Solved Murders - True Crime Stories - The 2015 Paris Terror Attacks A Night of Horror, Siege, and Global Aftermath #45
Episode Date: August 14, 2025#horrorstories #reddithorrorstories #ScaryStories #creepypasta #horrortales #terrorattack #Paris #globalterrorism #massacre #survivorstories On a tragic night in 2015, coordinated terrorist attacks ...struck multiple locations in Paris, plunging the city into a state of fear and siege. This story details the horror of the events, the resilience of the victims, and the sweeping global consequences that followed, forever changing international security and community solidarity. #horrorstories #reddithorrorstories #scarystories #horrorstory #creepypasta #horrortales #terrorism #Parisattacks #massshooting #hostagesiege #worldterrorism #attacksurvivor #counterterrorism #france #globalimpact #newsworthy #emergencyresponse #security #humanresilience #darkhistory
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It was November 13, 2015, night began at the city of Paris in France.
Inside few homes located in suburban areas of Paris.
A group of Islamic extremists were getting ready with their guns and bombs.
It was 9.20 p.m., a terrorist, suicide bomber, was foiled after in the state of France
in the northern suburb of St. Denis.
Inside the stadium, Olaan the French president was among the 80-00-0-00 people watching an association
football, soccer, match between the French and German national teams.
When security officers at one of the main entrances detected the terrorist's bomb belt,
he detonated it, killing one passerby.
The belt was an improvised device consisting of the highly unstable explosive compound
triacetone triperoxide in shrapnel such as nails and ball bearings, identical devices
would be employed by other terrorists throughout the evening.
Although the blast was audible to those inside the stadium, play on the field continued.
At 9.25 p.m., a team of terrorists launched a series of attacks on popular night spots in Paris's 10th and 11th arrondissements, municipal districts.
The first location to be targeted was Luccarollon, a popular bar on the Rue Olibert that had been a neighborhood fixture for some 40 years.
After firing on patrons at Le Carillon with AK-47 assault rifles, the terrorists moved across
Rue B. Shah to Lopati-Kambach, a Cambodian restaurant. Although this attack took just minutes,
it left 15 people dead and more than a dozen wounded. The terrorists were then observed
leaving the scene in a blast-seat Leon Hatchback. Minutes later at 9.30 p.m., another terrorist,
suicide bomber, attacked the state de France, detonating his belt at another entrance but causing
no casualties. Inside the game continued, but French President Olawn was evacuated from the stadium
because by then it became apparent that a terrorist attack was underway. The occupants of the
Black Leon crossed into the 11th arrondissement and opened fire on businesses along the Rue de la Fontaine
O'Roy at 9.32 p.m. Five people were killed and eight were wounded at the Italian restaurant La Casa Nostra,
the Café Bon Beer, and a laundromat. The terrorists then continued their deadly course,
targeting La Belle A Keepe, a popular eatery on the Rue de Chiron at 9.36 p.m.
The restaurant's terrace was packed with dinners, and the terrorists fired into the crowd,
killing 19 people as well as critically wounding nine others.
At the southeast end of the Boulevard Voltaire, just blocks southeast of La Belle A Keep,
a terrorist, suicide bomber, detonated his belt outside the captain.
Café Comptoire Voltaire at 9.40 p.m., injuring one person. At the same time, at the
other end of the Boulevard Voltaire, the deadliest attack of the evening was being carried out
at the Bataclan, historic theater and concert hall. The American rock band Eagles of Death
Medal was playing to a sold-out crowd at the 1,500 capacity venue when three terrorists
burst in and fired on the audience. Some of the concertgoers were able to escape through a side
entrance, and dozens took refuge on the building's roof, while others hid or feigned death in an
effort to avoid the attention of the terrorists. The terrorists shouted, Allahou Akbar, God is
greatest, and indictments of Olaan for French military intervention in Syria as the massacre
continued. The terrorists occupied the Bataklan for more than two hours, holding hostages
and killing indiscriminately, before French security forces stormed into the building at 1220 a.m.
Two of the terrorists detonated their suicide belts and the third terrorist's belt exploded spontaneously when it was hit with police bullets.
Scores were seriously wounded in the attack, and at the least 89 people were killed.
As the siege at the Bata clan was developing, the 80-00 fans at the Strata de France were becoming increasingly aware of the horrors unfolding outside the stadium.
Sirens and police helicopters were audible in the distance and at 9.53 p.m.
another terrorist, suicide bomber, detonated his belt near a McDonald's restaurant a short distance
from the stadium.
Match organizers and stadium security officials had decided to allow the game to continue to
discourage mass panic and fans were prevented from leaving until it was clear that it was safe
to do so.
The match ended in a 2-0 victory for France shortly before 11 p.m. and many fans with nowhere
else to go, poured onto the field.
The mood was somber and the crowd remained orderly as stadium officials as
assessed the situation outside. It was after 11.30 p.m. when fans finally began to head to the exits.
In the corridors beneath the stadium, members of the crowd broke into a defiant rendition of
La Marseillaise, the French national anthem. In the days after the attacks, the French sports
minister would praise the actions of the Stade de France staff for heading off what could have been
a far greater tragedy. While the hostage crisis at the Bataclan was still ongoing,
French President Hollande declared a state of emergency call for all of France.
Security services combed the city and it was determined that seven of the nine terrorists were dead.
On November 14, ISIL claimed responsibility for the bloodshed in Paris saying that it had represented the first of the storm.
Olaan responded by calling the attacks, an act of war, and declared three days of national mourning.
Police carried out hundreds of raids across France over subsequent days and on November 15th.
the Black Seat hatchback that had been used by the restaurant terrorists was found abandoned in the eastern
suburb of Monterelle. In the back seat, the police discovered a cache of weapons. Also on November 15th,
French warplanes launched a series of retaliatory strikes on the de facto ISIL capital of A.I. Raka,
Syria. This marked the beginning of a dramatic escalation of French military intervention in the Syrian Civil War.
As investigators established the identities of the terrorists, attention turned to Belgium,
where the suspected mastermind, Abdul Hamid Abouad had extensive ties.
Belgium-born and of Moroccan descent.
A Ba'aoud had grown up in the Brussels commune of Moulinbeak-Saint-Geen,
an area that drew the attention of counter-terrorism experts as a potential hotbed of militant Islamist extremism.
In Mollambique, Abouad had connected with several of the terrorists involved in the attacks at Paris
and the French law enforcement officials also linked him to the foiled attack on the Paris-bound
passenger train in August. Another Molambique native, Sulla Abdesslam was sought by police for his
involvement in the Paris attacks. He had rented several of the cars used by terrorists
and was believed to have been the driver for the terrorists, suicide bombers, at the state de France.
Abdeslam was stopped by police hours after the attacks, but he was released. Abaoud remained
at large after the attacks, his fingerprints were discovered on one of the AK-47s found in the
seat getaway car and mobile phone records placed him near the Bataclan during the siege. In the early
morning hours of November 18, members of the police, the military and the French elite counter-terrorist
unit. The Group D Intervention de-intervention de-in National Gendarmerie Intervention Group, converged
on an apartment in St. Dennis. An intense firefight followed with more than five,
5,000 rounds expended and the building was partially demolished by police grenades and bomb belts
detonated by police grenades and bomb belts detonated by the suspected terrorists. After seven hours,
the operation was declared over. From the rubble, police recovered the bodies of Aboud,
his female cousin and the suspected third restaurant terrorist. They also found evidence planned
of a follow-up attack on Paris's La Defense Financial District. Addressing a meeting of French
mayors shortly after the St. Dennis raid, Olaan defied anti-immigrant politicians who had sought to link
the attacks with Europe's migrant crisis when he reaffirmed France's commitment to accept 30,000 Syrian refugees
over two years. As the search continued for Abdeslam, Brussels was placed on lockdown on November 21st
in response to news of a serious and imminent threat to the city. Schools, businesses, and the metro
system would remain closed for days while soldiers patrolled public areas.
On November 23rd, French police recovered a bomb belt identical to those warned by the terrorists
from a trash-canon Paris suburb of Mont Rouge. This led to speculation that Abdeslam
whose mobile phone had been traced to that area may have discarded the belt rather than carry
out an attack. On the international front, the French aircraft carrier Charles de Gaul was
dispatched to the eastern Mediterranean to support the French military campaign against
ISIL and Olaan traveled to Washington, D.C. to meet with U.S. President Barack Obama in an effort
to forge a tighter anti-ISO coalition. In the months following the attacks, French and Belgian
investigators continued to pursue Leeds and the French government extended its state of emergency
until May 2016. On March 15, 2016, police raided a flat in forest, a suburb south
of Brussels and a firefight broke out that left four police officers injured and one terrorist.
The Algerian national with suspected ties to ISIL was dead.
Two suspects escaped during the gun battle and investigators recovered fingerprints belonging
to Abdeslam from the apartment.
On March 18, police raided a flat in Molenbeek and after four months on the run, Abdeslam
was arrested following a brief gun battle.
On April 23, 2018, the Belgian court sentenced Abdeslam to 20 years in prison for attempted
murder for his role in the gunfight that preceded his arrest.
He remained in prison in France, where he awaited trial on charges related to the Paris attacks.
The trial which began in September 2021 was the largest in modern French history.
More than 300 lawyers represented some 2,500 plaintiffs and 20 defendants.
The court considered more than 1 million pages of evidence.
Abdeslam the highest profile defendant was found guilty and received a sentence of whole life in prison.
The 19 others who had aided in the planning and execution of the attacks received sentences ranging from two years to life with the possibility of parole.
The end
