1986 Paris police station attack
The far-left Direct Action (AD) terror group detonated a bomb at the headquarters of the Brigade de répression du banditisme (BRB) police division in Paris, France, on 9 July 1986. It killed the division's chief inspector, Marcel Basdevant, and injured 22 other officers. The group claimed responsibility two days later.[1][2]
| 1986 Paris police station attack | |
|---|---|
| Part of terrorism in France | |
![]() Quai de Gesvres in 2012, street of the police station  | |
| Location | Quai de Gesvres, Paris, France | 
| Coordinates | 48.8570°N 2.3486°E | 
| Date | 9 July 1986  4:00 pm  | 
| Weapons | IED | 
| Deaths | 1 | 
| Injured | 22 | 
| Perpetrator | Action directe | 
The bomb is thought to have contained 10 kg of explosives and was planted in a restroom on the third floor. It caused major damage to the building, which was still new.[3] Maxime Frérot, a member of Action Directe's Lyon branch, was arrested in 1989 for the attack. He was eventually sentenced to serve 23 years in prison.[4][5]
On the same day, the West German Red Army Faction (which was allied with Direct Action) assassinated Karl Heinz Beckurts in Bavaria.[6]
References
    
- Universalis, Encyclopædia. "6-21 juillet 1986 - France. Série d'attentats à Paris revendiqués par Action directe - Événement - Encyclopædia Universalis". Encyclopædia Universalis.
 - "Les trente ans de bagarre de la brigade antibanditisme". 30 January 2005.
 - "la BRB... 40 ans de belles affaires. Mais pas que..." 16 May 2016.
 - "HISTOIRE : Chronique culturelle du 9 juillet". 9 July 2017.
 - "30 ans de grands bandits".
 - Ciment, James (10 March 2015). World Terrorism: An Encyclopedia of Political Violence from Ancient Times to the Post-9/11 Era: An Encyclopedia of Political Violence from Ancient Times to the Post-9/11 Era. Routledge. ISBN 9781317451518 – via Google Books.
 
