Quentin Deranque was twenty-three years old and a student in mathematics at the University of Lyon, France. A recent convert to Catholicism, he attended Saint-Georges, a church of the diocese of Lyon where Mass is usually said in the traditional Latin rite. Family, friends, and acquaintances described Quentin as devout and studious, someone whose day-to-day life centered on faith, reading, and doing well in school. One friend, “Vincent,” speaking on Radio Courtoisie, praised his “moral and spiritual virtues” and described him as a “bookworm” widely read in classical Christian theology, with a special interest in Thomas Aquinas and Augustine. Another friend, “Baptiste,” quoted by Le Monde, described him as deeply devout, intelligent, and curious, with a strong sense of justice.
On February 12, 2026, Quentin and two other men accompanied female activists from Collectif Némésis as they protested outside of Sciences Po Lyon, a far-left university. Collectif Némésis is a right-wing NGO comprised of young women opposed to the negative impact of mass immigration, Islamism, and left-wing ideology on the lives and rights of young women in France and Europe. The women of Némésis were there to unfurl a banner protesting an appearance on campus by Rima Hassan, a member of the European Parliament for the far-left party La France Insoumise (LFI). Hassan, who claims to be of Palestinian descent, is chiefly known for her full-throated support for Hamas in the wake of October 7.
An unremarkable set-piece of political theater should have ensued: A far-left figure speaks at a far-left university; right-wing activists protest peacefully outside. Instead, a horror unfolded.
Thanks to mobile phone video, an official autopsy report, and a preliminary report by Thierry Dran, chief prosecutor of the Judicial Tribunal of Lyon, we know what happened in detail. Contrary to initial media reports that described a “street brawl” between far-right and far-left activists, implying shared responsibility, it is now undeniable that a group of about twenty masked, hooded men encircled Quentin and the two other men and threw them to the ground and beat them. Quentin became isolated from his companions, and six men hurled him to the pavement and struck him repeatedly before dispersing.
The autopsy report shows that the assailants landed multiple blows to Quentin’s head, even after he was incapacitated. A breakdown of the video evidence counted at least eleven distinct blows. One man straddled Quentin and hit him repeatedly. Another appeared to strike him with a metal object.
According to the autopsy report, the damage to Quentin’s skull and brain was so deep and pervasive, including “major cranioencephalic trauma” and a “right temporal fracture,” that he had no chance of survival. This last fact is important, because minutes later Quentin regained consciousness, being described as visibly confused, and initially refused medical attention. The left-wing noise machine latched onto this fact to claim that Quentin had not been mortally wounded and that he only died as a result of his initial refusal to seek medical help. The autopsy report made it clear that even if Quentin had been immediately rushed to the hospital, he would still have died of his injuries.
It is important to get the facts right, which, again, are attested by multiple mobile phone videos, an official autopsy report, and an official report by the chief prosecutor of Lyon. There can be no reasonable doubt: Quentin was attacked and murdered by an organized, violent group. He did not seek, provoke, or initiate violence, and his attackers deliberately beat him and left him for dead.
The import of the event is clear. A French center-right commentator, Kevin Bossuet, put it simply in a television interview yesterday: “He is our Charlie Kirk.”
Quentin had nowhere near Charlie’s public profile, but he was a virtuous, talented, young Christian man who was gratuitously murdered by far-left extremists for doing nothing other than peacefully exercising his right to free speech.


