A mysterious, unexpected, sudden disappearance. On the night of December 15 to 16, 2020, Delphine Jubillar, a 33-year-old mother, vanished in the village of Cagnac-les-Mines (Tarn). Since the opening of the investigation seeking to find her, various leads have been explored but neither the body nor the truth have been found.

After two years of investigations and media enthusiasm for this case, the investigators deepen one of their tracks and wish to open the tombs of the Saint-Dalmaze cemetery in Cagnac-les-Mines, of which they search the surroundings. All this in order to find out whether the corpse of the nurse would not have been concealed there.

Citizen battles bringing together 1,000 people, drones, helicopters, dozens of gendarmes and divers… Despite the means employed, the nurse remains untraceable. Very quickly, the public prosecutor of Toulouse opened a judicial investigation for “kidnapping, arbitrary detention or sequestration”, which he describes as “very worrying” and entrusted, in view of the sensitivity of the case, to two judges of investigation the task of managing the judicial component of the investigation. Since then, the nurse’s husband has been indicted for voluntary spousal homicide.

Seemingly ordinary, Delphine Jubillar’s life was complex. Between deception, lover and divorce, it is still difficult to establish the reasons for his disappearance. A new lead, as mentioned above, suggests that the village cemetery could advance the investigation.

From now on, the search for the young woman is done in the cemetery, an essential point for the investigators because the cemetery is located 2 km from the house of the Jubillar family, according to La Dépêche, a perimeter which “corresponds to the last boundaries of the mobile phone, always not found, from the nurse” according to the regional daily. And for Cédric, the cemetery is a familiar place. He once came to do some research with an acquaintance and showed him: “plenty of places to hide a body”, even opening the drawer of one of the graves.

An assertion which aroused the interest of the investigators who decided to begin the identification of the graves which could have been opened. “It remains to be seen whether the two investigating judges in charge of the case, after having exhausted the other avenues, will give their agreement to have the graves opened”, concludes La Dépêche.

Maître Pressecq, lawyer for Delphine Jubillar’s cousin, explains that he has received many letters from clairvoyants on this subject.

In the columns of France Bleu Occitanie, Maître Pressecq, lawyer for the cousin of Delphine Jubillar, says that the relatives of the disappeared “are also tirelessly involved in research: they spent the whole weekend of July 9 making a beaten”. In addition, the lawyer explains that he has been contacted by many seers who all say that the nurse’s remains are in a cemetery. Among them, one would have given him a file of about fifty pages on the subject. “Just open the damaged vaults, pass a scanner and then we will see if there are two bodies in the coffin”, affirms Maître Pressecq.