
.
.Henri
LANDRU
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Public domain |
Henri Désiré
Landru (12 April 1869 – 25
February 1922) was a French serial killer and real-life
"Bluebeard".
Early life
Landru was born in Paris. After leaving school, he spent four
years in the French Army from 1887 – 1891. After he was discharged
from service, he proceeded to have a sexual relationship with his
cousin. She bore him a daughter, although Landru did not marry
her; he married another woman two years later and had four
children. He was shortly swindled out of money by a fraudulent
employer. He turned to fraud himself, operating scams that usually
involved swindling elderly widows. He was sentenced to two years
imprisonment in 1900 after being arrested and found guilty of
fraud, the first of several such convictions. By 1914, Landru was
estranged from his wife and working as a second-hand furniture
dealer.
Murders
Landru began to put advertisements in the lonely hearts
sections in Paris newspapers, usually along the lines of
"Widower with two children, aged 43, with comfortable income,
serious and moving in good society, desires to meet widow with a
view to matrimony." With World War I underway, many men were
being killed in the trenches, leaving plenty of widows upon whom
Landru could prey.
Landru would seduce the women who came to his Parisian villa
and, after he was given access to their assets, he would kill them
— possibly by strangulation or stabbing — and burn their
dismembered bodies in his oven. Between 1914 and 1918, Landru
claimed 11 victims: 10 women plus the teenaged son of one of his
victims. With no bodies, the victims were just listed as missing,
and it was virtually impossible for the police to know what had
happened to them as Landru used a wide variety of aliases in his
schemes. His aliases were so numerous that he had to keep a ledger
listing all the women with whom he corresponded and which
particular identity he used for each woman.
In 1919, the sister of one of Landru's victims, Madame Buisson,
attempted to track down her missing sibling. She did not know
Landru's real name but she knew his appearance and where he lived,
and she eventually persuaded the police to arrest him. Originally,
Landru was charged only with embezzlement. He refused to talk to
police, and with no bodies (police dug up his garden, but with no
results), there was seemingly not enough evidence to charge him
with murder. However, policemen did eventually find various bits
of paperwork that listed the missing women, including Madame
Buisson, and combining those with other documents, they finally
built up enough evidence to charge him with murder.
List of victims
- Madame Cuchet (last seen January 1915)
- Son of Madame Cuchet (last seen January 1915)
- Madame Laborde-Line (last seen 26 June 1915)
- Madame Guillin (last seen 2 August 1915)
- Madame Heon (last seen 8 December 1915)
- Madame Collomb (last seen 25 December 1915)
- Andree Babelay (last seen 12 April 1916)
- Madame Buisson (last seen 19 August 1916)
- Madame Jaume (last seen 25 November 1917)
- Madame Pascal (last seen 5 April 1918)
- Madame Marchadier (last seen 15 January 1919)
Trial and
execution
Landru stood trial on 11 counts of murder in November 1921. He
was convicted on all counts, sentenced to death, and guillotined
three months later in Versailles. During his trial Landru traced a
picture of his kitchen including the stove he was accused to have
burned his victims in. He gave this drawing to one of his lawyers,
Auguste Navières du Treuil. In December 1967 the drawing was made
public, written in pencil on the back Landru had written "Ce n'est
pas le mur derrière lequel il se passe quelquechose, mais bien la
cusinière dans laquelle on a brûlé quelque chose" (It is not
behind the wall that something is happening, but indeed in the
stove that something has been burned). This has been interpreted
as Landru's confession to his crimes.
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