Paris prosecutor opens judicial inquiries into COVID-19 response complaints
The Paris prosecutor's office has opened four judicial inquiries in response to complaints related to how French authorities have handled the coronavirus pandemic.
Remy Heitz, the chief public prosecutor in the French capital, said in a statement Tuesday that the judicial inquiries bring together 253 complaints against decision-makers and national public structures from the general population, health workers, civil servants as well as sick or dead people that were addressed to the Paris prosecutor's office since March 24.
The investigations will enable the prosecutor's office to carry out complex investigations intended to bring to light any criminal offenses on counts of voluntary abstention from fighting a disaster, endangering the lives of others and unintentional homicides and injuries.
France, along with much of Europe, is in the grip of a second wave of COVID-19 infections. Paris and its suburbs have been particularly hard-hit.
ABC News' Ibtissem Guenfoud contributed to this report.







