Jean-Pierre Gazeau

[4] He is the co-author of "Coherent States, Wavelets and Their Generalizations",[5] initially published in 2000 with a revised edition in 2014.At Paris Diderot University, Gazeau served as vice president for communication from 1992-1997.

Under Gazeau's initiative, supported by several colleagues, the university in 1994 held an event – Denis Diderot Days – to explore the philosopher's work and impact.

[9] Among early-career scientists who have studied for their doctoral degrees under Gazeau, several have gone on to distinguished careers: Romain Murenzi, executive director of TWAS, He got his PhD iat the Université Catholique de Louvain-La-Neuve (Belgium) under the supervision of Jean-Pierre Antoine (for the main thesis) and Jean-Pierre Gazeau (for the second thesis) Mathematician Jacques Renaud was appointed in 2016[10] to a five-year term directing Espé, the Higher School of Teaching and Education of the Academy of Versailles.

Simon Labrunie,[11] an associate professor at the University of Lorraine in France, is co-author of "Mathematical Foundations of Computational Electromagnetism" (Springer, 2018).

In 2007 the case remained unsolved, and Gazeau formed an association to focus attention on the crime and to press for continued investigation.