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Parcel bomb kills 1 in Paris law office

Other News Materials 7 December 2007 01:08 (UTC +04:00)

( AP ) - A package bearing homemade bombs blew up Thursday in a lawyer's office on a tony boulevard in central Paris, killing the woman who opened it. The motive for the unusual attack remained unclear.

The building also housed an unrelated law firm co-founded by President Nicolas Sarkozy, as well as a Holocaust research foundation, although officials said they did not appear to be targeted.

"It is a truly atrocious act," Sarkozy's spokesman David Martinon said on France-Info radio.

A messenger delivered the package, a wooden box that turned out to contain two homemade explosive devices, Interior Minister Michele Alliot-Marie said.

The office secretary opened the package and both explosives went off, killing her and seriously injuring a lawyer. Prosecutor Jean-Claude Marin said the secretary had had no reason to suspect anything out of the ordinary.

The package appeared to have been addressed to the law firm, which handles civil and commercial cases, Marin said. He said the nature of the explosive and its strength remained unclear.

Anti-terrorist agents were investigating. An official close to the investigation said the bombing did not bear the hallmarks of Islamic or Corsican terrorists, who have staged attacks in France in the past but often use bigger bombs and different methods. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the case.

Alliot-Marie said the injured attorney's life was not in danger despite "very serious" wounds. A police official identified him as Olivier Brane, a specialist in property law, and said he suffered face injuries and was operated on at a Paris hospital.

The official said the letter was addressed to Brane and to the director of the office, Catherine Gouet-Jenselme. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to give his name to the media.

Ten people were being treated for shock, the prosecutor said.

Christian Charriere-Bournazel, president of the Paris bar association, said the explosion "had nothing to do with" the law firm that Sarkozy opened with two other lawyers in 1987, because it is not on the same floor as the one targeted. Sarkozy's practice bore his name until his election in May, but is now called Arnaud Claude and Associates.

The bombed office was on the same floor as the Foundation for the Memory of the Shoah. Created in 2000 with an endowment from recovered funds that were confiscated from French Jews during World War II, it supports research and education about the Holocaust and Jewish culture.

Nazi hunter Serge Klarsfeld, after visiting the Holocaust foundation, said it had not received any threats. "Apparently the foundation was not the target," he said.

Damien Laude, a construction worker across the wide Boulevard Malesherbes from the elegant building described hearing a muffled blast. Afterward, he saw a blond woman carried out of the building.

"She was completely covered with blood, she was unconscious," he said. Afterward, Laude said, a man with a head wound also emerged.

Police and emergency vehicles quickly filled the boulevard, cordoning off several neighboring buildings for several hours.

One window pane was broken, but there was no other apparent external damage to the building, which houses several law firms, dental offices and a neurologist's practice.

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