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Hub AI
2025 French prison attacks AI simulator
(@2025 French prison attacks_simulator)
Hub AI
2025 French prison attacks AI simulator
(@2025 French prison attacks_simulator)
2025 French prison attacks
The 2025 French prison attacks are a series of terrorist attacks that started on 13 April 2025, and spanned several days, targeting multiple prisons and penitentiary-related places and targets across France with arson attacks on vehicles and automatic weapon fire.
The locations targeted included the National School of Prison Administration, Toulon-La Farlède prison, Nanterre prison, Aix-Luynes prison, Valence prison, the South-Francilien prison, Tarascon prison, the home of a prison guard in Méaux and social housing occupied by prison guards in Marseille. In total, 24 vehicles were set on fire and around fifteen bullets were fired at the gate of Toulon-La Farlède prison.
France is one of the largest consumers of cannabis in Western Europe, and the global trend is leaning toward the legalization of its recreational use—with French public opinion generally favourable to such an initiative—French Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin, who was Justice Minister at the time, defended a highly punitive and repressive policy toward drug traffickers and users. He announced a project to place the two hundred individuals he considered the most dangerous drug traffickers in a new prison under a new solitary confinement regime. The plan was criticised by the general inspector of prisons, who saw it as potentially designed to drive inmates insane. Darmanin aimed to expand the measure to include 600 to 700 prisoners and to increase the number of such facilities to "four or five". On 14 April 2025, the same day the attacks began, the minister made public a plan to create new prisons built using prefabricated structures, which would allow the state to rapidly and cheaply construct additional prison spaces.
A few days before the attacks, a Telegram group called DDPF (''Défense des droits des prisonniers français'' "Defense of the Rights of French Prisoners") was created. In this channel, messages and threats were shared targeting prison guards and French prison authorities, including statements such as "Guards, resign while you still can if you care about your families and loved ones" and "Know that our movement is spreading throughout France". In this group, the militants stated that they intended to act in this way in response to prison overcrowding, because prisons have reached 131% occupancy, among other issues. They claimed not to be terrorists but to be acting in defence of human rights, which they said were under threat. In this channel, they sent messages saying, for example:
"For several years now, a majority of the guards have been humiliating, insulting, and physically abusing the detained individuals. When the prisoners file a complaint or appeal, they end up being transferred to the opposite end of France or subjected to repeated, degrading searches ordered by the hierarchy [...] They do not respect the law in any way, but when it suits them, they enforce it strictly."
The attacks unfolded in two phases. First, during the night of 13 to 14 April 2025, seven vehicles were set on fire in the parking lot of the National School of Prison Administration in Agen. That same night, a guard's vehicle was torched at the prison centre in Réau.
The following day, on 15 April 2025 around 1 A.M., several individuals opened fire at the facade of the Toulon-La Farlède prison. One of the weapons used was an AK-47 and fired about fifteen rounds into the front of the building. Several individuals were reportedly seen inside a vehicle during the attack. A large “DDPF” symbol was found spray-painted on the entrance used by prison transport vehicles.
The prisons of Nanterre in Hauts-de-Seine, Aix-Luynes, and Valence were targeted by vehicle arson attacks. Anarchist slogans were found at some of the sites. The inscription "DDPF", was spray-painted on cars in the parking lots of the Nîmes and Luynes prisons.
2025 French prison attacks
The 2025 French prison attacks are a series of terrorist attacks that started on 13 April 2025, and spanned several days, targeting multiple prisons and penitentiary-related places and targets across France with arson attacks on vehicles and automatic weapon fire.
The locations targeted included the National School of Prison Administration, Toulon-La Farlède prison, Nanterre prison, Aix-Luynes prison, Valence prison, the South-Francilien prison, Tarascon prison, the home of a prison guard in Méaux and social housing occupied by prison guards in Marseille. In total, 24 vehicles were set on fire and around fifteen bullets were fired at the gate of Toulon-La Farlède prison.
France is one of the largest consumers of cannabis in Western Europe, and the global trend is leaning toward the legalization of its recreational use—with French public opinion generally favourable to such an initiative—French Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin, who was Justice Minister at the time, defended a highly punitive and repressive policy toward drug traffickers and users. He announced a project to place the two hundred individuals he considered the most dangerous drug traffickers in a new prison under a new solitary confinement regime. The plan was criticised by the general inspector of prisons, who saw it as potentially designed to drive inmates insane. Darmanin aimed to expand the measure to include 600 to 700 prisoners and to increase the number of such facilities to "four or five". On 14 April 2025, the same day the attacks began, the minister made public a plan to create new prisons built using prefabricated structures, which would allow the state to rapidly and cheaply construct additional prison spaces.
A few days before the attacks, a Telegram group called DDPF (''Défense des droits des prisonniers français'' "Defense of the Rights of French Prisoners") was created. In this channel, messages and threats were shared targeting prison guards and French prison authorities, including statements such as "Guards, resign while you still can if you care about your families and loved ones" and "Know that our movement is spreading throughout France". In this group, the militants stated that they intended to act in this way in response to prison overcrowding, because prisons have reached 131% occupancy, among other issues. They claimed not to be terrorists but to be acting in defence of human rights, which they said were under threat. In this channel, they sent messages saying, for example:
"For several years now, a majority of the guards have been humiliating, insulting, and physically abusing the detained individuals. When the prisoners file a complaint or appeal, they end up being transferred to the opposite end of France or subjected to repeated, degrading searches ordered by the hierarchy [...] They do not respect the law in any way, but when it suits them, they enforce it strictly."
The attacks unfolded in two phases. First, during the night of 13 to 14 April 2025, seven vehicles were set on fire in the parking lot of the National School of Prison Administration in Agen. That same night, a guard's vehicle was torched at the prison centre in Réau.
The following day, on 15 April 2025 around 1 A.M., several individuals opened fire at the facade of the Toulon-La Farlède prison. One of the weapons used was an AK-47 and fired about fifteen rounds into the front of the building. Several individuals were reportedly seen inside a vehicle during the attack. A large “DDPF” symbol was found spray-painted on the entrance used by prison transport vehicles.
The prisons of Nanterre in Hauts-de-Seine, Aix-Luynes, and Valence were targeted by vehicle arson attacks. Anarchist slogans were found at some of the sites. The inscription "DDPF", was spray-painted on cars in the parking lots of the Nîmes and Luynes prisons.
