
It was December 2020 — deep in the middle of France’s COVID lockdown — when 33-year-old Delphine Jubillar vanished from her home in the small town of Cagnac-les-Mines.
Her husband, Cédric, said she had simply disappeared in the night. But investigators quickly began to suspect otherwise.
But there was no body. No blood. No confession. No witness. Just a husband who insisted he was innocent.
By October 2025, five years later, with still no body or trace of Delphine, Cédric Jubillar finally stood trial for his wife’s murder.
But even then, with no physical evidence and no sign of Delphine ever found, two questions remained:
Where was Delphine Jubillar? And how do you convict someone of murder… when there’s no proof a murder ever happened?