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“We have reached the bottom”: SUV driver charged with murder after cyclist’s road rage death leaves French cycling community “deeply shaken”

The cyclist was allegedly crushed following a roadside row when the motorist cut across an unprotected cycle lane, as mayor says “it is unacceptable to die in Paris while riding a bike” and activists call for “end to road violence”

United in grief and horror at the shocking events which unfurled on a cycle lane in their nation’s capital this week, France’s cycling community has called for an end to “road violence”, following the tragic death of a cyclist reportedly crushed by a SUV driver during a road rage altercation in Paris.

On Friday afternoon, a 52-year-old driver was charged with murder in relation to the shocking incident, which according to witnesses and the local police saw the motorist deliberately drive over 27-year-old cyclist Paul Varry, crushing him to death, after the cyclist had banged on his Mercedes SUV when the driver had veered into an unprotected cycle lane, driving over the rider’s foot.

The sickening road rage attack has been condemned by cyclists and politicians across Paris and France, with one French cyclist telling road.cc that the “unprecedented” incident has left the nation’s cycling community “deeply shaken”, saying “this week, we have reached the bottom”.

Meanwhile, Paris’ mayor Anne Hidalgo, who has been responsible for the city’s cycling infrastructure revolution over the past decade, said it was “unacceptable to die in Paris today while riding a bike”, and the president of a major French cycling association also claimed that “society is more accepting of violence when it takes place on the road”.

The cyclist was killed following a furious roadside altercation which took place at around 5.45pm on Tuesday evening on Boulevard Malesherbes, near Place de la Madeleine, in Paris’ wealthy 8th arrondissement.

According to a statement issued by French police and reported by Le Parisien, video footage and eye-witness testimony has revealed that the driver of a luxury Mercedes SUV – who was travelling with his teenage daughter – drove “for 200m” along a painted, unprotected cycle lane.

While veering into the lane, the 52-year-old allegedly drove over the foot of a cyclist, named by French cycling bodies as 27-year-old Paul Varry, a prominent member of the Paris en Selle cycling campaign group.

The public prosecutor says that Varry then “hit the bonnet to alert the driver, who initially backed up, freeing his foot”. The 27-year-old then dropped his bike and positioned himself in front of the car, engaging in what witnesses described as a ferocious row with the driver at the side of the busy boulevard.

Soon after, the public prosecutor said, the “driver then turned his wheels towards the [cyclist] and resumed forward motion towards him”, hitting Varry.

Eight witnesses claimed that the motorist appeared to reverse after hitting the cyclist for a second time, before moving forward again over Varry’s body, sending him into cardiac-respiratory arrest. He died at the scene.

Paul Varry (French Cycling Federation)

Paul Varry (French Cycling Federation)

The subsequent postmortem “confirmed the marks of the vehicle crossing the body”, prosecutors said, and “the video surveillance shows an elevation of the front, then the rear of the left side of the vehicle”.

The 52-year-old motorist was arrested at the scene, and despite denying that he had deliberately aimed his car at the cyclist, was charged with murder on Friday following a court hearing.

“Motorised violence is largely trivialised and tolerated by the public authorities. Today, motorised violence kills”

The appalling death of a 27-year-old cyclist in Paris has sparked an outcry among cyclists in the capital and across France, with Varry’s death described as an “unacceptable tragedy” by his Paris en Selle group.

Around 200 people gathered on Wednesday evening at the scene of the incident near the Place de la Madeleine to pay tribute, while a minute’s silence has been organised across France on Saturday evening as part of a call to stop “motorised violence”.

“We are shocked, sad, angry,” Paris en Selle (Paris in the Saddle), which campaigns for safe cycling, said in a statement. “On Tuesday evening, Paul was killed by a motorist after an altercation while he was riding his bike. He was 27-years-old. He was a member of the Paris en Selle association, and campaigned for a city where everyone can move around safely.

“This tragedy resonates with many of us. As cyclists, we have all been victims of motorised violence: honking, insults, intimidation, overtaking and more… This motorised violence is largely trivialised and tolerated by the public authorities. Today, this motorised violence kills.

“Cyclists are all vulnerable road users, like pedestrians. We don’t have steel bodywork to protect us. There is always lots of tension. Some of our members have shocking stories to relate.

“We invite you to pay tribute to Paul this Saturday, October 19. All over France, we call for people to gather at 5.45pm for a minute of silence in front of your town hall. This tribute is a message to our leaders: stop motorised violence. It is time to listen to the reality of our daily lives and take all necessary measures to avoid a new tragedy!”

Paul Varry (Paris en Selle)

Paul Varry (Paris en Selle)

The call to end “motorised violence” has been echoed by other cycling and active travel groups in France.

Describing the incident to Le Monde, Alexis Frémeaux, the president of the Mieux se Déplacer à Bicyclette (Moving Better by Bicycle) group and co-president of the French Federation of Bicycle Users, said: “According to reports of the incident, it was no accident. The SUV driver seems to have deliberately decided to crush the cyclist. It would therefore be a murder.

“FUB members have reported several similar cases, even though they have not resulted in the victims’ deaths. Moreover, when an accident occurs, with the cyclist dying and no witnesses coming forward, it is difficult to determine exactly how the events transpired.”

> Questions asked as speeding suspended driver kills French cyclist in “125mph” hit-and-run crash after hiring Lamborghini without valid driving licence

Frémeaux said the tragedy has led to cyclists from all over France to share their own stories of road violence.

“We've received nearly 150 testimonials, from all over France and beyond,” he said.

“This case is stirring up a great deal of emotion among people who travel by bike. Everyone seems to have a story to tell: People, on bikes or on foot, who have been honked at, verbally or physically assaulted, threatened with beatings or death, or had a drive swerve toward them in an attempt to destabilise them.

“People have reported having to protect themselves, flee, or hide. I have observed that the perpetrators are often motorists or motorcyclists who don’t accept being slowed down, or making a detour from their route. And they are even more opposed to being called out on it. I also note that almost all of them are men.

“Society is more accepting of violence when it takes place on the road. Excuses are made for the perpetrator: It was not deliberate, he was in a hurry. A few years ago, a celebrity [musician Michel Sardou] was able to say on TV, when speaking about cyclists, ‘the next one, I’m getting him’, without eliciting any reaction from the presenter.

“I observe that many politicians and commentators challenge road safety measures, as was the case when, in 2018, the road speed limit was set at 80kph.”

> Paris to become '100 per cent cycling city' within next four years

Meanwhile, one cyclist from the south of France told road.cc today that the lack of an effective online reporting tool in the country for footage of road offences, like Operation Snap in the UK, has given a “free pass” to dangerous motorists.

“This week, we have reached the bottom,” researcher Benoit, a leisure cyclist, told us. “[Varry’s death] has deeply shaken the French cycling community nationwide. It is something unprecedented.

“This horrible story has shocked the cycling community, and across all the community, commuters, racers, all range of cyclists really.

“While around 16 cyclists a month get killed by motorists in ‘accidents’, this time it is different, it was literally premeditated.

“I often hear that France is great for cycling, that French drivers are considerate, but it is not true. We do have the same problems as the UK’s roads! We all remain vulnerable, and we need to stand united. 

“Unfortunately in France we do not have this scheme that you have in the UK, where you can report footage like CyclingMikey does. So it is a free pass for motorists.”

> “The only motive was idiocy”: Two men who pushed cyclists into ditches for “fun” handed a two-year suspended prison sentence

In a tribute posted on social media on Friday, the French Cycling Federation also said it was “deeply shocked by the death of Paul Varry.

“The road is a space for sharing, where intolerance and violence cannot be the rule. We extend our sincere condolences to Paul’s family and friends.”

In 2023, 226 cyclists were killed on French roads, though only one of these was in Paris.

The capital’s mayor Anne Hidalgo, who spearheaded Paris’ active travel push since being elected in 2014, responded to Tuesday’s shocking news by saying it was “unacceptable in this day and age for someone to die on a bicycle in Paris”.

A Paris deputy mayor, David Belliard, also said on social media: “What happened last night is horrifying … This young man is a new victim of road violence. Cars can drive you mad. Cars kill. Cyclists and pedestrians are their first victims.”

After obtaining a PhD, lecturing, and hosting a history podcast at Queen’s University Belfast, Ryan joined road.cc in December 2021 and since then has kept the site’s readers and listeners informed and enthralled (well at least occasionally) on news, the live blog, and the road.cc Podcast. After boarding a wrong bus at the world championships and ruining a good pair of jeans at the cyclocross, he now serves as road.cc’s senior news writer. Before his foray into cycling journalism, he wallowed in the equally pitiless world of academia, where he wrote a book about Victorian politics and droned on about cycling and bikes to classes of bored students (while taking every chance he could get to talk about cycling in print or on the radio). He can be found riding his bike very slowly around the narrow, scenic country lanes of Co. Down.

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28 comments

Avatar
JN35000 | 1 month ago
0 likes

First off, congrats for an informative and well-written article.

I was pleased to read that the car driver accused of murder has been remanded in custody, despite his lawyer claiming he was not a "thug" but a "good family man" who carefully drives 150,000 km a year for his job as a technical salesman and who up until now had only lost 4 out of 12 penalty points on his licence.

It strikes me that it must be difficult to safely drive 150000 km a year while also presumably visiting clients and makes sales presentations over a 220 day working year because the said driver must be doing over 680 km on an average day.

French newspapers are reporting that video surveillance on Paris streets showed the said 'careful' driver going through red lights, driving up bus lanes and cycle lanes, nearly colliding with several other cyclists before finally killing Paul Varry.

Perhaps that explains why the judge thought he need to be kept locked up. Normally being held on remand is a sign that the person has already been convicted of serious offences, or is thought likely to flee the country, or a public danger. Maybe the judge also thought the accused needed to be locked up for his own safety.

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eburtthebike replied to Ysgubor | 1 month ago
6 likes
Ysgubor wrote:

https://academic.oup.com/jpubhealth/article-abstract/33/2/160/1591440?redirectedFrom=fulltext# 

"Are cars the new tobacco?

Private cars cause significant health harm."

Excellent article, thanks.

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alexuk | 1 month ago
8 likes

“unacceptable to die in Paris today while riding a bike”. It should be unacceptable to die anywhere while riding a bike tbh.

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brooksby replied to alexuk | 1 month ago
6 likes

Yes, but the mayor of Paris only has jurisdiction and responsibility for Paris...

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Rendel Harris | 1 month ago
9 likes

According to the French newspapers this morning, the suspect has told the police the cyclist was killed by "a clumsy movement" on his (the suspect's) part. Must think he's in front of a British magistrate…

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anke2 replied to Rendel Harris | 1 month ago
3 likes

Clumsy movements are fine and can absolutely be excused - if you don't have your finger on a trigger!

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tomascjenkins | 1 month ago
6 likes

Definitely agree that France is no safer to cycle in than in the UK. I went there this September to cycle the famous climbs in the French Pyrenees. The roads were mostly quiet as the volume of traffic is low. However that did not stop various vans and cars doing late and close overtakes just before narrow pinch points. I definitely felt I had to assume all drivers were going to do something reckless and modify my riding accordingly.

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S.E. replied to tomascjenkins | 4 weeks ago
0 likes

I notice a polarization and radicalization of pro and anti-cyclism... some drivers now show more extra care than decades ago, but I also witness more openly aggressive behaviors.

"Divide and conquer" has always been a tool of the PTB...

That said, looking at the video in the article, it's obvious that incidents are happening all the time in this crossing!.

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anke2 | 1 month ago
7 likes

A horrifying murder.

While we focus on the "deranged psychopath", we almost ignore the weapon that was used.

When it comes to gun crime in the U.S., we think “control the guns” – but we don’t apply the same thinking to cars, which are also weapons, against people (and the climate).

We provide powerful vehicles to frustrated individuals without sufficient psychological screening. These cars inflate their egos, further destabilize their mental state with the “status” they seem to offer, trap them in traffic, and deprive them of much-needed physical exercise. All the while, they’re reminded of how futile it is to sit in a metal box as cyclists zip by, moving freely and happily.

Is it any wonder that the most unstable abuse the very weapons we’ve entrusted them with? 

I miss a debate on the psychological (and physiological) effects that cars have on (deranged) indivuals driving them. (Or are these individuals actually driven by the car???) But it seems that not only the motor-industry was very effective in stopping this discussion from coming up...

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eburtthebike | 1 month ago
6 likes

Having cycled extensively in France, I find this story very disturbing, but I suppose there are psychopaths in every society: the question is, should we give them lethal weapons?

This does demonstrate that motonormativity is widespread and, with a few notable exceptions, the rule in many developed societies, and is extremely deeply embedded and will be difficult to change.  It has taken generations to get to this point, and hopefully, it won't take as long to realise that allowing everything to be dominated by cars is a mistake and to reverse the trend.

The recent speeches by Louise Haigh are very worrying, changing what she originally said about supporting Active Travel into support for driving.  Reducing the dominance of cars may not be popular with the vociferous petrolheads, but it is increasingly popular with the general public, and politicians should be very careful not to be swayed by loud-mouthed caraholics.

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chrisonabike replied to eburtthebike | 1 month ago
3 likes

I hope she doesn't get shut down before she can follow up on some of the initial directions it seems she was taking. (eg. getting a ride in with Laura Laker and Chris Boardman immediately to talk active travel). Despite the majority the government seems unusually politically sensitive - or is it we were just used to the last lot assuming they'd stay in power regardless?

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kingleo | 1 month ago
9 likes

A lot of car drivers are like the cowboys of the old Wild West in America who carried two guns - any slight provocation and they had no qualms in using the guns to kill or injure somebody - car drivers use their cars as weapons when there is an altercation, to kill or injure people.

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Car Delenda Est | 1 month ago
15 likes

extremely jarring to see this crime taken seriously. If this happened here I have no doubt it would fall below the threshold of dangerous driving let alone murder.

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mikeclarke | 1 month ago
6 likes

There is a substantial minority of French drivers who put cyclists at risk. Five years ago I was driven into by a Female driver at a set of lights while cycling in Lyon. I winter in Spain where the most reckless and abusive drivers are from the UK; closely followed into second place by French drivers.

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ubercurmudgeon | 1 month ago
13 likes

Those quotes from the mayor and deputy mayor would have them labelled as "liberal elites" who are "waging a war on motorists" in this country. Implying that the lives of cyclists are of paramount importance, and acknowledging that the power and sense of invulnerability of cars can have an effect on the sanity of certain drivers, is blasphemy in the United Kingdom of Top Gear, or at the very least sedition against King Jezza.

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belugabob | 1 month ago
7 likes

The saddest thing is that this happened in France,where I felt that I could ride my bike without feeling in danger.
Even riding up the Champs Elysée and round the Arc de Triomphe was better than the quietest of British roads.

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Rendel Harris replied to belugabob | 1 month ago
4 likes
belugabob wrote:

The saddest thing is that this happened in France,where I felt that I could ride my bike without feeling in danger. Even riding up the Champs Elysée and round the Arc de Triomphe was better than the quietest of British roads.

I'm sorry but that's nonsense. I love France and I love cycling in Paris, which I've done countless times over four decades, and yes French drivers are generally more considerate of cyclists than British ones, but to claim that cycling round L'Etoille, an eight lane roundabout where a dozen major roads intersect, is "better than the quietest of British roads" just isn't true.

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neilmck replied to Rendel Harris | 1 month ago
8 likes

It does depend what is meant by "round" the Arc de Triomphe (l'Etoile). There is a quiet road with a cycle path that goes around the place de l'Etoile. No one dares cycle on the place de l'Etoile itself, my wife won't even drive on it and she is French!

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bensynnock replied to neilmck | 1 month ago
2 likes

I cycled around it this summer. I've certainly felt less safe cycling around some roundabouts on the UK. The only danger was from the armed police who told me I couldn't push my bike through the centre.

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Rendel Harris replied to neilmck | 1 month ago
3 likes
neilmck wrote:

No one dares cycle on the place de l'Etoile itself, my wife won't even drive on it and she is French!

I've dared...but I certainly wouldn't recommend it! Once you get about three lanes away from the kerb there's the same kind of feeling as if you've swum too far out from the shore and don't know how you're going to get back.

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belugabob replied to Rendel Harris | 1 month ago
0 likes
Rendel Harris wrote:
belugabob wrote:

The saddest thing is that this happened in France,where I felt that I could ride my bike without feeling in danger. Even riding up the Champs Elysée and round the Arc de Triomphe was better than the quietest of British roads.

I'm sorry but that's nonsense. I love France and I love cycling in Paris, which I've done countless times over four decades, and yes French drivers are generally more considerate of cyclists than British ones, but to claim that cycling round L'Etoille, an eight lane roundabout where a dozen major roads intersect, is "better than the quietest of British roads" just isn't true.

Maybe we were lucky, then - despite being very busy, I didn't get the same sense of disdain that I do from British drivers - even on the quietest roads.

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Barraob1 | 1 month ago
14 likes

What kind of a psychopath do you have to be to murder someone with your child in the vehicle beside you? Hopefully he spends the rest of his life in prison and has zero contact with his kid/kids.

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Zjtm231 replied to Barraob1 | 1 month ago
13 likes

I've lost count of the number of times I've been swerved at or seen a driver swerve to knock someone off in London. Managed to dodge most of them. One landed up at the old Bailey and the driver got off.... Just one step away from this.

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belugabob replied to Barraob1 | 1 month ago
3 likes
Barraob1 wrote:

What kind of a psychopath do you have to be to murder someone with your child in the vehicle beside you? Hopefully he spends the rest of his life in prison and has zero contact with his kid/kids.

The same kind of person who set off on a foul mouthed tirade against me, in the presence of his wife and child - refusing to listen to what I wanted to tell him. (Which would have benefitted him, if he'd had an open mind)

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anke2 replied to Barraob1 | 1 month ago
0 likes
Barraob1 wrote:

What kind of a psychopath do you have to be to murder someone with your child in the vehicle beside you? Hopefully he spends the rest of his life in prison and has zero contact with his kid/kids.

...the type of abusive psychopath that his father probably was. Let's hope his daugther does not also become one, after she must have suffered this trauma.  2

 

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Rendel Harris replied to Barraob1 | 1 month ago
7 likes

I've found a certain type of person/psychopath can actually be worse in the presence of their kids than otherwise, especially when the kids are a bit older as here: added to natural aggression there's an "I ain't going to let my kids see their old man back down" mentality. Neanderthal.

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Davisian | 1 month ago
16 likes

R.I.P. Paul Varry. Hopefully authorities across the world will hear of this devastating story and will come to realise what cyclists have to face from drivers every day. Your passing will not be in vain. 🙏🏻

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