Son-in-law admits involvement in murder of Monaco heiress

Wojciech Janowski, son-in-law of Monaco heiress Helene Pastor, hidden by the arm of a policeman, leaves a police station in a police car during a transfer from Nice to the courthouse in Marseille on June 27, 2014. The son-in-law of the 77-year-o
Wojciech Janowski, son-in-law of Monaco heiress Helene Pastor, hidden by the arm of a policeman, leaves a police station in a police car during a transfer from Nice to the courthouse in Marseille on June 27, 2014. The son-in-law of the 77-year-old heiress of one of Monaco’s richest families has admitted to involvement in her murder last month, Marseille prosecutor Brice Robin told AFP on Friday. -- PHOTO: REUTERS

MARSEILLE (AFP) - The son-in-law of the 77-year-old heiress of one of Monaco's richest families has admitted to involvement in her murder last month, Marseille prosecutor Brice Robin told AFP on Friday.

Wojciech Janowski, a 64-year-old who is also Poland's honorary consul in Monaco, "recognised his involvement" in the killing of Helene Pastor while in detention this week, Mr Robin said.

He said more details would be revealed at a press conference in Marseille at 3pm GMT (11pm Singapore time).

Janowski has been in custody since Monday, when he was arrested along with 22 others by police investigating the shooting of Pastor multiple times as she was leaving a hospital in the French Riviera city of Nice on May 6.

Her driver, Mohammed Darwich, 64, also died from injuries sustained in the attack.

Janowski's 53-year-old partner Sylvia, Pastor's eldest daughter, was also detained for questioning but released on Thursday without charge.

Prosecutors had until the end of the day on Friday to charge those detained or release them.

Mr Robin said earlier that police had identified two suspects alleged to have been hitmen hired to kill Pastor.

The two men - a 31-year-old and a 24-year-old from Marseille's rough northern districts - had been identified as being "present at the location of the killing".

They were identified thanks to surveillance cameras, mobile telephone records and traces of DNA found in a Nice hotel where they stayed on the day of the killing.

Police are also said to be investigating "suspicious financial flows" in Janowski's accounts.

Pastor had inherited a huge real estate and construction business set up by her Italian grandfather Jean-Baptiste Pastor, a stone mason who moved to Monaco in 1880.

As the sleepy principality in the French Riviera slowly grew into a playground for the world's rich and famous, the family's fortune skyrocketed.

The real jackpot came in 1966 when Prince Rainier, whose fairytale wedding to Hollywood actress Grace Kelly helped catapult Monaco to international fame, gave permission to Helene Pastor's father Gildo to build high-rise buildings along the seafront.

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