French Criminal Who Escaped in Fatal Prison Break Recaptured in Romania

Paris Prosecutor Laure Beccuau said 10 people arrested in Bucharest were suspected of helping Mohamed Amra escape and go into hiding.
French Criminal Who Escaped in Fatal Prison Break Recaptured in Romania
Mohamed Amra, nicknamed 'The Fly,' is brought handcuffed by police officers to the Court of Appeals in Bucharest, Romania, on Feb. 23, 2025. Vadim Ghirda/AP
Chris Summers
Updated:
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A French criminal, who was freed in a prison break by armed associates in an incident that led to the deaths of two guards, has been arrested in the Romanian capital, Bucharest.

Mohamed Amra, nicknamed La Mouche (The Fly), who was detained on Feb. 22 and appeared in court in Bucharest on Feb. 23, is expected to be extradited to France.

The 30-year-old sported dyed red hair and grinned at onlookers as he was escorted by armed police to and from the courthouse.

On May 14, 2024, two guards—Fabrice Moello, 52, and Arnaud Garcia, 34—were killed when armed men attacked a prison convoy as it slowed down at a highway toll booth in Incarville, outside Rouen, France.

Amra was being taken from court to prison following his May 10, 2024, conviction of a burglary in Évreux, France, when the escape—which made global headlines—took place.

He vanished, along with his accomplices, and Interpol issued a red notice for his arrest.

After a nine-month manhunt, Amra and 10 other alleged members of his entourage were tracked down in Bucharest, where they were detained on Feb. 22.

On Feb. 23, Paris prosecutor Laure Beccuau said the other people arrested in Bucharest were suspected of participating in the preparation and execution of his escape and helping him hide once he was on the run.

Beccuau said Amra had connections with one of Marseille, France’s organized crime gangs, and was suspected of heading a drug trafficking network.

She said that when Amra escaped he was also under investigation for an attempted murder and a kidnapping that resulted in death.

Facial Recognition Used

Beccuau said Amra was arrested near a shopping center in Bucharest. “Despite the change of his hair color, the identification of the suspect was confirmed using facial recognition and fingerprint comparison,” she said.
French President Emmanuel Macron called Amra’s capture a “formidable success,'' and French Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau posted on social media platform X on Feb. 22: “I congratulate all the forces that made possible the arrest of Mohamed Amra in Romania today. I warmly thank Romania for its decisive cooperation.”
On the night of Feb. 23, Shannon Seban, president of Macron’s Renaissance Party in the department of Seine-Saint-Denis in suburban Paris, posted on X: “The arrest of Mohamed Amra in Romania after months on the run proves the effectiveness of European cooperation.

“A huge relief for the families of Fabrice Moello and Arnaud Garcia, the prison officers killed during the escape of this drug trafficker in May 2024. Congratulations to the investigators and magistrates involved.

“It is not up to criminals to defy the republic. It is up to the republic to defy the criminals.”

The Paris prosecutor’s office said Amra’s criminal record dates back to the age of 11.

He had a number of aliases, including “Yanis,” “Momo,” and “Schtroumpf (Smurf),” it said.

Beccuau said it would be up to the Romanian judicial authorities to decide whether to hand over Amra to France.

An undated image of Mohamed Amra—who escaped from a prison van in France on May 14, 2024, and was recaptured in Romania on Feb. 22, 2025. (Interpol via AP)
An undated image of Mohamed Amra—who escaped from a prison van in France on May 14, 2024, and was recaptured in Romania on Feb. 22, 2025. Interpol via AP
On Jan. 28, former Paris prosecutor François Molins said narcotrafficking in France had become “perhaps more significant than terrorism.”

In November 2024 Retailleau said the situation was so serious that drug gang violence in small towns could lead to the emergence of “narco-enclaves.”

He compared the situation to the control that drug cartels have acquired in communities in Mexico.

The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.
Correction: A previous version of this article gave an incorrect date for the attack on the prison convoy. The Epoch Times regrets the error.
Chris Summers
Chris Summers
Author
Chris Summers is a UK-based journalist covering a wide range of national stories, with a particular interest in crime, policing and the law.