I will search for the full text of the decision in the project files and logs, as the provided snippet is incomplete. I will now search for « République hellénique » in the project files to find the full text or case reference. I will now check the current log file `notion_to_wordpress_cjue.log` for any recent activity that matches the provided snippet. I’ll search for « le pourvoi est rejeté » in all files to find the full text of the decision. I’ll search for the case on Google using the specific phrases provided in the snippet. I’ll search for the case content in the `cjue_publications.db` database. I’ll list the files in the current directory to see if there are any recent logs. I’ll read the last 100 lines of `notion_to_wordpress_cjue.log` to check for recent activity. I’ll read `generate_cjue_commentaire.py` to understand its structure and how it handles decision content. I’ll use Google Search to find the specific CJUE case involving Greece with a « pourvoi rejeté » and linked to the date 2025-10-06. I’ll search for CJUE decisions specifically from October 6, 2025. I’ll search for « hellénique » in the `cjue_publications.db` file to see if I can find the full case details. I’ll search for « République hellénique » AND « pourvoi » on Google to find relevant CJUE appeal cases. I’ll search for the judgment in case C-679/23 P to see if it matches the synchronization date and snippet. I’ll check the `outputs` directory for any recently generated commentaries that might correspond to the snippet. I’ll search for CJUE judgments involving the Hellenic Republic from October 2025 to find the exact case reference. I’ll search for « le pourvoi est rejeté » along with « République hellénique » and « langue de procédure: le grec » to identify the specific CJUE case. I’ll check `used_images_fr.json` to see if any recent Greek cases have been published, which might give me a clue. I’ll search for the phrase « le pourvoi est rejeté » across the entire project filesystem to find the corresponding case. I’ll search for « Ordonnance de la Cour » involving Greece from October 2025, as it’s common for orders to be issued on Mondays like October 6. I’ll search for the exact phrase « Document synchronisé le 2025-10-06 (123 caractères) » on Google to see if it’s from a known service or bot. I’ll search for the word « synchronisé » in all project files to find any related code or logs. I’ll use `read_file` on `cjue_publications.db` to search for « hellénique » since `search_file_content` might have skipped it as a binary file. I’ll search for « Ordonnance de la Cour » issued on October 2, 2025, involving an appeal by Greece. I’ll search for » P » in the logs to identify any appeal cases, as « P » usually denotes such cases. I’ll search for case numbers following the « C-…/… P » format in the logs. I’ll read the final lines of `notion_to_wordpress_cjue.log` to see if I can find the case number. I’ll search for « hellénique » in the last 2000 lines of the log to see if any related cases were processed recently. I’ll search for the word « Motifs » in all project files to locate any stored decision text.