Police informers believed that some
extreme-left Jacobins known as "" plotted to kill Napoleon with a . On 16 and 17 Brumaire (November 7–8, 1800) the Paris police arrested the suspects, including an agitator named Metge and a chemist named Chevalier. Metge had published a pamphlet entitled
Le Turc et le militaire français ('The Turk and the French Military'), comparing Napoleon to the despotic Roman ruler
Julius Cæsar, who was killed by
Marcus Brutus, and calling for "the birth of thousands of Bruti to stab the tyrant Bonaparte." Chevalier had experimented with explosives in a hangar and was suspected of making a bomb to dispatch Napoleon; however, the that exploded a month later in the rue Saint-Nicaise was not Chevalier's bomb. Napoleon had apparently convinced himself that the attempt on his life had been made by the . Minister of Police
Joseph Fouché accused the Chouans, but Napoleon would not listen. He was "deeply shocked and very angry." He believed that he had done wonders for France and that his would-be assassins were ungrateful. An enraged Napoleon told his
Conseil d'État, "For such an atrocious crime we must have vengeance like a thunder-bolt; blood must flow; we must shoot as many guilty men as there have been victims." Napoleon wanted his "Jacobin enemies" removed from France. Even after the real culprits were apprehended by Fouché's police, Napoleon refused to pardon the innocent ones, insisting that they be deported from
metropolitan France. On 14 Nivôse Year IX (January 4, 1801), Napoleon and his fellow Consuls
Jean-Jacques-Régis de Cambacérès and
Charles-François Lebrun exiled 130 Jacobins from France. Their consular decree read: "130 citizens whose names are indicated, suspect of carrying partial responsibility for the terrorist attempt of 3 Nivôse, the explosion of the machine infernale, shall be placed under special surveillance outside the European territory of the Republic." On 15 Nivôse (January 5) the docile
Sénat ratified this act by issuing a
sénatus-consulte certifying that the consuls' action "preserved the constitution." The 130 suspects were deported from France without trial and without the right of appeal. Working closely with Fouché, Dubois, the police prefect, had his men collect the remnants of the dead mare and of the cart at the scene of the explosion and question all the Paris horse traders. One of them gave the description of the man who had bought her from him. On 18 Nivôse Year IX (January 8, 1801), fifteen days after the assassination attempt, Carbon the bomb maker was identified by Lamballethe man who had sold (or rented) the cart to himas well as by the
blacksmith who had shod the mare hitched to the cart. Fouchéwho had known the Jacobins' innocence all alongbrought solid proof to Napoleon that the plotters were the royalist Chouans rather than the Jacobin . Fouché showed him the evidence that the bomb made by the Chevalier, whom Dubois' police had accused of having made the machine infernale, was quite different from the bomb that had exploded in the rue Saint-Nicaise. The police minister, who had plotted with
Charles Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord and Clément de Ris to replace Napoleon, appeared eager to prove his loyalty to the first consul. Fouché wanted to prove that it was the royalist Chouans, not the republican , as Napoleon had thought, who had tried to murder his boss. But Napoleon would not listen to Fouché, vowing vengeance against the Jacobins. On 19 Nivôse (January 9) the four ('daggers conspirators')the Jacobins
Giuseppe Ceracchi, Joseph Antoine Aréna,
François Topino-Lebrun and Dominique Demervillewere found guilty of plotting to murder Napoleon and condemned to death. Their protestations of innocence and of being tortured into confessing went unheeded. Napoleon, who had been a fervent Jacobin himself, now turned against his former allies. He still insisted that the Jacobin had tried to kill him. "A Royalist attempt would upset his policy of fusion. He refused to believe that; a Jacobin attempt suited him, as conforming to his system of the moment". On 21 Nivôse Year IX (January 11, 1801) Chevalier, who had not made the , was executed by order of Napoleon. On 28 Nivôse (January 18), the Chouan bomb maker Carbon was arrested. Under torture he gave the names of his fellow plotters, Limoëlan and Saint-Régeant. On 30 Nivôse (January 20), four weeks after the explosion, Napoleon executed the pamphleteer Metge and two of his friends, even though there was no proof that any of them had been involved in the plot. On 1 Pluviôse Year IX (January 21, 1801) Napoleon named the 44-year-old scientist
Jean-Antoine-Claude Chaptal de Chanteloup to the post of
France's interior minister. On January 25 Carbon's fellow plotter, Saint-Régeant, was arrested. One scholar thought that "Saint-Réjant escaped to the United States andthe least the would-be assassin could dobecame a priest." In fact, Saint-Régeant was executed on 30 Germinal (April 20) at the
Place de Grève in Paris, where the attempted
regicide Robert-François Damiens had been executed in 1757, and the man who escaped to the US was the conspirator Limoëlan. He had expressed feeling guilt about the death of the girl, Peusol, who had held the horse hitched to the cart. Limoëlan was ordained a priest in 1812, and died in 1826. == Napoleon's reaction ==