New Online Account Linked to Missing French Suspect Active Until 2017
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New Online Account Linked to Missing French Suspect Active Until 2017
- An anonymous online account, "Epsilon," potentially linked to Xavier Dupont de Ligonnès, remained active on a religious forum until 2017, six years after his disappearance.
- Stylometric analysis revealed "troubling resemblances" between "Epsilon" and accounts known to be used by Dupont de Ligonnès, "Chevy" and "LIGO," including unique discussions about specific biblical contradictions.
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New information has emerged in the long-unsolved case of Xavier Dupont de Ligonnès, the primary suspect in the 2011 murders of his wife and four children in Nantes, France. While Dupont de Ligonnès vanished in April 2011 and has not been definitively located since, an investigation has uncovered an online account, “Epsilon,” that was active on a religious forum until 2017.
Dupont de Ligonnès was previously known to have posted extensively on the “cite-catholique.org” forum, dedicated to faith and theology, under the pseudonyms “Chevy” starting in 2009 and “LIGO” from 2010. The newly identified “Epsilon” account exhibits significant stylistic similarities to these known accounts. Researchers employed stylometry, a technique that analyzes writing style, syntax, vocabulary, and punctuation, to compare messages from “Chevy,” “LIGO,” and “Epsilon.” This analysis reportedly revealed “troubling resemblances” between the accounts.
A particularly compelling detail connecting “Epsilon” to Dupont de Ligonnès involves a unique discussion about specific biblical contradictions concerning the kings Baescha, Jojakin, and Achazia. These same contradictions were mentioned in a handwritten letter by Dupont de Ligonnès dated May 1, 2008. The “Epsilon” account posted multiple messages on this obscure topic in February 2011, and among the thousands of forum members, “Epsilon” was the only account to ever discuss these specific kings. [cite: 6