Shooting On 6 May 1932, a book fair was being held at the Hôtel Salomon de Rothschild in Paris, and the President of France, Paul Doumer, was present. Gorguloff arrived at the hotel approximately an hour before Doumer, under the false identity of an author named "Paul Brède". Carrying a concealed
Browning FN Model 1910 , Gorguloff visited several book stands, being noted for his nervous demeanor and foreign accent. He then approached the President from behind, pulled out his gun and fired three shots. Two of them hit the President, one in the back of the head and the other in the right armpit. One of the authors at the exhibition,
Claude Farrère, managed to wrestle with Gorguloff until the police arrived to arrest him. Doumer was rushed to the
Beaujon Hospital in Paris but died the next day.
Investigation , 1932 While in custody, he wrote a confession letter on 9 May 1932, stating that the assassination was a form of protest against the difficulties faced by self-exiled White Russians in Europe and the United States, and against France's positive relationship with other Western nations and the Soviet Union. Private writings found in his apartment, which was filled with material related to his "green party", showed that Gorguloff believed France had caused the spread of "Judeo-Bolshevism" within Russia and that he was destined to bring "holy vengeance". Within the same notes, Gorguloff claimed responsibility for acts of "clandestine terror", including a 1921 train derailment in
Břeclav, multiple assassination attempts on Czechoslovakia's founder Tomáš Masaryk, the serial poison murder of pregnant women, and even the
kidnapping of the Lindbergh Baby, which are largely dismissed as products of Gorguloff's fantasy. Despite Gorguloff's self-admitted fascist leanings, once proclaiming his hatred for both communists and tsarists, the court's prosecution, along with the
Democratic Republican Alliance and its allies, which included former president
Alexandre Millerand and incumbent Prime Minister
André Tardieu, alleged that he was a communist agent of the
Soviet secret police. Conversely, the
French Communist Party and other left-wing parties claimed that the assassination was a
false flag operation organised by Tardieu to justify a war with the Soviet Union. Following a two-day trial and 29 minutes of deliberation, the jury rejected the idea that Gorguloff was insane and announced that Gorguloff would receive a death sentence. While Gorguloff welcomed the verdict as his chance to become a martyr, the
Human Rights League decried the punishment. On 20 August, the
Court of Cassation, France's final appeal court, rejected a defence of insanity by Gorguloff's attornies. On 14 September 1932, Gorguloff was executed at
La Santé Prison in Paris by
guillotine. His last words were "Россия, моя страна!" ("Russia, my country!"). He was buried at
Ivry Cemetery. The gun used in the assassination is now in the
Musée des Collections Historiques de la Préfecture de Police in Paris. ==References==