 80
meters below the surface.
Because the lake is surrounded by mountains, winds that whip through the area create a
unique environment for aquatic sports.
Fishing is a big thing at the lake, and rowing clubs are pretty popular too. In September of 2012, though, the area made headlines for something far less idyllic.
A massacre.
A nameless and faceless gunslinger unleashed horror in a forest close to the lake and nearly
annihilated an entire family who was out for a scenic drive and a cyclist who was getting
his daily exercise.
Everyone, and I mean everyone who has studied this case can't quite make sense of it,
which is why today's episode is just part one of the story.
Part two is coming next week because there was just too much information to
cover in a single episode.
I want to give you a disclaimer upfront that there are quite a few foreign names
to me in this case.
So bear with me because I've tried my very best to make sure I pronounce them
correctly. Something else to keep in mind as we go is that there are still a lot
of unknowns with this case, most critical of which is who was the target of this
brutal crime? Was it the family on vacation or the local cyclist out for a
leisurely ride? You might not come out of this story with the answer to that question, but I promise
you with every bit of new information you hear, you'll think you have.
This is Park Predators. So Around 3.45 p.m. on Wednesday, September 5, 2012, a British man named Brett Martin was
cycling along a narrow
one-lane road in the French Alps when another man on a bicycle whizzed past him.
The area Brett was riding in was fairly remote, but every now and then it wasn't uncommon
to see another person come along, whether by bike or car.
It was a beautiful roadway to take your time on and just revel in the scenery.
Brett was a retired Royal Air Force pilot who owned a vacation home near Lake Annesy.
So I imagine he was pretty familiar with the usual comings and goings on the roadway, and
having another cyclist eclipse him wasn't something that he gave a lot of thought to.
Shortly after the other cyclist went around him, a BMW passed by headed in the same direction,
which was further up into the mountains.
A short time later, Brett stopped pedaling as he rode up to a small
gravel pull-off next to the roadway.
There, laying on the ground near the edge of the road was the bicycle
that Brett recognized as belonging to the man who'd just ridden past him.
Initially, Brett thought the guy had just laid his bike on the ground
because he was resting
or possibly taking a break.
But as he got closer he noticed more things that appeared out of place.
A young girl stumbled out into the roadway and at first Brett thought she was just being
silly and playing like kids do, but then he saw her collapse.
When he walked close enough to get a good look at her, he saw that she was lying down with severe trauma to her upper body.
A few feet away from him and the girl was a maroon BMW with its engine
revving and back end wrecked into some brush.
The tires were still spinning and everything, and Brett immediately became
concerned that the vehicle would dislodge and lurch forward and run over the injured little girl.
So he moved her body a few feet out of harm's way, rolled her onto her side into a recovery position, and tried to tend to her.
This whole time though, he thought whatever had happened was just the result of some sort of
accident between the driver of the car and the cyclist.
However, that assumption quickly vanished when he walked toward the cyclist laying on the ground a few feet in front of the car and the cyclist. However, that assumption quickly vanished when he walked toward
the cyclist laying on the ground a few feet in front of the car
and realized the man had been shot more than once.
That's when Brett realized nothing about the scene he just stumbled upon was normal.
Inside the BMW, he saw two women and a man dead from apparent gunshot wounds.
He later described the scene to BBC News as something straight out of a movie.
Lots of blood everywhere and a bunch of people with bullet holes in their heads.
Brett broke a window of the BMW, turned the car off, and
reported what he'd found to the authorities.
By 3.48 PM, the police were aware of what was going on, and
shortly after that, French
investigators arrived and eventually more than 60 officers responded to the crime scene
to help address the situation.
They also blocked traffic in both directions on the one-lane road.
The young girl who Brett had found injured was barely clinging to life.
She'd been beaten and shot in one of her shoulders. But emergency responders were able to stabilize her and airlift her to a hospital.
After that, investigators began to take in the carnage in front of them and
noticed that the windshield of the BMW had bullet holes in it.
That made sense considering the fact that all the victims inside had clearly
sustained multiple gunshot wounds, including execution-style shots to the head.
Scattered on the ground around the car were a bunch of spent bullet casings.
In total, the police determined that at least 21 shots had been fired into the Maroon BMW.
The male cyclist, who was also lying dead near the small gravel parking lot,
had been shot at least five times in his chest and head.
It appeared that he'd been in the process of running away from the shooter when the first two rounds hit him because he had gunshot wounds to
the front of his body and on his back. Authorities also noticed that the chain
from his bike was not on the sprockets, so that detail caused some detectives to
wonder if maybe the cyclist had dismounted his bike and had been right in the middle of trying to fix it when the shooter attacked him and the people in the BMW.
Because the police had so much to process in such a short amount of time and so many victims and shell casings to examine, they initially told the press that they didn't know whether one or two or more offenders had carried out the crime.
whether one or two or more offenders had carried out the crime.
Around that same time, a French prosecutor for Anasine named Eric Maillot took charge of the investigation and called in a specialized forensics team to come to the scene and help
local police. Unfortunately, though, that team was located eight hours away in Paris,
so for the time being, local police had to essentially babysit the crime scene and make
sure no one disturbed anything. While they waited for the specialist from, local police had to essentially babysit the crime scene and make sure no one disturbed anything.
While they waited for the specialist from Paris, they worked on identifying the victims inside the car.
I'm not sure if police were able to do this by running the BMW's registration or what,
but whatever they did, it became clear that the man in the driver's seat was 50-year-old Saad al-Hili.
With him was his wife, 47-year-old Iqbal Al-Hili,
and Iqbal's 74-year-old mother, Sahela.
The family was from Surrey, England,
a suburb southwest of London.
Saad had lived there for more than two decades
and been married to Iqbal for nearly half that time.
Together, they had two daughters,
four-year-old Zeena and seven-year-old Zayna.
But police didn't learn that the couple had two children until several hours into the investigation.
They became aware of that fact only after the manager of a campground down the mountain near Lake Anisey where the family had been staying phoned in to report that the Alhiles had a younger daughter who appeared to be unaccounted for. Now I have to assume this campground manager must have heard about the crime from someone
or something because otherwise I don't know how they would have known that only one child
in the family had been discovered at the crime scene.
But whatever the case was, the information this person provided fundamentally changed
investigators' understanding of what they might be dealing with.
They quickly determined that seven-year-old Zaynab was the girl that Brett Martin had
found shot and badly beaten.
But little Zina was still missing.
This was concerning to the police because they didn't know if she'd gotten frightened
by the shooting and ran off into the woods to hide somewhere, or if she'd possibly been
abducted by her family's attacker.
So in an attempt to figure out where she was,
authorities conducted a search in the woods around the crime scene,
but didn't find her.
It was also around this time that they got the chance to speak with Brett Martin.
He, of course, didn't know anything about another child and
couldn't even begin to tell authorities where Zena was.
By 1130 PM that night, the forensics team from Paris had arrived
and began to slowly approach the dead cyclist
and Alhilly's car and collect the spent shell casings
on the roadway.
The team sort of worked in a circle
and got closer and closer to all those central elements
as they slowly pressed in on the main area
where the crime had occurred.
After a while, it was time for them to open up the doors
to the family's BMW.
And when they did, they immediately
saw a flutter of movement beneath Iqbal's skirt.
That movement was little Zeena.
She was alive and had been hiding in fear
amongst her parents' and grandmother's bodies for hours. When police realized late Wednesday night that four-year-old
Zina Alheli had been hiding in her family's shot up car the entire time,
it was shocking.
Journalist Tom Parry, who worked for the Daily Mirror and
later wrote a book about the crime, told producers for
the docu-series, that the police had been trying to find Zina.
But the police were unable to find her. The police were unable to find her. entire time. It was shocking. Journalist Tom Parry, who worked for the Daily Mirror and later
wrote a book about the crime, told producers for the docu
series Murder in the Alps, that law enforcement finding Xena so
many hours after responding to the crime scene seemed like a
huge oversight. It was almost incomprehensible that the police
had not looked for her sooner in the family's car. Tom said this apparent mistake raised a lot of questions about the leadership
overseeing the case, and news outlets in the UK suggested that local authorities
in France were not experienced enough to handle a criminal investigation of this magnitude.
In response to the bombshell update about Zena and criticism from the press,
French prosecutor Eric Mayaud
held a press conference to explain what was going on. By that point, news of the murders had reached
far and wide and hundreds of journalists from across the world had traveled to Lake Annesy to
cover the story. Eric maintained that the reason Zina had not been discovered sooner was because
she'd been completely obscured from view beneath her mother's skirt. When she was found, it was obvious that she'd been traumatized and couldn't
communicate well with authorities. Right after being removed from the family's car, she was taken
to a different hospital than her older sister and guarded round the clock by armed officers.
Zaynab, who by that point had been put into an artificial coma so she could recover,
was also given police protection. The girls were the only living witnesses to the Zaynab, who by that point had been put into an artificial coma so she could recover, was
also given police protection.
The girls were the only living witnesses to the brutal crime, so police knew that they
had to keep them safe because the shooter or shooters were still at large and there
was legitimate concern that they could come after them.
The day after the crime, Saad's brother, Zayd Alhili, who also lived in Surrey, England,
learned about the shootings after receiving a phone call from one of Saad's friends,
who'd been unable to get in touch with Saad.
While Zayed processed the horrific news about his brother and his family, more and more
reporters started showing up at his flat and lining up outside the family's home.
To grieve in privacy, he accepted police protection and moved into a law
enforcement compound where two officers stood watch outside his room.
British police had also stationed officers at Saad and Nickbal's house in
the Claygate village of Surrey to keep it secure.
Residents who live nearby expressed that they were shocked to learn that
something so terrible had happened to people they knew.
One person told the Evening Standard, quote,
When I realized that the family who were shot lived here, I couldn't believe it.
It is not the kind of thing you expect to involve people on your doorstep.
End quote.
According to Stephanie Boucher's reporting and the docu-series Murder in the Alps,
on Friday, the third day of the investigation, autopsies on all the
victims were done, and authorities formally identified the cyclist who'd been killed at
the same time as the Alhiles as 45-year-old Sylvain Mollier, a French native who lived
in the general vicinity of Lake Annecy with his partner Claire and newborn son.
Sylvain also had two other sons from a previous marriage, but according to the source material,
had recently taken paternity leave from his job as a welder
and lived in the small town of Eugène, France, near Lake Annecy.
That's where his partner Claire's family lived
and owned a lucrative pharmacy business.
It's unclear from the source material why it took what seems like slightly longer
to officially confirm Sylvan's ID when it didn't take nearly that long to formally ID the Alhiles.
But according to an article by the Evening Standard, it was Claire, his partner,
who ultimately helped police determine that he was in fact the fourth victim.
She'd visited a French police station after he didn't come home from his bike ride on
September 5th, and when she showed a few officers a photo of him,
the police were able to put two and two together rather quickly after that.
I have to imagine, though, that Claire went to that police station on September 5th,
or maybe like the next day, not three days after the crime.
But who knows, maybe the police did have Ceylon tentatively identified before Claire showed up,
but they just had to wait for an autopsy to be done
to officially say it was him.
Whatever the case was, the bottom line is,
Solon was determined to be the fourth victim,
and it just took some time for police
to finally be able to publicly confirm that.
The next thing French investigators did on day three
was remove the Alhely's car from the crime scene
and stage a walkthrough of the roadway
and gravel pull-off area to get a better sense of where the shooter or shooters might have been
standing when the attack happened. They also aimed to answer the most important question that was in
everyone's mind. Who had been the target of the shootings? Sylvan or someone in the Alhili family?
One strong theory that emerged early on
was that Saad had been the target of an assassination,
and his wife, children, mother-in-law, and Sylvan
had only been targeted because they were collateral damage.
In that scenario, one retired British detective
who worked the case explained to producers
for the docu-series Murder in the Alps
that the shooter could have been alone and hidingu-series Murder in the Alps, that
the shooter could have been alone and hiding in a small gully alongside the roadway that
was across the street from the gravel parking lot.
This gully would have kept the shooter out of sight until they were ready to commit the
crime.
In that theory, it was believed that Saad had parked his family's car in the small
gravel lot, gotten out with Zaynab and after the shooter had fired a few rounds, Saad
had been able to get back into the car and put it in reverse,
but in his haste had left his daughter by herself outside.
When the family's car lurched into reverse, the back tire had
gotten stuck in some brush or slight incline, which allowed
the shooter to continue firing at Sylvanne, who is presumed to
be just in the wrong place at the wrong time.
And then the shooter made their way to the Al-Hillis car.
The British investigator who spoke with the docuseries described Saad and his family's
final moments as probably looking straight out their windshield toward the roadway facing
their assailant head on.
The killer then fired multiple rounds into their windshield and then went to each window
and delivered fatal headshots at close range. Zainab's head injury was a bit of a curveball
for investigators though because it wasn't a gunshot. Eric Mayotte explained during one of the
first news conferences about this case that she'd suffered multiple fractures to her skull and just
one shot to one of her shoulders. So it was kind of odd to the police that she'd suffered multiple fractures to her skull and just one shot to one of her shoulders.
So it was kind of odd to the police that she'd been beaten when no one else had.
One expert consultant told producers for Murder in the Alps that the blows to Zainab
likely meant the killer had run out of ammunition or his firearm had malfunctioned by
the time he made it to her.
And because he couldn't shoot her, he had to resort to hitting her in the head,
likely with the butt of the gun.
The last shot authorities believed had been fired
was a headshot to Sylvan.
They surmised that the shooter may have seen him suffering
from his initial gunshot wounds
or become angry at him for trying to intervene
and then simply executed him to make sure he didn't survive.
In the wake of the crime, his family agreed with that suggestion.
They rarely spoke publicly about the crime, but did publish an obituary for him that indicated
they thought he had simply been cycling in the wrong place at the wrong time.
And it seemed he either interrupted or had been caught right in the middle of a sequence of
events that had nothing to do with him.
Now, you might be wondering, why would the Al-Hillis have been more of a target than Sylvan?
Well, I'm glad you asked because it's a long story and kind of wild.
Turns out there were a few facts about Saad that investigators suspected might have made
him a likely candidate for a potential hit. One was that he worked as a design engineer for a company in England called Surrey Satellite Technology,
which dealt with, you guessed it, satellite technologies.
But the business also reportedly had ties to the nuclear industry as well.
Investigators and the media wondered if maybe Saad had discovered something at his job that
put him in danger. This kind of thinking prompted police to consider that Saad might have been
a spy. The reason for coming to this conclusion was because he and his brother Zaid had immigrated
to England from Iraq, back in 1971 when they were kids. So they were not British-born citizens,
and that fact alone is something Zaid, Saad's
brother and some of Saad's friends, told producers for Murder in the Alps, the media really played
up, and seemingly caused police to suspect that Saad had secrets in his life that involved
his family's past in the Middle East.
I personally find this position police took about Saad as super prejudiced and
kind of ridiculous.
But even if you take that out of the equation, there were other things that
police discovered about Saad that made detectives wonder if there was more to him
than met the eye.
For example, according to what investigators learned after speaking with
friends and neighbors, the Alhili's trip to Lake Annesy had been kind of last
minute.
On August 29th, so one week before the crime, the family had packed up their car and tow camper and
left Surrey seemingly on a whim to go on holiday. They'd boarded a night ferry that took them from
England into France and then drove to the French Alps and checked into a campground near Lake Annesy.
They'd spent a few days visiting different areas around the lake, and on the seventh
day they'd driven up into the mountains to presumably go sightseeing.
It was during that drive that they'd been murdered.
At the campground where they'd been staying, authorities searched their camper, and I imagine
they found all the usual personal belongings you'd expect a family of five to have while
camping.
But they also discovered a few other things that weren't so typical.
For example, investigators found troves of personal documents, legal paperwork, computer
hard drives, and other digital devices stored inside the caravan.
A good amount of that stuff contained a lot of information about Saad and things related
to his work.
A few of the hard drives police collected were even encrypted.
Saad intentionally packing all this stuff to go camping with his family felt off to investigators.
I would give Saad the benefit of the doubt and say that he may have brought those items to make sure
they stayed safe, but investigators speculated that he'd planned to deliver or sell sensitive
information to someone during his travels, but had been killed in the process.
Again, that theory is sort of going back to this, Saad might have been a spy.
But it wasn't like investigators were pulling that theory out of thin air.
They'd also noticed while inventorying the family's camper and car that all of their
passports were missing. It was as if they'd literally just vanished.
So that detail only further fueled investigators' suspicions that the family
had been killed as part of some professional hit job.
To make matters even more bizarre, journalists in England got wind of this
rumor and began writing salacious articles that alleged the family had been
watched by the Secret Service prior to their deaths,
which was later proved to be untrue.
At one point on day four of the investigation, UK police brought a bomb squad to the family's
home in Claygate and claimed that potential explosive substances had been found in a shed
on their property.
But that allegation also turned out to be completely false.
Inside the house, investigators found a taser, which reporters wrote might have suggested
that Saad had been fearful of some kind of imminent attack.
But again, there was no proof that was true.
Police also drilled open the family's safe, which Saad's friends said he'd recently
purchased to store documents in.
But I couldn't find any source material that reported what the
contents of that safe were.
The murder in the Alps documentary also didn't go into
detail about that.
But while the press continued to spin stories about the crime,
the investigation at the family's home and the victims,
investigators in France shifted their focus to interviewing the
one person who could give them reliable information about the murders, Zainab.
Six days into working the case, police learned that she was finally awake from her coma and
able to talk. When seven-year-old Zainab awoke from her coma, she told specially trained police detectives
that she remembered some very specific things leading up to and during the murders of her
family.
She said that her dad had parked their car in the gravel lot and gotten out with her,
but had almost instantly seen something that alarmed him.
So he'd yelled for her to get back into their car,
and then all of a sudden gunshots rang out.
She told investigators that she remembered seeing a silhouette of a man
with his face covered standing nearby,
and she referred to this individual as the bad man.
Unfortunately, she couldn't make out his face,
likely because she was running,
so she wasn't able to give authorities a more detailed description of what he looked like.
But even with those details, the one thing she'd confirmed for police was that one person
had committed the crime, not two or more.
Armed with this new information, French prosecutor Eric Maillot told the press that he was more
convinced than ever that the key to figuring out the entire mystery was somewhere in England, not France.
So just over a week into the investigation, Eric and his team of detectives traveled to
Surrey to start interviewing as many people as they could about the family.
They linked up with British police officials, and one of the first people they wanted to
speak with was Zaid, Saad's brother. He voluntarily spoke with the French detectives and told them that
he couldn't think of anyone who would want Saad dead. French authorities questioned him for hours
about his relationship with his brother and whether there had ever been any disputes between them or
anybody else. But Zaid kept saying the same thing. He didn't think Saad had any enemies.
However, that's not the story investigators heard when they spoke with Saad's friends.
Those folks told authorities that the brothers had actually had a falling out the previous year
over an inheritance and property their late mother and father had left them.
Now, this bit of information really changed the way Eric Mayaud and his team viewed Zaid
as a potential suspect.
So about a week after their first interview with him, they asked him to come back in for
a second one.
That conversation took place at a British police safe house and lasted roughly nine hours.
To me, it seems like because Zaid was a British citizen, French investigators couldn't conduct
this formal interview with him, which was more of an interrogation than an interview.
Only British investigators could ask him questions.
So Eric Mayaud's team of French investigators had to just sit in another room and listen
in.
They couldn't actively participate.
Zayed was asked to provide an alibi for his whereabouts on September 5th, and he did.
He said he'd hung out with a friend the entire day in southern England, and investigators
were able to corroborate his story.
So unable to really go much further with him, detectives decided to circle back to a few
other leads, like trying to identify the type of firearm that had been used.
According to the source material,
about a week and a half after the crime,
investigators determined that a Luger PO-629
semi-automatic handgun had fired the rounds
that killed all the victims.
Authorities examined all the shell casings collected
at the crime scene and a shard of wooden debris
that they later determined belonged
to the grip of a handgun.
One expert who spoke to producers for Murder in the Alps stated that the piece of grip
had Zaynab's DNA on it and had apparently broken off the shooter's weapon when he struck
her in the head.
The Luger P0629 pistol itself was sort of a unique firearm.
It was described as a non-modern gun that was known to be extremely accurate when fired at close range. It was a standard issue gun given to
individuals who'd served in the Swiss Army or police force, which meant there
were potentially thousands of them floating around in the world. That
presented a challenge to French investigators trying to figure out who
might own such a weapon. But the one upside to finally narrowing down
the type of murder weapon they needed to be looking for
was that authorities realized the shooter
had to have reloaded more than once
while committing the crime.
You see, this particular type of gun only held eight rounds.
And because investigators knew that more than 20 shots
had been fired at the crime scene,
that meant the shooter had to have emptied his magazine, reloaded it, emptied it again,
and then reloaded it.
The fact that it was described as being a war relic type of firearm which had the tendency
to jam or malfunction sort of pointed away from the suggestion that whoever the shooter
was had experience as a professional hitman.
Basically, this gun just wasn't going to be a contract killer's first choice.
But for the time being, French investigators still had to consider that scenario as a possibility.
In addition to learning all the new information about the type of gun the killer used,
authorities also spoke with witnesses who'd been driving or
present along the roadway that led to the crime scene.
Unfortunately, the closest CCTV camera was more than 20 miles away from the crime scene,
so really no use to police.
But several witnesses had come forward and reported that they'd seen a few suspicious
vehicles driving toward or away from the scene around the time of the murders.
However, one vehicle in particular caught authorities' attention.
A forestry worker who'd been near the crime scene said that they'd seen a black and white
motorcycle cruising in the area around the time of the crime.
The rider was reported to have been wearing all black, and when detectives reviewed Bret
Martin's statements, they saw that he'd mentioned a similar sighting.
About 10 minutes after this first forestry worker spotted the bike, two more forestry
workers clocked it, and I guess because the mountain road was one lane, motorcycles weren't
permitted.
So, the two forestry workers who saw the motorcyclist told him that he needed to make his way back
down the mountain.
They described him to police as a man with a beard.
At that time, the police created a composite sketch of this motorcyclist based on the
forest workers memories of him.
But French and British detectives decided not to release that sketch yet to the
public. The only details they put out about this were that they wanted to speak
with the motorcycle rider as well as the driver of a green four wheel drive car
that had also been seen driving in the area.
I think it's safe to say at this point,
investigators believe the motorcyclist
could have been the shooter.
The further along they got in the case,
the more they strongly began to suspect
that they were dealing with a contract killing,
and whoever the shooter was, he was skilled with a firearm
and had managed to easily evade detection after the crime.
Bret Martin, the man who discovered the crime scene, had told detectives that he never heard
any gunshots ring out while riding his bike. That detail caused some investigators to wonder
if perhaps the shooter had used a silencer, because it seemed highly unlikely that firing
so many shots in a serene landscape like the mountains around Lake Annesy would go unnoticed.
Especially when you consider the fact that Brett Martin had only been passed by them
a short time before stumbling upon the crime scene.
If the killer was this lone gunman acting as a hitman, then like I mentioned earlier,
that's why police believe there was still a credible threat against Zainab and Zina.
After a few more days in the hospital, both girls were flown home to England, given false
identities, put into foster care, and kept under police protection.
Meanwhile, British and French detectives continued to look closely at the relationship between
Saad and his brother, Zaid.
Because Eric Mayaud and his team were convinced that Zayed was hiding something and had orchestrated the shootings.
He, of course, vehemently denied those accusations and said that
the disagreement he'd had with Saad over their inheritance and
their late parents' house was not a feud, but just a normal
sibling disagreement.
He said it was a mistake for authorities to spend time and
energy looking into the matter because it would distract them from finding the true perpetrator.
But the homicide detectives wouldn't let up.
According to the docuseries Murder in the Alps, 23 days after the crime, several police
officers searched Zaid's flat in Surrey.
When they left, they took documents, personal belongings, money, and anything they believed
might contain information about the financial issue between him and Saad.
After reviewing all of that stuff, though, detectives didn't find anything that linked
him to the crime.
About a week after searching his place, investigators diverted their attention away from England
and to a city much closer to the actual crime scene.
According to news coverage, four weeks into working the case,
authorities learned that Saad had made a phone call to a bank in
Geneva, Switzerland, about an account in his late father's
name that contained, wait for it, almost 1 million euros.
According to the docu-series Murder in the Alps, Saad had
placed that call to the Swiss bank just two days before his
family was murdered.
He told staff that he would be traveling from France to Switzerland to deal with something
related to the account.
Now what's super interesting is that if you look on a map and follow the road the victims
were killed on, it's almost around an hour from Geneva, more or less depending on traffic
or how slowly you navigate the winding road.
When police reviewed the history of the almost 1 million euro bank account, they learned
that Saad and Zaid's dad, Qadam al-Hili, had opened it many years earlier and over
time dumped sums of money into it.
When detectives looked into the dad's background, they discovered that before he'd moved his
family from Iraq to England back in the early 70s, he'd allegedly known key leadership
figures in Saddam Hussein's regime.
Yeah, the Saddam Hussein who spearheaded a takeover of Iraq's government.
French prosecutor Eric Maillod told the press that in light of discovering this information
about Saad's father's supposed ties to such a ruthless dictator,
his team was going to spend a lot of time and resources trying to figure out if
perhaps someone who'd held a deep grudge against Saad's father and the family for being able to flee Iraq with so much money
was behind the Lackanese murders.
The only problem was the Iraqi government was not willing to play ball with the French
investigative team because at the time there was too much instability plaguing the country
and Iraqi leaders were in no position to have a foreign law enforcement agency swing by
for a visit.
Saad's brother, Zayed, was not disappointed that Eric Mayod couldn't pursue this lead
any further because he said that the suggestion that his brother's death was somehow related to their dad's history in Iraq was completely unfounded.
He told producers for Murder in the Alps that the only reason the bank account in Switzerland
held so much money was because Hiansad's dad had built up a pension in it for a long
time.
It was not dirty money he'd absconded from Iraq with or laundered from Saddam Hussein.
While that was all being sorted out, the al-Hillis' bodies were flown back to the UK and Zayed
helped organize their funerals.
After the burials, French police really ratcheted up the pressure on him as a suspect.
Eric Mayotte and his team had had some time to thoroughly examine all of the documents
and paperwork that officers had removed from Saad and his family's camper.
And when they inventoried all of that stuff, they noticed there were two wills from Saad
and Zayed's father.
Those documents spelled out two very different instructions on how his sons were supposed
to divvy up their inheritance.
One will reportedly ensured that Zayed would get everything
from the men's parents, but the other will stated
that the estate would be split between the two brothers.
French investigators believe
that one of the wills was a fake.
Evidence that supported this assumption
were online messages Saad had sent to his friends
prior to his murder, which indicated he believed
Zayed had falsified
the will that ensured the estate wouldn't be distributed equally.
Zayid clarified to producers for Murder in the Alps, though, that Eric Mayotte and his
team were mistaken.
There had never been two wills.
There had only been one will, the original will, that their father had made before he died.
Zaid said that document only had his name on it,
but his dad later asked him to add Saad's name to it.
Before he got the chance to amend the original will though,
Saad had made a copy of it,
which meant the two documents police found
were the photocopy of the will
that only Zaid's name was on,
and the amended version that had both brothers' names on it.
It seemed to me that the second will was the active one,
which ensured that both men would get equal parts of their parents' estate.
But Zayed's explanation didn't hold much weight for French prosecutor Eric Mayotte
and his team.
Those investigators were convinced that he was intentionally downplaying
how bitter his relationship with Saad had been
leading up to the murders.
Throughout the investigation,
authorities had learned that the brothers
had gotten into a physical fight at Saad's home
about 11 months before the crime.
And as a result of that dispute,
Saad had replaced all the locks at his house.
He'd also changed his security system and told neighbors that he was worried something would happen to him.
French investigators could not continue to ignore their growing suspicions about Zayed.
So on June 24th, 2013, nine months after the shootings in Lake Anasie,
British police arrested him for suspicion of conspiracy to commit murder. He was taken to a British police station in Surrey and booked.
A British detective who helped take him into custody told producers for
the docu-series Murder in the Alps that UK police went along with the arrest.
But not because they believed Zayed was guilty, but
because behind the scenes they planned to prove that he was innocent.
Yeah, you heard me right, innocent.
This detective said that British police arrested him because they believed it
might be their best opportunity to clear his name once and for all.
I know, super wild.
But like I said at the start of this episode, nothing about this case is what it seems.
Including two people I've not spent much time talking about, but who authorities eventually
discovered had a lot of secrets and potential enemies lurking in their pasts.
And those two people are Sylvain Mollier and Iqbal Alhili.
Come back next week for part two, because trust me, you're not going to want to miss it.
Park Predators is an AudioChuck production.
You can view a list of all the source material for this episode on our website, parkpredators.com.
And you can also follow Park Predators on Instagram website, ParkPredators.com. And you can also follow ParkPredators on Instagram, at ParkPredators.
So what do you think, Chuck?
Do you approve?
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