
Algerian Illegal Immigrant Nanny Arrested for Allegedly Poisoning Jewish Family in Paris


A shocking case in France has reignited fears about the dangers of uncontrolled migration after an illegal immigrant from Algerian—already issued deportation orders by the state—was put on trial for allegedly poisoning the Jewish family that had hired her as a nanny.
Prosecutors say France has never seen a case like this.
According to a report from Le Parisien, one of the newspapers of record in France, the 42-year-old woman, who reportedly used forged Belgian documents to obtain the job, had been living with the family for only two months before strange incidents began. The mother noticed food and drinks that smelled of chemicals, and even makeup remover that burned her eyes.
Alarmed, the family contacted police, and their five-year-old daughter later told investigators she saw the nanny pour something into a bottle labeled “Jerusalem.” Toxicology tests soon confirmed multiple items in the home were contaminated with chemical agents, including polyethylene glycol.
According to investigators, the substances were corrosive enough to damage the digestive tract. During questioning, the Algerian woman admitted to adding a “soap-based lotion” to the parents’ meals, claiming it was a “punishment” after disputes over her pay.
But her comments suggested something far darker. She reportedly said she acted “because they have money and power” and complained she should “never have worked for a Jewish woman.” Police also uncovered online searches about Judaism and posts related to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Children in the home told investigators the nanny repeatedly asked intrusive questions about their religion. One of the children said she saw the woman tampering with the family’s mezuzah, a clear sign she was targeting the household because they were Jewish.
A guard at the children’s Jewish school told police the woman constantly complained about money and made remarks implying the family’s Jewish identity meant they owed her more. In his words, she kept repeating, “They have money, they can give it to me.”
Prosecutors ended up downgrading the charges after experts concluded the chemicals were not lethal under French law. The nanny’s lawyer insists the motive was purely financial, though investigators maintain the anti-Semitic element is undeniable.
Psychiatrists found the woman fully responsible for her actions, and she now faces trial in Nanterre. The case has become a symbol of France’s growing struggle to manage illegal immigration from alien cultures and the cultural tensions that come with it.
For many French citizens, events like this confirm what officials refuse to admit: importing people with no connection to French values—many from regions hostile to the West—carries grave risks. What happened in this Paris home is no longer seen as an aberration, but a warning.
Across France, families are increasingly vocal about feeling unprotected by a state that seems more committed to ideological experiments than to public safety. Each new incident deepens the perception that the country has lost control over who enters—and who stays.
As the trial unfolds, conservatives and critics of France’s globalist immigration policies say this case underscores the pressing need to overhaul France’s immigration and deportation system. The argument that, if deportation orders were actually enforced and France had a serious immigration policy, this family would never have been put in danger in the first place grows stronger every day.
The post Algerian Illegal Immigrant Nanny Arrested for Allegedly Poisoning Jewish Family in Paris appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.