“The grip is very complicated to explain, you must have experienced it to understand it.” Alexandra Rosenfeld took the floor in Quotidien, this Wednesday, September 3, to testify the violence that he said he had suffered chef Jean Imbert.
She and three other women, including actress Lila Salet, accuse the head of domestic violence, especially physical and psychological. The Versailles prosecutor’s office opened an investigation, after the complaint of Lila Salet, presented on Saturday, August 23, 2025 for acts dating from 2012 and 2013.
The four women had already testified to Elr in April 2025, highlighting these accusations.
“When journalists contacted me, they had three testimonies. My first reaction was to say no,” said Alexandra Rosenfeld on Wednesday, who talks about violence between 2013 and 2014.
“What damaged me was what was not seen”
Finally accept, but decides to be nicknamed. It was in a publication shared on Instagram at the end of August that revealed that it was Eléonore.
“We had to.
“Before we did not know (with the other ex -partner), after her newspaper, we talk a lot, we get very close, that helps me,” he continues. Alexandra Rosenfeld says he had suffered physical violence, including a whim, but also and, above all, psychological violence. The most difficult part for her.
“What damaged me much more was what is not seen. Physical violence can be seen, but everything that is psychological violence, that does horrible damage because nothing is seen and we cannot believe us,” he insists.
A grip phenomenon
This insidious grip mechanism is described by all women victims of domestic violence. It leads to a loss of self -confidence, sometimes depersonalization and, in general, to an investment of guilt, among others.
“These are daily reductions for everything, mockery,” he said before adding: “All I was doing was zero, he made fun of my social background, my friends who were not known, my attire.”
Despite this, it is impossible to leave. This is another score of the grip. “When I got angry and left, he cried. I left him dozens of times, but when you leave him, he hides in his parking lot, at the bottom of his house, in front of his daughter’s school. I could really go after many attempts, when he decided.”
“I don’t sleep”
What she wants today is “repair for victims, the release of speech and the protection of victims.” He also declares that other women contacted her that they say they were victims of Jean Imbert.
“Today, I don’t sleep anymore, I’m afraid, it’s powerful and very well surrounded. But I do it for victims of domestic violence, whether physical or moral,” he concludes.
The boss firmly denies the facts. It is presumed innocent.
Source: BFM TV
