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Olga Konstantinovna Briscorn, Serial Killer Aristocrat – Russia, 1836

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Wikipedia: Olga Konstantinovna Briscorn (née Strukova, born Mavrogeni; 1776 — 1836), nicknamed The Kursk Saltychikha [Saltykova], was a wealthy Russian landowner and socialite, as well as torturer and serial killer of her own serfs, who operated in the Kursk, Yekaterinoslav and Saint Petersburg Governorates. She owned households in the capital, and other estates in Pyataya Gora, Prilepy and Khomutovka.

~ Biography ~

Olga Konstantinovna Strukova, born in 1776 in the family of a wealthy landowner, came from the well-known Mavrogeni family, who were Moldovan boyars.

She married the provincial marshal of nobility, Ananiy Gerasimovich Strukov, the richest man in the province, receiving a very good dowry from the marriage: 56,000 rubles, large plots of land and households, as well as several hundred slaves. After a very profitable wedding, Olga became the "first lady" among the Yekaterinoslav elite. A young (a little over 30) woman, well-read and witty, she was keenly interested in theater and amateur performances.
Soon after her husband's death, the widow moved to St. Petersburg, but did not mourn for long - only a year later, she married a major official, senator and diplomat named Fyodor Maximovich Briscorn. Since then, Olga Konstantinovna began living a double life: in St. Petersburg, she posed as a model of piety, in whose metropolitan house on Galernaya Street, the family of the great poet Alexander Pushkin lived for some time; however, in the Yekaterinoslav, "Senator Briscorn" became known for something completely different.

~ Abuse of peasants ~

In 1817, the 40-year-old Briscorn bought an estate in the Dmitrievsky district of the Kursk Governorate. Many serfs were transferred to the estate, and in just a year, she ordered a cloth factory be built in the village of Prilepy. The factory was a unique on the technical side, with the weaving machines being bought from abroad, and a steam engine, the first in the Central Black Earth economic region, were set in motion.

Her "glory" did not come from this, however, but by the fact that she constantly punished both adults and minors who worked in her factory. In a short time, the material situation of the serfs worsened, and the mortality rate increased. In 1822, local farmers turned towards Emperor Alexander the First, whose official, yet secret, investigation lasted 3 years.

The landowner was convicted of torturing her serfs via beating them with whips, bats and sticks, as well as starving them to death. She forced the peasants who built the factory to work on holidays and in their "own days", which is why they didn't have time to cultivate their own land. When people were assigned to her factory, Briscorn would take away their property and order them to live in the machine room. In 1820, the salary's factory was doubled, but very little - Briscorn kept most of the money for food and clothing. From October 1820 to May 1821, 121 workers died of starvation, disease and injuries, of which 44 were under the age of 15; 74 of them were buried by the priest, while the rest were buried in pits. During this period, more than 300 people fled the estate. According to the results of the investigation, fraudulent operations concerning the products were also revealed, and Briscorn (already a widow by this time), was removed from ownership of the Prilepy factory, which was taken under state guardianship.

In total, the factory employed 379 people, about 90 of whom were children from seven years and older. The working day was 14-15 hours long, with the serfs having to sleep on straw in the workshop.
The food was extremely modest: bread with cake; cabbage soup; a spoonful of porridge; there was meat, but wormy and when divided to all, it added up to 8 grams per person. Life wasn't any easier for those who worked the land, as they were forced to work on Briscorn's land exclusively. As a result, serfs were unable to grow crops of their own, and then starved along with their families.

~ Patronage ~

Despite her notoriety, the Kursk Saltychikha was also famous for her piety and patronage of the arts: she built large temples and churches, and granted alms to the poor. In the village of Pyataya Gora, the church built by Briscorn in 1826 has been preserved to this day.

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~ Notes

In the second half of the 19th century, three other cruel serfresses and followers of Saltychikha were documented: princess Anna Stepanovna Sheleshpanskaya, who earned the nickname of the "Chukhloma Saltychikha" for torturing and then, in a drunken stupor, slaying 15 serfs; princess Alexandra Vladimirovna Kozolovskaya, who tortured, maimed and killed her serfs; and Honorata Stotskaya, the "Saltychikha from Mozyr Uyezd", whom surpassed all of her "serf-colleagues" and was exiled in Siberia. 

References

"Olga Konstantinovna Briscorn". www.kva.kursk.ru. Retrieved March 7, 2020.


Princess Anna Stepanovna Sheleshpanskaya, Aristocratic Serial Killer – Russia, Mid-Late 1800s

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This post is a “place-holder,” awaiting further information on Princess Anna Stepanovna Sheleshpanskaya.

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In the Wikipedia post on Olga Konstantinovna Briscorn, a Russian artistocrat who serially murdered her serfs, the following list of similar cases is noted. “Saltichikha” refers to the most well-known case of this type, that of Saltykova. [See post on this site: 1762 – Darya Nikolayevna Saltykova – Moscow, Russia]

In the second half of the 19th century, three other cruel serfresses and followers of Saltychikha [Saltykova] were documented:

1) Princess Anna Stepanovna Sheleshpanskaya, who earned the nickname of the "Chukhloma Saltychikha" for torturing and then, in a drunken stupor, slaying 15 serfs;

2) Princess Alexandra Vladimirovna Kozolovskaya, who tortured, maimed and killed her serfs;

3) Honorata Stotskaya, the "Saltychikha from Mozyr Uyezd", whom surpassed all of her serf-owning colleagues and was exiled in Siberia.

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Chukhloma (Russian: Чу́хлома) is a town and the administrative center of Chukhlomsky District in Kostroma Oblast, Russia, located on Lake Chukhloma.

Princess Alexandra Vladimirovna Kozolovskaya, Aristocratic Serial Killer – Russia, Mid-Late 1800s

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This post is a “place-holder,” awaiting further information on Princess Alexandra Vladimirovna Kozolovskaya.

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In the Wikipedia post on Olga Konstantinovna Briscorn, a Russian artistocrat who serially murdered her serfs, the following list of similar cases is noted. “Saltichikha” refers to the most well-known case of this type, that of Saltykova. [See post on this site: 1762 – Darya Nikolayevna Saltykova – Moscow, Russia]

In the second half of the 19th century, three other cruel serfresses and followers of Saltychikha [Saltykova] were documented:

1) Princess Anna Stepanovna Sheleshpanskaya, who earned the nickname of the "Chukhloma Saltychikha" for torturing and then, in a drunken stupor, slaying 15 serfs;

2) Princess Alexandra Vladimirovna Kozolovskaya, who tortured, maimed and killed her serfs;

3) Honorata Stotskaya, the "Saltychikha from Mozyr Uyezd", whom surpassed all of her serf-owning colleagues and was exiled in Siberia.

Honorata Stotskaya, Aristocratic Serial Killer – Russia, Mid-Late 1800s

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This post is a “place-holder,” awaiting further information on Honorata Stotskaya.

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In the Wikipedia post on Olga Konstantinovna Briscorn, a Russian artistocrat who serially murdered her serfs, the following list of similar cases is noted. “Saltichikha” refers to the most well-known case of this type, that of Saltykova. [See post on this site: 1762 – Darya Nikolayevna Saltykova – Moscow, Russia]

In the second half of the 19th century, three other cruel serfresses and followers of Saltychikha [Saltykova] were documented:

1) Princess Anna Stepanovna Sheleshpanskaya, who earned the nickname of the "Chukhloma Saltychikha" for torturing and then, in a drunken stupor, slaying 15 serfs;

2) Princess Alexandra Vladimirovna Kozolovskaya, who tortured, maimed and killed her serfs;

3) Honorata Stotskaya, the "Saltychikha from Mozyr Uyezd", whom surpassed all of her serf-owning colleagues and was exiled in Siberia.

Gila Giraldo, AKA “La Serrana de la Vera,” Legendary Serial Killer – Spain, Early 1500s

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Wikipedia: Gila Giraldo, also known as La Serrana de la Vera (born in Garganta la Olla in the last third of the 15th century – died in Plasencia, first third of the 16th century), was a Spanish serial killer who inspired numerous legends, romances and theatrical pieces during the 18th century Spanish Golden Age.
According to the legends, Giraldo was from Garganta la Olla, a few leagues from Plasencia. During the time of the Catholic Monarchs, Don Lucas de Carvajal, captain of arms, came to the place to look for soldiers. He asked for accommodation in Giraldo's house. Gila refused and chased him through town with his gun. Don Lucas swore to return and avenge himself with Gila's deceit, which he fulfilled by outwitting her and earning her honor.

Discovering the deception, Gila retaliated by in turn by throwing Don Lucas down a ravine. He fled to the mountains, where he survived in a cave and took care of cattle. When a traveler was lost, he was welcomed by her into the cave, and after a copious amount of meal, drinks and sexual acts so that he the victim would tire and go to sleep, he would be beheaded. Many bones could be found inside the cave. Up to here, the legend according to the version of Luis Vélez de Guevara and the romances, it historically can represent a real woman – Isabel de Carvajal.

The real historical facts were probably mixed with the legends and Extremadura myths of the mountain people, for some women who lived in the mountains led a life of elemental rusticity.

Gila was captured and executed in the Plaza de Plasencia. The character starts in no less than twenty-one versions of romances and is later treated in different theatrical pieces by Luis Vélez de Guevara (1613), Lope de Vega (1617) and a 'a lo divino' version by José de Valdivielso. 

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http://unknownmisandry.blogspot.com/2015/04/discredited-female-serial-killer.html

MORE Discredited Female Serial Killer Legends & False Reports

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Valentina Aleksandrova, “Bloody Valya” – Bulgaria, 1998

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NOTE: The inclusion of this case is another exception to the “serial killer” definition. It involves three murders (and one attempt) which took place on only two separate occasions.

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On July 18, 1998, in the Bulgarian town of Polikraishte with 3,000 residents, 76-year-old Velika Kukova was found beaten and strangled with her own headscarf in her home. Her husband Lyuben died later in hospital from the injuries sustained after having been horribly beaten. “Their skulls were literally crushed and smashed."

Two weeks later, on July 29th, in a nearby little village in Gorna Oryahovitsa a pair of old and isolated sisters - Sevdalina Angelova and Yordanka Bogoevska, were found beaten and robbed. Following a 34-day coma Sevdalina died and Yordanka, who lost an eye, survived.

Police investigators identified the perpetrator as Valentina Aleksandrova, an unemployed paramedic wife of a tractor driver with four children, two of whom were accomplices. Police said that Valentina made her sons hold the hands of her victims and then hit them with an adze until they lost consciousness.  Small sums of money were stolen from the victims’ homes - 80,000 Levs [US$5] from Kukova's home and 110,000 Levs [US$6] from Sevdalina's home.

Although confessions were made and the mother and two sons were the three murders were convicted, the family appealed. On July 6, 1999, Valentina (59) had been sentenced to life in prison,  Ivan (18) received a 10-year sentence, Vladimir (15), 5 years. The court also ordered the Aleksandrov family pay 41,000 levs in damages to the victims' family members.

In October 2009, the freed Vladimir was found dead by his brother Plamen. According to rumors, his death was punishment for his mother's sins.'

The Appellate Court later voided the verdict against Valentina of the murders of the Kukova couple and cancelled the monetary damages. She says her confessions were falsified. She continued to claim complete innocence for all charges of violent crimes made against her.

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SOURCES:


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CHRONOLOGY
Jul. 18, 1998 – Velika Kukova (47), was found beaten and strangled with her own headscarf; Lyuben beaten (dies later).
Jul. 29, 1998 – Sevdalina Angelova, Yordanka Bogoevska, sisters found beaten and robbed. Sevdalina dies after a 34-day coma. Yordanka, whose eye was removed as a result from a strong blow, manages to survive. village in Gorna Oryahovitsa
Jul. 6, 1999 – the Veliko Tarnovo Regional Court sentences her to life imprisonment with a chance of parole. Ivan (18) received a 10-year sentence. Vladimir (15) is sentenced to 5 years, half of which he'd serve at a group home until he reached adulthood. The same court also had the Aleksandrov family pay 41 thousand levs to the victims' family members for property damages.
Year? – "The Appellate Court acquitted me of the murders of Velika Kukova and her husband Lyuben. They also removed the monetary compensation for their loved ones. My eldest son served in the Lovech prison until the decision of the Appellate Court, after which he was acquitted. Vladimir didn't stay in prison.
Oct. 2, 2009 – Vladimir, Valya's middle son, was found dead by his brother Plamen in Polikraishte.

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Linda Taylor, Con Artist & Suspected Serial Killer – Chicago, 1970s

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In 1976, candidate Ronald Reagan made Linda Taylor famous – albeit anonymously famous – as the Welfare Queen:

“In Chicago, they found a woman who holds the record. She used 80 names, 30 addresses, 15 telephone numbers to collect food stamps, Social Security, veterans’ benefits for four nonexistent deceased veteran husbands, as well as welfare . . . her tax-free cash income alone has been running at $150,000 a year.”

Linda Taylor was, in reality, a career criminal and very likely a serial killer.

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Book: Josh Jevin, The Queen: The Forgotten Life Behind an American Myth, 2019, Little, Brown

Publisher’s copy:  Taylor, it turned out, was also a kidnapper, and possibly a murderer. A desperately ill teacher, a combat-traumatized Marine, an elderly woman hungry for companionship -- after Taylor came into their lives, all three ended up dead under suspicious circumstances. But nobody -- not the journalists who touted her story, not the police, and not presidential candidate Ronald Reagan -- seemed to care about anything but her welfare thievery.

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CHRONOLOGY
1926 – Linda Taylor born Martha Louise White, Golddust, Tennessee,
1940 –she had her first child.
1943 –Seattle arrested for disorderly conduct under the name Martha Davis.
1944 – she was arrested for vagrancy as “Martha Gordon” in Port Orchard, Washington; in 1945, malicious mischief as “Connie Reed” in Oakland, California; in 1946, suspicion of prostitution as “Betty Smith” in Oakland.
1948 – while “passing” as white, she married a Navy sailor named Paul Harbaugh. She had three more children in this period, one of whom had a darker complexion than the others. The marriage quickly unraveled.
1952 – she married a drifter named Troy “Buddy” Elliott in Arkansas and had a fifth child. But Elliott’s family rejected her and her darker-skinned son, whom she eventually abandoned.
1959 – Taylor, as “Connie Harbaugh,” filed a lawsuit in Peoria, Illinois, alleging her children had been severely injured in a gas explosion at their school. The case was thrown out seven years later.
1964 – Taylor first made news in 1964, in Chicago, when she claimed to be the daughter of Lawrence Wakefield, a black man who, upon his death, was found to have more than $760,000 in cash in his home, a fortune earned in an underground gambling business. As “Constance Wakefield,” she sued to be named Wakefield’s sole heir. Her uncle and grandmother were flown in to testify against her.
Aug. 1974 – false burglary report resulting in discovery of welfare fraud.
Sep. 29, 1974 – Taylor’s welfare scam reported the headline “Cops find deceit-but no one cares.”
1975; She was also present for at least three suspicious deaths, Levin writes. One of them happened while awaiting trial in 1975; Taylor moved into the home of a woman named Patricia Parks. Within months, Parks had made Taylor the trustee of her estate and then died suddenly of a barbiturate overdose. Taylor was investigated but never charged.
1976 – A niece told Levin that Taylor kidnapped her for days in 1976; police were called, but charges were never filed.
1978 – Taylor was eventually convicted of theft and perjury and sentenced to three to seven years in prison. When she was released in 1980 after a little more than two years,
1980 – released.
2002 – She died in a care facility near Chicago in 2002.

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[Gillian Brockell, “She was stereotyped as ‘the welfare queen’. The truth was more disturbing, a new book says.” The Washington Post (D. C.), May 22, 2019]

Maria Aleksandrovna Petrova, “The Zyuzino Maniac” Serial Killer – Russia, 2002

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"The Zyuzinsky Maniac": She Hated All Men

FULL TEXT (autotranslated from Russian):  This 39-year-old Muscovite, suffering from schizotypal personality disorder, managed to kill two men and injure several more, according to one version, thus Maria Petrova avenged sexual violence, which she had to repeatedly experience.

~ Assaultin the Zyuzino District ~

Maria Petrova got her nickname because of the place where she most often attacked her victims - this is the South-Western administrative district of Moscow. The investigation and the court proved two episodes of the murder of Mokvichs, regarding the number of wounded by the “Zyuzinsky maniac”, the opinions differed - the prosecutor's office insisted on four, but by the definition of the Judicial Collegium for Criminal Cases of the Supreme Court of May 15, 2003 No. 5-o03-82 one of the victims, but survivors, removed from the list of victims - the court considered that there was no conclusive evidence that it was Petrov who cut the man. Moreover, the wounded, unlike the other three, did not see who hit him and could not identify the attacker (attacker). 

Also, the Supreme Court’s ruling refused to prosecute M. A. Petrova due to her chronic mental (schizotypic) disorder - that is, Zyuzinsky Maniac could not adequately perceive her actions during the attacks. Thus, officially in this case two corpses and three, but not four wounded, as the media and bloggers wrote. In addition, in numerous publications, the surname of the first victim, allegedly Sergey Makaryev, was incorrectly indicated. The aforementioned Supreme Court ruling does not contain this name at all — neither among those killed by Petrova, nor among the wounded — IA Kamornikov and N.P. Zhabin, as wounded by the maniac, and Efimov, Chernyaev and Isaev, the wounded. The episode with Petrova’s attack on V.P. Kiselev is excluded from the list of proven.

~ Who She Is And Why She Started Stabbing Men ~

Outwardly, she is a broad-shouldered, tall, masculine woman. From childhood she went in for sports. By nature, uncommunicative and closed. It is reported that she was observed by a psychiatrist from an early age. The girl (at the time of the crimes of Petrova was 24 years old) taught physical education in one of the Moscow technical schools, where, by the way, she was well characterized, among other things, as an organizer of extracurricular sports activities (weight-lifting section), an active athlete (Petrova was fond of swimming). With men, Maria Petrova, obviously, was not lucky due to character traits (and it is possible that problems with the psyche). The main reason Zyuzinsky Maniac started attacking males with a knife was revenge for the rape by a certain young man and sexual harassment at the workplace of an elderly colleague. Allegedly, it was these two cases that prompted Maria Petrova to cruel reprisals against men completely unfamiliar to her.

~ Her Behavior ~

From March to April, the Zyuzinsk Maniac attacked men with a knife five times. Beat in the throat, stomach or back to back. The attacks took place on the street, often with witnesses. The investigation then concluded that Petrova did not care in advance about where, when, and whom exactly she would kill. I didn’t think out ways to leave and, in principle, did not develop a crime plan. She was attracted by the manic desire to kill a man at all costs, no matter under what circumstances. 

The first Muscovite I. A. Kamornikov was killed by her on March 1 near the Varshavskoye metro station. At the end of the month, stabbing N.P. Zhabina on Sivashskaya Street with knife stabs in the throat of the “Zyuzinsky Maniac”. Until the end of April of the same year, when M. A. Petrova was detained, she managed to attack three more people with a knife (these are only episodes proved by the investigation and the court). 

Fortunately, the victims of the attacks survived. ... "Zyuzinsky maniac" was caught on April 23, 2002. Petrova confessed to the killings, and the forensic psychiatric examination recognized her insane, therefore, beyond the scope of criminal prosecution. Now M. A. Petrova is undergoing compulsory treatment in a special institution. The victims who were involved in this criminal case tried unsuccessfully to challenge the findings of experts and insisted that the Zyuzinsky maniac still go to jail. But the court refused them these requirements.

[«Зюзинская маньячка»: за что она возненавидела всех мужчин, Pikabu.ru, undated]

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CHRONOLOGY
May 15, 1978 – Maria Aleksandrovna Petrova born
Mar. 1, 2002 – Petrova kills Sergei Makariev (20), stabbing him twice with a knife.
Mar. 27, 2002 – Petrova killed a 60-year-old pensioner, Nikolai Zhabin, by cutting his throat. 
Mar.-Apr. 2002 – 4 attempted murders.
Apr. 23, 2002 – Petrova arrested on soon confessed to everything; charged with killing two and attempting to kill four more people. The forensic psychiatric examination recognized her as insane. The victims who were involved in this criminal case tried unsuccessfully to challenge the findings of experts and insisted that the Zyuzinsky maniac still go to jail. But the court refused them these requirements.
2013 –Released?

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Maria Aleksandrovna Petrova / Мария Александровна Петрова
“The Zyuzino Maniac” / «Маньячка из Зюзино»

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Madina Nurgazizovnaya Shakirova, "Dina the Meat-grinder,” Accomplice to a Cannibal Serial Killer – Russia, 1985

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Madina Nurgazizovnaya Shakirova was accomplice to the Russian cannibal serial killer Aleksey Vasilevich Sukletin. Although she lured female victims for her male partner – both before and after the serial killings began – and she dismembered, cooked at ate them Shakirova did not, it is presumed, personally kill any of them. Astonishingly, after the sixth murder, that of a girl aged 11 or 12, Shakirova “left Sukletin and returned to her parents, but did not tell anybody about the crimes. . . . Following the seventh murder (March 18, 1985), Madina Shakirova returned to Sukletin. In order to conceal the murder of Lydia Fedorova, she cleaned the roommate and washed his bloodied linen.”

Following is the Wikipedia article on cannibal serial killer Aleksey Vasilevich Sukletin, who was executed on July 29, 1987.

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Wikipedia: Aleksey Vasilevich Sukletin (Russian: Алексе́й Васи́льевич Сукле́тин; born March 23, 1943 - July 29, 1987) was a Soviet serial killer, rapist and cannibal. Between 1979 and 1985 (according to other data, from 1981 to 1985), along with accomplices Madina Shakirova and Anatoly Nikitin, he killed and cannibalized seven girls and women in Tatarstan.

~ Vasilevich Sukletin – Early life and early crimes ~

Aleksey Vasilevich Sukletin was born in 1943, in Kazan, RSFSR, Soviet Union. His mother worked as a nurse in a military field hospital (it is known that she was alive in 1985, when Sukletin was arrested on suspicion for a series of murders). There is no available information about his father. Sukletin suffered from alcoholism, drinking heavily until he reached adulthood.

The first crime Aleksey committed was in February 1960, at the age of 16. At night, he attacked a girl, hitting her with a heavy object on the head and attempted to rape her. She was saved by two young men, and the offender was asked to leave, but as a result he got arrested. Sukletin was sentenced to two years imprisonment, serving his punishment in a youth detention center, and upon reaching maturity he was transferred to a corrective labor colony.

In 1964, Sukletin committed a new crime, acting together with accomplices with whom he drank alcohol. Once they had no more money left, Aleksey informed them of an elderly woman who lived nearby. They entered her apartment together, posing as gas service employees. The men then hit the woman on the head with a heavy object and took 80 rubles, but the victim survived and reported the crime to the police. The attackers were detained a few hours later at the nearest bar.

Aleksey Sukletin was sentenced to 12 years imprisonment. While serving his sentence, he collaborated with law enforcement agencies, telling them about each of his convictions. He read many books in the colony, and later used his erudition to seduce women.

~ Madina Shakirova ~

In 1976, Sukletin was released. He got a job as a worker for an insurance company, but never went to work, and then as a guard for a horticultural association, from where he was fired for frequent absences. In 1978, he became a medical orderly in a psychiatric hospital. A year later, he changed jobs, becoming a guard again, this time in the garden community "Kaenlyk" in the urban settlement of Vasilyevo.

The same year, Aleksey Sukletin met 23-year-old Madina Nurgazizovnaya Shakirova, a native of Vasilyevo, and began cohabiting with her. He told her that he allegedly was serving a sentence at a Kazakh camp, but fled. Before meeting Sukletin, Shakirova had gone to Uzbekistan for work, then moved to Kazan, where she worked as a turner at a plant, then as a breeder on a farm. She also had a child which she abandoned and gave to her parents, while she herself moved in with Sukletin.

Soon the couple began to engage in criminal activities, starting with extortion. By order of Sukletin, Shakirova went to Vasilyevo to Kazan, taking a taxi back late in the evening. She complained to the taxi driver that her husband was cheating on her, and when they came to Sukletin's home, she offered the taxi driver to spend the night together. The man agreed, and then Sukletin and his accomplice Rinat Volkov, who played the role of a jealous husband and Shakirova's brother, burst in the bedroom. They beat the taxi driver and demanded money from him, also photographing him in indecent postures, asking for 200 rubles or else they would distribute the pictures to the public. The next day, the taxi driver gave them 200 rubles.

~ Murders ~

Shortly after meeting Shakirova, Sukletin informed her of his desire to kill women for cannibalism. He told her about his first idol, Jean-Bédel Bokassa, emperor of the Central African Empire, the other being 19th century British serial killer Jack the Ripper.

Sukletin committed his first murder in November 1979 (according to some sources, it was in November 1981). He invited 22-year-old Ekaterina Osetrova (allegedly a prostitute) to his home, introducing Shakirova as his sister. A feast took place, and at night Sukletin and Osetrova went to the bedroom and had sex. Shakirova then offered Osetrova a drink - distracting her - while Sukletin took a rag-wrapped hammer and hit her on the head with it. Sukletin then put her in a trough, tied her hands with a rope, and cut her throat. He claimed to have drunk her blood while she was still alive, and made Shakirova drink with him. When Osetrova died, he hung her corpse and mocked her, before cutting off the soft tissues and eviscerating the internal organs (with Shakirova's help). The remaining blood was disposed of in the bath. Sukletin then ate her heart, liver and lungs. Shakirova then prepared borscht and pelmeni from the remains, which she ate together with Sukletin. with some of the remaining meat being fed to their dogs. The couple buried the victim's bones under a water tower (according to others, in a barrel).

Sukletin killed all his subsequent victims in a similar way. He stunned them with a strong blow from the hammer or hit their head against the wall, then in most cases cut the throat (in one case, it was the hammer blow that was fatal). After the death of the victim, Sukletin and Shakirova dismembered the corpse and ate the soft tissues. Shakirova would then wash the bloody clothes and Sukletin's underwear. She did not take part in the killings directly. The bones of all subsequent victims were buried in the same place as those of Osetrova. Sometimes, Shakirova would keep items from the victims. In addition to eating the human meat, Sukletin and Shakirova sold it to their neighbors under the guise of being tenderloin. According to the head of the investigative unit of the Tatarstan Prosecutor's Office (later, deputy prosecutor of Tatarstan) Farid Zagidullin, Sukletin's adult victims led an asocial lifestyle: they either engaged in prostitution, were vagrants or were alcoholics.

Subsequently, Madina Shakirova recalled that Sukletin looked at women only as possible sources for meat. Allegedly, Sukletin had tried to kill her three times. She also said:

“Beautiful women caused him to be really malicious. Well, those intelligent, he was afraid of. He liked to talk and dream about such people as me, how he would have sexual intercourse with her, and always in a perverted form, and then he would kill and eat them.”

In January 1980 (according to other sources, January 1982), Sukletin committed his second murder. Together with Shakirova, he met two girls and invited them to celebrate the New Year. At night, he killed and ate one of the girls, 22-year-old Tatiana Illarionova. He did not harm the second girl, as she seemed too thin for his liking. When the surviving girl woke up, Sukletin told her that Ilarionova got up early in the morning and went to Kazan.

The third victim of the maniac was 15 (or 16)-year-old Rezeda Galimova. Sukletin lured the girl to his dacha, saying that he would settle her problems with studies. He raped her, and then killed her with two hammer blows to the head. The victim begged Shakirova to help her, but she refused. Subsequently, Shakirova took the murdered girl's sweater.

After killing Galimova, Sukletin lured 22-year-old Nadezhda Sityavina to his house. He announced to Shakirova that he would now cohabit with Sityavina, even presenting Nadezhda to his mother in Zelenodolsk, and then killed her. The fifth victim was 19-year-old Natalia Shkolnikova, a colleague of Sityavina.

The sixth and youngest victim of Sukletin was 11-year-old (or 12) Valentina Elikova. Having met the girl in Kazan, the maniac introduced himself as a distant uncle and took her to his home. There he hit Elikova's head against the wall, raped, killed and then ate her. Shakirova tried to save the child, but Sukletin severely beat her. After the murder, he ordered Shakirova to kidnap a baby for him, but she refused to do that. She eventually left Sukletin and returned to her parents, but did not tell anybody about the crimes. After Shakirova fled, Sukletin raped the juvenile daughter of his friend Boris. He achieved this by telling her about a non-existent nephew living in Italy, for whom he promised to find a girl to marry.

Soon after, 23-year-old excessive drinker Lydiya Fyodorova became Sukletin's new cohabitant. She was accompanied by her relative Anatoly Nikitin. The three of them had parties and drank alcohol. However, the new concubine refused to help Sukletin kill and eat women, threatening to expose him to police. On March 12, 1985, Sukletin and Nikitin raped and beat Fyodorova, who became the seventh and last victim. Sukletin burned her clothes and, after mocking the corpse, dismembered it, and ate the soft tissues. On March 18, Shakirova returned to Sukletin. In order to conceal the murder, she cleaned her roommate's room and washed the bloodied clothes.

According to neighbors, Aleksey Sukletin did not arouse any suspicion in them. They knew him as a good man and drinking companion, who could fix the roof, dig potatoes, recite poems, and was a hospitable host. He liked women and enjoyed their company. He liked to call passing children "meatballs", but no one could have imagined that the guard committed murders and engaged in cannibalism. The Vasilyevo police eventually visited Sukletin, but failed to gather any evidence. In mid-80s Soviet society it was not customary to talk about serial killers, which were considered a characteristic feature of capitalist countries, as a result of which law enforcement agencies kept the disappearances of women and girls in Vasilyevo a secret.

~ Arrest ~

Fyodorova's long absence became of interest to law enforcement. Representatives visited Sukletin and asked him questions about her whereabouts, but he replied that he had no clue on the subject. Shortly after Fyodorova's murder, Sukletin visited Gennady Uglov, a co-worker with whom he drank alcohol. When Uglov asked Sukletin where Fyodorova was, the maniac showed him the burial site of her remains. Sukletin believed that Uglov would not disclose what he knew about Fyodorova's murder because Sukletin, in his position as a guard, had promised to make an entry in Uglov's workbook, which would allow Gennady to avoid criminal liability for parasitism. However, on June 3, 1985, Uglov filed a report with the police. Initially, the police did not believe him, but Uglov then told the story to a friend who worked at the police force.

In his book, Serial Killers, maniacs and their victims, Nikolai Modestov related a different version of how Sukletin’s crimes were discovered: after Shakirova returned to Sukletin, the couple again began to engage in extortion, using the same ploy as they had previously. This time, the targeted taxi driver did not give money to the criminals, but turned to the police. When the authorities arrived at Sukletin's home, they found a passport belonging to one of his victims and the remains of another.

On June 4, 1985, Aleksey Sukletin was arrested. Former Olympic weightlifting champion Nikolay Kolesnikov, who was then a senior security officer in Tatarstan's criminal investigation department for particularly important cases, participated in the maniac's capture. Four bags of human bones were collected from Sukletin's garden, and half a bucket of melted human fat was found in a utility room. Subsequently, Shakirova, Nikitin, and Volkov were also arrested.

~ Investigation, trial and execution ~

During the first interrogations, Sukletin stated that investigators would not able to prove his guilt in the murders. However, investigator Farid Zagidullin (afterward, the deputy prosecutor of Tatarstan) was able to obtain a confession from Shakirova, threatening that she would be executed if she stayed silent. Frightened that her daughter would be orphaned, she began to testify, writing 70 sheets of text:

I myself did not kill anyone. He cut the meat, cooked food from the dead. We appropriated some things from the dead. Coats, skirts, jackets, shoes, books. I took only good things. The bad we burned.

~ Excerpt from Madina Shakirova's testimony ~

Sukletin was transferred to Moscow for a forensic psychiatric examination at the Serbsky Center. During the examination, he stated that he did not feel any remorse about the crimes committed:

“Why should I repent? They all were prostitutes. I helped society, cleaned it, say, from the amoral element. No, I do not regret them!”
               
When Sukletin was asked whether he was afraid of God and the Last Judgment, he replied:
Haha, what is God to me! Myself, I am God and the Devil! I'm actually afraid of death. I'm reluctant to die now; I have lived only a little yet. Hit the road with your Last Judgment!

According to the results of the examination, Sukletin was recognized as sane, despite his attempts to fake madness. Trying to delay the investigation, he talked about crimes that he did not actually commit. He demanded to be paid 50 rubles for revealing the location of the remains of each victim, as well as interrupting court hearings in order to smoke. He recounted the smallest details of crimes committed by him with pleasure. To investigator Farid Zagidullin, he presented an autographed photo with the inscription, "In memory of the first meeting with the cannibal."

On April 18, 1986, Aleksey Sukletin was sentenced to execution by shooting. While awaiting execution, the maniac carved women's shoes from bread and presented them to Zagidullin. On July 29, 1987, the sentence was carried out.

For Madina Shakirova, the prosecution also requested the death penalty. However, the court took into account mitigating circumstances: the defendant's repentance of the crimes committed, as well as the fact that she participated in criminal activity under the threat of murder by Sukletin. She was eventually sentenced to 15 years imprisonment. Anatoly Nikitin was also sentenced to 15 years for the murder of Lidiya Fyodorova, and Rinat Volkov was sentenced to 7 years for extortion. While Shakirova was serving her sentence, inmates shunned her, dubbing her "Dina-Meat Grinder". Initially, she was kept in a colony in Kozlovka, Chuvash Republic, where other prisoners attacked her, after which she was transferred to a colony in the Plesetsky District, Arkhangelsk Oblast. In 2001, both Shakirova and Nikitin were released from prison. The media erroneously reported that she had died in 2005, but those reports were refuted in 2008, when she gave an interview to the TV program "City". The fate of Nikitin and Volkov after release is unknown.

~ In the media ~

The Sukletin case was repeatedly reflected in mass culture in post-Soviet Russia. In particular, books and chapters from books were devoted to him:

"The End of the Bloody Devil" by A. K. Bataev, employee of the Prosecutor's Office in Tatarstan (1993)
"Serial Killers. Maniacs and their victims." by Nikolai Modestov (chapter: "Shashlik from the Beloved", 1999)
"Kazan Bandits 2" by Maxim Belyaev (deputy chairman of the Supreme Court of the Republic of Tatarstan) and Andrey Sheptytsky (senior assistant to the head of the Investigative Committee of Russia in the Republic of Tatarstan) [chapter: "Volga Alligator", 2013]
Aleksey Sukletin became the prototype of the hero of the third series of the Russian TV series The Method, released in 2015.
Literature
Hans Askenasy. Cannibalism: From Sacrifice to Survival. — Prometheus Books, 1994. — P. 208. — 292 p. — ISBN 9780879759063.

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Мадина Шакирова
Алексей Суклетин Мадина Шакирова

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For more cases see: Cannibal Murderesses

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http://unknownmisandry.blogspot.com/2012/07/serial-killer-couples.html

Links to more Serial Killer Couples

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“The Mischar Triple Black Widow” – Serbia, 1896

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FULL TEXT (translated from German): In Mischar, Serbia, a woman had her third husband killed by two of her lovers and thrown into a well. The murdered child's daughter overheard a conversation between the murderers and the mother, from which they were all arrested. It has now been found that the former two spouses of this woman were also murdered at her instigation.

[“Habitual spouse murderer.” (“Gewohnheitsmäßige Gattenmörderin.”)  Reichspost (Vienna, Austria), 5. September 1896. P. 11]

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FULL TEXT: In Mischar (Serbien) ließ eine Frau ihren dritten Mann durch zwei ihrer Liebhaber erschlagen und in einen Brunnen werfen. Die Tochter des Ermordeten belauschte ein Gespräch der Mörder mit der Mutter, woraus diese Alle verhaftet wurden. Es wurde nun festgestellt, daß auch die früheren zwei Gatten dieses Weibes auf dessen Anstiften ermordet wurden.

[“Gewohnheitsmäßige Gattenmörderin.” Reichspost (Vienna, Austria), 5. September 1896. P. 11]

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Murder by proxy

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Pamela Moss, Serial Killer – Georgia, 2012

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FULL TEXT:  On a summer day a decade and a half ago [in 1996], in the hours before Macon police launched a manhunt for her, then-murder-suspect Pamela Carrie Frye slipped out of town.

She turned up that night in a metro Atlanta hospital. She’d cut her wrists, but only superficially, and swallowed an overdose of pills.

A year later, in the fall of 1997, Frye was convicted of involuntary manslaughter and sent to Pulaski State Prison for the poisoning death of her 64-year-old mother. Her mother’s remains, exhumed from Riverside Cemetery after she died in February 1996, showed signs that she had succumbed to an overdose of antidepressants.

In 2005, Frye got out of prison. Over the next six-plus years, she married a man 17 years her senior, took her husband’s last name and, according to Internet postings, oversaw a pair of nonprofits. Her husband died last October [2011].

Now 54, she was still living at the house they rented in River North, a gated, golf-course community near the Ocmulgee River in southern Jones County.

Then last week, a 67-year-old McDonough businessman went missing.

He was last seen at a McDonald’s in north Bibb County. Authorities say the man, Doug Coker, had financial dealings with Pamela Moss, as Frye is now known.

Late Sunday night, shortly before midnight, a pair of Bibb sheriff’s investigators went to Moss’ house on Old Ridge Road to talk to her about Coker’s disappearance. Authorities say she’d been dodging them for days. So the Bibb deputies, thinking they’d find her at home at that hour, paid a surprise visit.
But what they found surprised them.

They smelled what seemed to be a dead body when they stepped out of their car. They soon found what authorities now believe to be Coker’s body. It was stashed beneath some sort of cover, under her back porch.

“It was obvious,” Jones sheriff’s Capt. Earl Humphries later said, that Coker had been killed.
Moss was nowhere to be found.

Humphries said investigators searched her house and noticed signs inside that Coker had been slain.
“There had been attempts to cover up the crime scene,” Humphries said, adding there was “fresh paint” in spots.

During the day Monday, Moss’ Macon attorney, Franklin J. Hogue, who also represented her in 1997, learned there was a warrant for her arrest in connection with Coker’s slaying.

Hogue spoke to Moss by phone and told her to turn herself in. But she didn’t.

As Monday wore on, Hogue said, “I couldn’t get ahold of her.”

Monday, investigators got word from deputies in Jesup, in southeast Georgia, that Moss was in the hospital.

had tried to kill herself, Hogue said, apparently in a coma caused by overdosing on “some sort of pill.”

Moss has a sister in Jesup, investigators said. Authorities in Jones County had asked police there to be on the lookout for Moss.

Tuesday evening, she was still in a Jesup hospital being guarded by deputies posted there, Humphries said. “Her condition is improving.”

Humphries, asked if anything stood out about the case so far, said it was that Moss “never covered her tracks up that well” when she allegedly left her house with a dead body in plain view under the back porch.

Moss’ husband, Urban Eugene Moss, died of an apparent heart attack while he was showering last October, officials said. The 71-year-old, who worked in construction management, was cremated.
Humphries stopped short of calling Pamela Moss a suspect in her husband’s death, but he did say “her recent behavior has us concerned, and we’re looking at all of her behavior since early on. ... We’re going to be looking into everything she’s done.”

[Joe Kovac Jr., “River North murder suspect in hospital after taking pills,” The Telegraph, Mar. 20, 2012, Updated Mar. 22, 2012]

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On Aug. 28, 2013 Moss was sentenced to life in prison without parole.

Jones County District Attorney Fred Bright stated:

“This case is saturated with evidence that she knew exactly what she was doing, just like that living room was saturated with Mr. Coker’s blood,” Jones County District Attorney Fred Bright said.

“Pam Moss had a goal. She flim-flammed this man out of money, she didn’t want to pay him back, she lured him to her home to kill him,” he said. “Everything she did was to hide her misdeed after she did it.”

[Source: “Pamela Moss Sentenced to Life Without Parole for Jones County Murder,” 41NBC, Aug. 29, 2013]

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CHRONOLOGY
1951 ca – Pamela Frye, born.
Feb. 16, 1996 – Barbara Sherman Frye (64), mother, dies.
Dec. 27, 1997 – Pamela Moss sentenced to 10 years for murder of mother.
Jul. 27, 2005 – Pamela Moss released from prison.
Oct. 2011 – Urban Eugene Moss (71), husband, dies; “heart attack”; later, after arrest for Coker murder, investigated as possible murder.
Mar. 13, 2012 – William Douglas Coker (67), dies.
Mar. 18, 2012 – Coker found dead under Pamala’s back porch
Mar. 20, 2012 – Arrested (55) for Coker murder.
Aug. 28, 2013 – Sentenced to life without parole.

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Auguste Milkoweit, Serial Killer, Executed – Russia, 1910

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FULL TEXT (Translated from German): Before the jury in Insterburg [Chernyakhovsk, Kaliningrad Oblast, Russia], the trial of the maid Auguste Milkoweit for poisoning was brought to an end.

The accused was accused of poisoning her mistress, the land-owner Schwarz, as well as the owner's daughter Anna Czapon with arsenic, and previously attempted to poison the Schwarz couple and Frau Schwarz's sister, but this had no effect.

Finally, the charges was incitement to set fire.

The accused of love affair allegedly committed all of these offenses because, as she believed, her victims opposed a marriage relationship between herself and Ms. Schwarz's son.

According to the jury's verdict, the court sentenced the 24-year-old to death twice and 15 to felony for two completed and three attempted poisonings, and for attempting to incite the crime of arson.

[“Sentenced to death twice.” (Zweimal zum Tode verurteilt.), Schlesisches Tagblatt (Teschen (Teschen), Silesia), 15. Novembre 1910, p. 3]

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Auguste Milkoweit was executed on Jan. 28, 1911. [“Der Greuel des Todestraffe.” Arbeiterwille, Graz, Austria), 26. Februar 1911, p. 2]

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FULL TEXT: Vor dem Schwurgerichte in Insterburg [Chernyakhovsk] wurde der Prozeß gegen das Dienstmädchen Auguste Milkoweit wegen Giftmordes zu Endegeführt.

Die Angeklagte war beschuldigt, ihre Herrin, die Besitzersftau Schwarz, sowie die Besitzerstochter Anna Czapon mit Arsenik vergiftet und vorher an dem Ehepaar Schwarz und der Schwesterder Frau Schwarz einen Giftmord versuch unternommen zuhaben, der aber wirkungslos blieb.

Schließlich lautete die Anklage noch auf Anstiftung zur Brandlegung.

Alle diese Vergehen soll die Angeklagte aus Liebesleidenschast begangen haben, da, wie sie glaubte, ihre Opfer sich einer ehelichen Verbindung zwischen ihr und dem Sohne der Frau Schwarz widersetzten.

Nach dem Wahrspruche der Geschwornen verurteilte der Gerichtshof die 24jährige Angeklagte wegen zwei vollendeter und drei versuchter Giftmorde sowie wegen versuchter Verleitung zum Verbrechen der Brandstiftung zweimal zum Tode sowie zu fünfzehn ihren  Zuchthaus.

[“Zweimal zum Tode verurteilt.” Schlesisches Tagblatt (Teschen (Teschen), Silesia), 15. Novembre 1910, p. 3]

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Two Pap Women, Serial Killers – Hungary, 1933

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FULL TEXT (translated from German): Budapest, Nov. 4. – As reported from Debrecen, in the municipalities of Csökmö and Komacs, the years 1924, 1925 and 1926 uncovered arsenic poisoning murders. It is the family of farmer Stefan Pap. Both Pap, his wife and son and a relative of the family named Ludwig Kiss have died of arsenic poisoning, as the gendarmerie's investigation has shown. The poisonings were committed by two women in the family. It is suspected that further poisonings have been committed. The exhumation of the bodies has been ordered.

[“Poison Murders.” (“Giftmorde.”) Oedenburger Zeitung (Oedenburg (Sopron), Hungary, 5. November 1933, p. 1]

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FULL TEXT: Budapest, 4. Nov. Wie aus Debrecen gemeldet wird, wurden-in denGemeinden Csökmö und Komacs auf die Jahre1924, 1925 und 1926 zurück reichende Arsenikgiftmorde aufgedeckt. Es handelt sich um die Familie des Landwirtes Stefan Pap. Sowohl Pap wie auch seine Frauund sein Sohn und ein Verwandter der Familie namens Ludwig Kiss sind, wie die Ermittlungen der Gendarmerie ergeben haben, an Arsenikvergiftung gestorben. Die Giftmorde wurden von zwei Frauen der Familie verübt. Esliegtder Verdacht vor, daß auch weitere Giftmorde verübt wurden. Die Exhumierung der Leichen ist angeordnet worden.

[“Giftmorde.” Oedenburger Zeitung (Oedenburg (Sopron), Hungary, 5. November 1933, p. 1]

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Marie Nowak, Serial Killer – Moravia, 1904

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FULL TEXT: The district court Steinitz in Moravia was delivered on Friday with the horrible Marie Nowak from Charlottenfeld, under the terrible suspicion of having dispatched her three husbands from the world. This reasoning is based on the following circumstances: Her first husband Jakob Spaniel was found hanged on December 9, 1897 in his house, her second husband Daniek died suddenly on February 10, 1901, and her third husband Nowak wason the 3rd of this month found hanged in his stable.

The latter had told the head of the community, F. Praschek, that if he died, his body should be autopsied, since he feared that his wife would poison him. And the custodian Skumal states that Marie Nowak had given her permission to pour something into the brandy given to her second husband because of his alcoholism. The gendarmerie found a pot with a phosphor solution at Nowak’s place, who was known to have been at odds with all three men.

[“The Murderess of Three Husbands,” (“Die Mörderin ihrer drei Männer.”) Währisch-Schlesische Prelle (Freiwaldau, (Jeseník Czech Olomouc Region ), 17. Februar 1904, p. 4]

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FULL TEXT: Dem Bezirksgerichte Steinitz in Mähren wurde am Freitag die Häuslerin Marie Nowak aus Charlottenfeld  unter dem furchtbaren Berdachte in geliefert, ihre drei Männer gewaltsam aus der Welt geschafft  zuhaben. Dieser Berdacht gründet sich auffolgende Umstände: Ihrerster Gatte Jakob Spaniel wurde am 9. Dezember 1897 in seinem Vorhause erhenkt auf gefunden, ihr zweiter Gatte Daniek starb plötzlich am 10. Februar 1901 unter  Vergistiingserscheinungen, und ihr dritter Ehemann Nowak wurde am 3.d. in seinem Stalle erhenkt aufgefunden.

Dieser letztere hatte dem Gemeindevorsteher F. Praschek erklärt, wenn er sterbe, möge seine Leiche obduziert werden, den er fürchte, seine Gattin wolle ihn vergiften. Und die Häuslerin Skumal gibt an, Marie Nowak habe ihr zugestanden, sie habe ihrem zweiten Gatten wegen seiner Trunksucht etwas in den Brannt wein geschüttet. Die Gendarmerie fand bei der Nowak, die mit allen drei Männern in Unfrieden gelebt  hatte, einen Topf mit einer Phosphorlösung.

[“Die Mörderin ihrer drei Männer.” Währisch-Schlesische Prelle (Freiwaldau, (Jeseník Czech Olomouc Region), 17. Februar 1904, p. 4]

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For links to other cases of woman who murdered 2 or more husbands (or paramours), see Black Widow Serial Killers.

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Johanna Schadenhofer, Double Black Widow – Austria, 1931

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FULL TEXT (translated from German): From Ybbs on the Danube it is reported: The farmer Johann Schadenhofer in Mitterburg near Ybbs married the widowed business owner Johanna Kohlhuber in 1929. Marriage became more and more unhappy over time due to property law differences. The man had brought a fortune of 6,000 Shillings into the marriage, for which the woman had promised to have him registered as a co-owner of the economic activity belonging to her. After the marriage, she did not keep this promise, but assured him a sum of 4500 Shillings and free meals. After the woman had married off her daughter from her first marriage, the man stood as a superfluous mouth who was just in the way. In the past few weeks, Johann Schadenhofer has been repeatedly attacked by serious symptoms after enjoying the coffee that his wife gave him. He finally arranged for a chemical test to be carried out on such a portion of coffee, and it was found that the coffee contained thalin [naphthalin] as a poison used to destroy mice and rats. After the whole situation no other staff the wife opportunity u. Interested in mixing the poison into the coffee, the police arrested Johanna Schadenhofer an Ybbs and, despite her denial, delivered one to the Ybbs district court.

[“Verdacht des versucten Gattenmordes,” Ybbstal Zeitung (St. Polten, Austria), 8. August 1931, p. 16]

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FULL TEXT (translated from German): St. Pölten, April 14th. - A strange murder trial is bothering the jury today. The 59-year-old business owner Johanna Schadenhofer is accused. She was married to three men. Two died from it. One by poison, the other by suicide because he could no longer stand it by her side, and the third had only a lucky coincidence to thank him for escaping the poisoner.

The indictment describes the following facts: On February 7, 1910, Johanna Schruf, as the girl was called, married the then 45-year-old widower Josef Klammer, who owned an inn. Reading the two spouses together was not the best. On August 3, 1915, Joef Klammer horribly committed suicide by cutting his neck with a knife.

The widow didn't even wait for the funeral service. She soon consoled herself. Ten months after the death of the staple, in May 1916, she married the farmer Franz Kohlhuber, who had a registration in Mitterburg. He was also a widower and had some children from his first marriage. Johanna Kohlhuber, as the suspect was now called, was also written on the house, but remained the owner of the property that she inherited after her first husband until she sold it for 8,000 K. in 1917, although she did a kept large five yoke forest segment to herself.

Franz Kohlhuber was no better off with his second wife than the accused's first husband. He repeatedly said that his wife was an intolerable and contentious person and that the second marriage would have regretted him already. Franz Kohlhuber was repeatedly beaten by his wife.

Towards the end of 1927, Franz Kohlhuber began to suffer and nobody knew the cause of his illness, only he was clear. Not only once, he said repeatedly that he was afraid of the food his wife was preparing for him because he suspected it was poisoned. The following incident shows how right Franz Kohlhuber was with his suspicions:

The doctor treating him prescribed medicine, of which he should take ten drops three times a day. Johanna Kohlhuber, however, wanted to force her husband to eat a tablespoon every two hours, with the intention that the poison contained in the medication would then have a fine effect. Franz Kohlhuber then refused to accept any medicine at all. On April 5, 1928, he succumbed to the "care" of his wife.

~ Poisoned with Barium. ~

Why Franz Kohlhuber was kept alive by his relatives during his lifetime and also after his death, and why Franz Kohlhuber died fourteen days after his son was no longer allowed to look after him, did not become clear until 1931, when the suspicions expressed by Fran Kohlhuber faded, he was poisoned, actuated. The exhumation of the body, which took place on September 5, 1931, had the surprising result that a large amount of barium was found in it, so that it could not be doubted that Franz Kohlhusber was the cause of a barium poisoning. The universal heir to Kohlhuber was the widow again and the children from his first marriage had to be together with 1500 Schillings to be satisfied.

In Mardi Gras in 1929, ten months after the death of her second husband, Johanna Kohlhuber married Johann Schadenhofer. The latter had an inn, which he gave to a daughter after the death of his first wife, who also married her father at the Carnival in 1929. Schadenhofer brought 8,000 Schillings cash into the marriage, a calf, cereals and hay, and gave this to his wife against the promise that half of the letters would be written to him at home. Johann Schadenhofer put 1,000 Schillings of the proceeds from the heap of a meadow into his wife's business.

As long as Schadenhofer had money, living with his wife was just about possible. It became different when he ran out of money and pushed for the cover letter. A lawyer between the two spouses was one of the same and granted him a kind of security.

~ Rat Poison in the Coffee. ~

Between Christmas and New Year in 1931, Schadenhofer presented her husband's living room for supper, which he had to eat alone because his wife had told him that the housewives had eaten earlier. Immediately after enjoying the dumplings he felt sick. It is clear that these dumplings were poisoned. At Easter 1931 Schadenhofer left the house and went to work outside and only returned every Saturday. As often as he came home, his wife presented him with a coffee that smelled bad. He poured the coffee away several times. But once he filled it into a bottle that he had cleaned before and took it to the gendarmerie.

Chemical analysis of the beverage revealed that it had added thallium sulfate, a common rat killer. Since only Johanna Schadenhofer made the coffee for her husband, it was clear that it was only she who had mixed the poison into the coffee. She was therefore arrested and brought to the St. Pölten district court. In the course of the investigation, the death of the second husband was also considered. The suspect denies having eliminated her second husband and trying to kill her third husband.

(Continued in the morning paper.)

[“Die männermordende Bäuerin von Mitterburg. Eine Giftmischerin vor dem Geschwornen.” Neue Frei Presse. Morgenblatt (Vienna, Austria), 14. April 1932. P. 3]

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FULL TEXT (translated from German): St. Pölten, 16. April. - The trial against the poisoner Johanna Schadenhofer ended this morning in the morning.

The question of guilt for murder was answered with 7 yes and 5 no, the second question for attempted murder was answered with 1 yes and 11 no for poisoned liver dumplings, with 9 yes and 3 no for poisoned coffee. The sentence was ten years in prison.

When the verdict was pronounced, the accused suffered a nervous breakdown.

[“The poisoner from Mitterburg. Sentenced to ten years in prison.” Illustrated Kronen Zeitung (Vienna, Austria), April 17, 1932, p. 26]

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CHRONOLOGY
Feb. 7, 1910 – Johanna marries Josef Klammer (45).
Aug. 3, 1915 – Klammer suicide, slit throat with knife.
May 1916 – Johanna marries Franz Kohlhuber, dies; poisoned.
1917 – Johnanna sells inherited Kohlhuber property.
1927 – Kohlhuber illness begins.
Mar. 5, 1928 – Kohlhuber dies.
1929 – Johanna marries Johann Schadenhofer,Mardi Gras.
1931 – Schadenhofer poisoned, survived.
Sep. 5, 1931 – Exhumation and examination of Kohlhuber; large quantity of Barium found.

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FULL TEXT: Aus Ybbs a.d. Donau wird berichtet: Der Landwirt Johann Schadenhofer in Mitterburg bei Ybbs hat im Jahre1929 die verwitwete Wirtschaftsbesitzerin Johanna Kohlhuber geheiratet. Die Ehe gestaltete sich im Laufe der Zeit wegen vermögensrechtlicher Differenzen immer unglücklicher. Der Mann hatte ein Vermögen von 6000 S in die Ehe gebracht, wofür ihm die Frau versprochen hatte, ihn als Miteigentümer der ihr gehörigen Wirtschaftgrung bücherlich eintragen zu lassen. Nach der Ehe schließung hielt sie dieses Versprechen nicht ein, sondern sicherte ihm eine Summe von 4500 S und freie Verpflegung  zu. Nach dem die Frau ihreTochter aus erster Ehe ausgeheiratet hatte, stand ihr der Mann als überflüssiger Mitesser über haupt nur mehr im Wege.

In den letzten Wochen wurde Johann Schadenhofer wiederholt nach dem Genusse von Kaffee, den ihm die Gattinvor setzte, von schweren Ueblichkeiten befallen. Er veranlaßte schließlich die chemische Untersuchung  einer solchen Kaffeeportion, wobei festgestellt wurde, daß der Kaffee Thalin – ein zur Vertilgung von Mäusen und Ratten verwendetes Gift – enthalte. Danach der ganzen Sachlage keine andere Personals die Gattin Gelegenheit u. Interesse hatte, das Gift in den Kaffee zu mischen, wurde Johanna Schadenhofer von der Gendarmerie in Ybbs verhaftet und trotz ihres Leugnens dem Bezirksgerichte Ybbs ein geliefert.

[“Verdacht des versucten Gattenmordes,” Ybbstal Zeitung (St. Polten, Austria), 8. August 1931, p. 16]

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FULL TEXT: St. Pölten, 14. April.  – Ein merkwürdiger Mordprozeß beschästigt heute die Geschwornen. Angeklagt ist die 59jährige Wirtschschaftbesefitzerin Johanna Schadenhofer. Sie war mist drei ännern verheiratet. Zwei sind durch sie gestorben. Der eine durch Gift, der andere durch Selbstmord, weil er es an ihrer Seite nicht  mehr aushalten konnte, und der dritte hat es nur einem glücklichen Zufall zu danken, daß erder Giftmischerin entkommen ist.

Die Anklage schildert folgenden Tatbestand: Am 7. Februar 1910 heiratete die Johanna Schruf, wie die Angeklagte als  Mädchen hieß, den damals 45jährigen Witwer Josef Klammer, der eine Wirtschaft besaß. Das Zusammenlesen der beiden Ehe-leute war nicht das beste. Am 3. August 1915 verübte Joef Klammer auf gräßliche Weise Selbstmord, indem er sich mit einem Messer den Hals durchschnitt.

Die Witwe wartete nicht einmal das Trauerfahr ab. Sie tröstete sich bald. Zehn Monate nach dem Tode des Klammer, im Mai 1916, heiratete sie den Landwirt Franz Kohlhuber, der ein Anmesen in Mitterburg besaß. Auch dieser war Witwer und hatte aus seiner ersten Ehe einige Kinder. Johanna Kohlhuber, wie die Beschuldigte nun hieß, wurde ebenfalls auf das Haus angeschrieben, blieb aber auch noch Besitzerin des Anwesens, das sie nach ihrem erstenMann geerbt hatte, bis sie es im Jahre 1917 um 8000 K. verkaufte, wobei sie jedoch einen fünf Joch großen Wald für sich behielt.

Franz Kohlhuber ging es an der Seite seiner zweiten Gattin nicht besser als dem ersten Ehemann der Beschuldigten. Wiederholt äußerte er sich, daß seine Frau eine unverträgliche und streitsüchtige Person sei und daß ihn die zweite Heirat  schon ost gereut hätte. Franz Kohlhuber bekam nämlch von seiner Frau wiederholt Schläge.

Gegen Ende des Jahres1927 begann Franz Kohlhuber zu kränkeln und niemand wußte die Ursache seiner Krankheit, nur er war sich im klaren. Nicht nur einmal, wiederholt sagte er, daß er sich dem Essen, das ihm seine Frau zubereite, fürchte, da er den Verdacht hege, es sei vergiftet. Wie recht Franz Kohlhuber mit seinem Verdacht hatte, zeigt folgender Vorfall:

Der behandelnde Arzt verschrieb ihm eine Medizin, von der er dreimal taglich zehn Tropfen nehmen sollte. Johanna Kohlhuber wollte aber ihrem Mann alle zwei Stunden einen Eßlöfel voll aufnötigen, in er Absicht,daß das in dem Medikament ent haltene Gift dann feine Wirkung tun werde. Darauf verweigerte aber Franz Kohlhuber überhaupt die Annahme jeder Medizin. Am 5. April1928 erlag er der, “Pflege” seiner Frau.

~ Mit Bariumn vergiftet. ~

Warum Franz Kohlhuber bei Lebzeiten und auch noch nach seinem Tode von seinen Verwandten abgespert wurde und warum Franz Kohlhuber  vierzehn Tage, nach dem sein Sohn ihn nicht mehr verpflegen durste, starb, wurde erst im Jahre 1931 offenbar, als fich der von Fran Kohlhuber geäußerte Verdacht, er werde vergiftet, betätigte. Die Exhumierung der Leiche, die am 5. September 1931 stattfand, hatte das überraschende Ergebnis, daß in ihr einegroße Menge Bariumefunden wurde, so daß nicht zweifelhaft sein bann, daß Franz Kohlhusber an einer Bariumvergiftung  zugugrunde gegangen ist. Die Universalerbin nach Kohlhuber war wieder die Witwe und die Kinder aus seiner ersten Ehe mußten sich zusammen mit 1500S. zufrieden geben.

Im Fasching 1929, also wieder zehn Monate nach dem Tode ihres zweiten Gatten, heiratete Johanna Kohlhuber den Johann Schadenhofer. Dieser hatte eine Wirtschaft besessen, die er nach dem Tod seiner ersten Fraus einer Tochter über geben hatte, die zugleich mit ihrem Vater im Fasching1929 Hochzeit hielt. Schadenhofer brachte in die Ehe 8000 S. Bargeld, eine Kalbin, Körnerfrucht und Heu mit und über gab dies seiner Frau gegen das Versprechen, daß er am Hause zur Hälfte angeschrieben werde. Johann Schadenhofer steckte über dies noch1000 S., den Erlös aus dem Verhauf einer Wiese, in die Wirtschaft seiner Frau.

Solange Schadenhofer Geld hatte, war das Auskommen mit seiner Frau gerade noch möglich Anders wurde es, als er kein Geld mehr besaß und auf die Anschreibung drängte. Es wurde zwar bei einem Rechtsanwalt zwischen den beiden Gatten einer gleich abgeschlossen und ihm eine Art Sicherstellung gewährt.

~ Rattengift im Kaffee. ~

Zwifchen Weihnachten und Neujahr des Jahres 1931 setzte die Schadenhofer ihrem MannLebernöbel  zum Nachtmahl vor, die er allein essen mußte, da seine Frau ihm gesagt hatte, die Haus leute hätten fchonfrirher gegessen. Gleich nach dern Genuß der Knödel wurde ihm übel. Es ist klar,daß diese Knödel vergiftet waren. Zu Ostern 1931 verließ Schadenhofer das Haus und ging auswärts der Arbeit nach und kehrte nur jeden Samstag heim. So oft er heimkam, setzte ihm seine Frau einen Kaffee vor, der einen üblen Geruch hatte. Mehrmals schüttete er den Kaffee weg.  Einmal aber füllte er ihn in eine Flasche, die er vor her gereinigt hatte und brachte sie zur Gendarmerie.

Eine chemische Untersuchung des Getränkes ergab, daß es mit Thalliumsulfat, einem gebräuchlichen Rattenvertilgungsmittel, versetzt war. Da nur die Johanna Schadenhofer ihrem Gatten den Kaffee bochte, war es klar dasß nur sie es war, die das Gift in den Kaffee gemischt hatte. Sie wurde daher verhaftet und dern Kreisgericht St. Pölten eingeliefert. Im Zuge der Untersuchung wurde auch der Tod des zweiten Gatten naher betrachtet. Die Besuldigte leugnet, ihren zweiten Mann beseitigt und ihrem dritten Mann nach dem Leben getrachtet zu haben.

(Fortsetzung im Morgenblatt.)

[“Die männermordende Bäuerin von Mitterburg. Eine Giftmischerin vor dem Geschwornen.” Neue Frei Presse. Morgenblatt (Vienna, Austria), 14. April 1932. P. 3]

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FULL TEXT: St. Pölten,16. April. – Der Prozeß gegen die Giftmischerin Johanna Schadenhofer ging heute in den Morgen stunden zu Ende.

Die Schuldfrage auf Mord wurde mit 7Ja und 5 Nein beantwortet, die zweite Frage auf Mord versuch wurde betreffs der vergifteten Leberknödel mit 1Ja und 11Nein, mit vergiftetem Kaffe mit 9 Ja und 3 Nein beantwortet. Das Urteil lautete auf zehn Jahre schweren Kerkers.

Bei der Urteilsverkündung erlitt die Angeklagte einen Nervenzusammenbruch.

[“Die Giftmischerin von Mitterburg. Zu zehn Jahren Kerkers verurteilt.” Illustrierte Kronen Zeitung (Vienna, Austria), 17. April 1932, p.  26]

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For links to other cases of woman who murdered 2 or more husbands (or paramours), see Black Widow Serial Killers.

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Sofronia Agatescu – Triple Black Widow – Romania, 1906

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FULL TEXT (translated from German): We are told from Temesvar: In the municipality of Kisoda [Chisoda], the wealthy Romanian widow Sofronia Agatescu was arrested by order of the Temesvar Court. She appears accused of poisoning her husband, who died three weeks ago.

Now voices are also being voiced which claim that she also eliminated her former two spouses with poison. As is well known, poisoning was common in the area around Temesvar years ago. A large gang of poisoners wreaked havoc and it is believed that the widow Agatescu was also connected to it.*

[“Three Poison Murders? A Woman Arrested as Poisoner.” (“Dreisacher Gattenmord? Eine Frau als Giftmischerin verhaftet.”) Neukeits Weld-Blatt (Vienna, Austria), 3. Juli 1906. P. 5]

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* The Chisoda cases of 1900-1901:



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FULL TEXT: Aus Temesvar wird uns berichtet: In der Gemeinde Kisoda wurde die reiche rumänische Witwe Sofronia Agatescu über Anordnung des Temesvarer Gerichtshofes in Haft genommen. Sie erscheint beschuldigt, ihren vor drei Wochen verstorbenen GattendurchGiftausdem Leben geschafft zu haben.

Jetzt werden auch Stimmen lant, welche behaupten, daß sie auch ihre früheren beiden Gatten durch Gift beseitigt habe. VorJahren waren bekanntlich die Vergiftungen im Umkreis vonTemesvar an der Tagesordnung. Eine große Bande von Giftmördern trieb ihr Unwesen und man nimmt an, daß auch die Witwe Agatescu damit in Verbindung stand.

[“Dreisacher Gattenmord? Eine Frau als Giftmischerin verhaftet.” Neukeits Weld-Blatt (Vienna, Austria), 3. Juli 1906. P. 5]


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For links to other cases of woman who murdered 2 or more husbands (or paramours), see Black Widow Serial Killers.

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“Barand Woman Quack,” Professional Poisoner / Serial Killer – Hungary, 1884

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FULL TEXT: On May 29, the Barand resident Mita Nadovanciev died suddenly. This was noticed by the notary Johann Zsivkovic, who had spoken to the deceased for a long time the day before, and upon his selection the body was dissected the following day.

The forensic doctors reported several diseases that may have caused his death, but excluded the possibility of poisoning.

However, the notary's suspicion was not dispelled by this statement by the physicians, and was even reinforced by the fact that Radovancsev's widow had in the meantime not gone far; So he went after the woman and he managed to get from her the confession that she poisoned her husband because she did not love him.

She got the poison from the local female quack who gave her the assurance that she had made countless happy widows without the authorities finding out about the poison.

The quack was also arrested; she was so sure of her cause that she only wanted to be paid after her victim was buried.

The original investigation was also extended to the village "clientele.”

[“A poisoner.” (“Eine Giftmischerin.”) Margurger Zeiting (Marburg (Maribor), Slovenia), 11. Juni 1884. p. 2]

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FULL TEXT: Am 29. Mai starb der Barander Insasse Mita Nadovanciev eine plötzlichenTodes. Dem Notar Johann Zsivkovic, der mit dem Verblichenen noch tags zuvor längere Zeit gesprochen, fiel dies auf und auf sein Ausuchen wurde die Leiche am folgendenTage sezirt.

Die Gerichlsärzte gaben mehrere Krankheiten an, die denTod her beigeführt haben mochten, schloffen aber die Möglichkeit einer Vergiftung aus.

FULL TEXT (translated from German): Sie erhielt das Gift von der Quackfalberin des Ortes, die ihr die Versicherung gab, daß sie schon zahllose glückliche Witwen gemacht, ohne daß die Behörden dem Gifte auf die Spur gekommen.

Auch die Quacksalberin wurde verhaftet; sie war ihrer Sache so sicher, daß sie erst nach dein Begräbnisse ihres Opfers bezahlt sein wollte.

Die Urrtersuchung wurde auch auf die “Klientel" der Dorfhere ausgedehut.

[“Eine Giftmischerin.” Margurger Zeiting (Marburg (Maribor), Slovenia), 11. Juni 1884. p. 2]

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http://unknownmisandry.blogspot.com/2017/04/husband-killing-syndicates.html

For more than two dozen similar cases, dating from 1658 to 2011, see the summary list with links see: The Husband-Killing Syndicates

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Veronika Franz, Serial Killer – France, 1854

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NOTE: The following translation is a bit garbled, but the concluding sentence is clear: Veronlika Frantz was a serial killer of 3 victims and was executed.

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FULL TEXT (Attempted translation from German): In Barr (near Stuttgart) on August 4, the 29-year-old poisoner Veronika Frantz was executed at Meißengott.

She married her employer Georg Guntz, in an “emergency,” in a loveless union.

On 1 December 1852, her mother-in-law, she murdered the 70-year-old widow Ruhlmann (who had asked for her removal from the house); then on July 6, 1853, her daughter, the 45-year-old Mrs. Guntz; and finally, when the 44-year-old Guntz tried to marry again after six weeks a day at the Widowhood, who poisoned herself on 27 January 1854.

Faced with the Assisses, this triple killer was on June 17 sentenced to death.

[Untitled, Neuigkeitten (Brunn, Austria), 10. August 1854. p. 3]

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FULL TEXT: In Barr (bei Stuttgart) wurde am 4.d; die 29jährige Giftmischerin Veronika Frantz von Meißengott hingerichtet.

Um eine Bäuerin, d. h. die Frau ihres Dienstherrn, des Ackermanns Georg Guntz zu Nothalten zu werden, hatte sie, ohne daß dieser ihr irgend welche Zuneigung  bezeugt, zuerst dessen Schwiegermutter, die 70jährige Witwe Ruhlmann (welche ihre Entsernung aus dem Hause verlangte) am 1. December 1852, sodann deren Tochter, die 45jährige Frau Guntz am 6. Juli 1853, undendlich, als der 44jährige Guntz nach sechswochentlich em  Wittwerstand  ich ander weitig wieder verheirathen wollte, die en selbstam 27. Ja. 1854 vergiftet.

Vor die Assissen gestellt, wurde diese dreifache Mörderin am 17. Juni d. J. zum Tode verurtheilt.

[Neuigkeitten (Brunn, Austria), 10. August 1854. p. 3]

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Hester Rebecca Nepping, Serial Killer – Netherlands, 1812

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Wikipedia: Hester Rebecca Nepping (baptized Amsterdam October 9, 1774 - June 15, 1812) was a Dutch poisoner who was sentenced to guillotine in 1812.

Nepping was born in 1774 as the only child of the master painter Johannes Nepping and Cornelia Schram. At the age of nineteen she married the Amsterdam tobacco retailer Jan Brummelkamp. Due to debts, they left the capital in 1800 for Loenen, later Hilversum, where Brummelkamp again opened a tobacco shop. After that business also failed, they moved to Hall in 1805, where they both worked in a paper mill.

In 1808 Nepping acquired a considerable inheritance, including a house in Wijk bij Duurstede and five thousand guilders in cash. The couple moved to that town and Brummelkamp bought a paper dyeing shop there. This company was also made bottles. Nepping meanwhile had an extra-marital affair with the Wijkse city ​​messenger Gerrit Verkerk. The inheritance ran out and the couple took boarders: the elderly couple Beerenburg-Vinjole with a sister-in-law. They had to be cared for for life, for three thousand guilders at once, with an additional amount after their death.

Mrs. Beerenburg turned out not to be an easy boarder. Nepping, together with her maid Adriana van Rijswijk, planned the murder of the woman. Beerenburg died on August 31, 1811. On November 9, Nepping's old father who lived with her also died, and two days later Jan Brummelkamp. The deaths aroused suspicion, the bodies were exhumed, and the section indicated arsenic poisoning. Nepping and Van Rijswijk were arrested, as was the lover Verkerk who had provided the arsenic.

In January 1812, they were detained in Amsterdam, where the trial was to take place. All three suspects made (partial) confessions. The Assize Court in Amsterdam considered two of the murders proven and sentenced the three to the death penalty. From 1810 onwards, because of the annexation of the Netherlands to the First French Empire, French criminal law was applied and an appeal had to be made to the Court of Cassation in Paris. This court confirmed the verdict of the Amsterdam Court and on June 15, 1812, the verdict was executed with the aid of a guillotine on the Nieuwmarkt in Amsterdam. It was the only time that a death sentence was executed in Amsterdam in this way.

~ Watercolor illustration of the execution ~

“The execution of Hester Rebecca Nepping and her accomplices Adriana van Rijswijk and Gerrit Verkerk in 1812 in front of the Waag on the Nieuwmarkt in Amsterdam,” [Het guiliotine regt voor de eerste maal binnen Amsterdam uitgeoefend aan Hester Rebekka Nepping, Adriane van Rijswijk], pen and watercolor, by Gerrit Lamberts (1876-1850). (Nationaal Gevangenismuseum Bron [056707282], NCRD; 27,9 × 38,7 cm)

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CHRONOLOGY
Oct. 9, 1774 – Hester Rebecca Nepping born.
Aug. 31, 1811 – Beerenburg, boarder, dies.
Nov. 9, 1811 – Nepping's old father dies.
Nov. 11, 1811 – Jan Brummelkamp, boarder, dies.
Jun. 15, 1812 – Hester Rebecca Nepping & accomplices, Adriana van Rijswijk and Gerrit Verkerk, executed.

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Sources, notes and / or references
Nepping, Hester Rebecca (2015), in: Digital Women's Lexicon of the Netherlands. Consulted online, February 24, 2015.
Scratching, A. (2012); Heads roll on the Nieuwmarkt , www.isistory.nl.
Meddens-van Borselen, A. "The life of the poisoner Hester Rebbecca Nepping (1774-1812)" in: Oud-Utrecht, jg. 71 (1998), No. 5, p. 124-129
Baptism book Amstelkerk and Death certificate
In her last weeks, Nepping was assigned the pastor Willem Broes as a caretaker. He wrote in 1812 the detailed booklet about the life, character and last religious afflictions of the infamous poisoner Hester Rebekka Nepping, sentenced to death with her accomplices, for the murder of her resident, and of her husband, from which, inter alia, the main well.
Execution on the Nieuwmarkt , Ons Amsterdam , June 2012.

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http://unknownmisandry.blogspot.com/2013/03/female-serial-killers-executed.html

More cases: Female Serial Killers Executed

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Rosalia Peter, Serial Killer Poison Seller – Hungary, 1905

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FULL TEXT: The "FüggetIen Magyarorszag" [newspaper]reports that in Bacs-Petrovoszell [Hungary] poison murders were discovered in a number that reminded them of the famous southern Hungarian poisoning trial.

The farmer Michael Markus died eight days ago.

People failed to believe that his wife, only three days after beginning to share household with her beloved.

As a result of the suspicion, she was questioned and she confessed that she acquired the poison from a farmer's wife, Rosalia Peter, and had eliminated him.

The arrest of Peter had the sensational result that six poisonings of husbands by her had been proven.

But she had also murdered her own 18-year-old mentally weak daughter.

Among other things, she is said to be to blame for the murder of the landowner in Csongrad, whose cook had been arrested on weekends after being reported to be under suspicion of poisoning.

[“Mass poisoning in southern Hungary.” Salzburg Chronicle (Salzburg, Austria), April 20, 1905, p. 4]

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FULL TEXT: Der “Független Magyarorszag" meldet, daß in Bacs-Petrovoszell Giftmorde in einer Zahl entdeckt wurden, daß sie an den berühmten südungarischen Giftmord prozeß erinnerten. Vor acht Tagen starb der Bauer Michael Markus.

Den Leuten fiel aus, daß seine Frau schon nach drei Tagen mit ihrem Geliebten gemein samen Haushalt, begann.

Infolge des Verdachtes erfolgte, ihre Einvernahme und sie gestand, von einer Bauernfrau Rosalia Peter. Gift für ihren Manner hallen und ihn beseitigt zu haben.

Die Verhaftung der Peter hatte das sensasionelle Ergebnis, daß ihr schon bis Her sechs Giftmorde an Ehemännern nach, gewiesen werden konnten.

Aber auch ihre eigene 18-jährige geistesschwache Tochter hatte sie ermordet.

Unter anderem soll sie, die Mitschuldige an der Ermordung  jenes Gutsbesitzers in Csongrad sein, dessen Köchin nach einer offistellen Meldung vorige Woche unter dem Verdachtedes Giftmordes verhaftet worden war.

[“Massenvergiftnngen in Südungarn.” Salzburger Chronik (Salzburg, Austria), 20. April 1905, p. 4]

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FULL TEXT: The "Független Magyarorszag" [newspaper]reports that in Bacs-Petrovoszell [Hungary] poison murders were discovered in a number that reminded them of the famous southern Hungarian poisoning trial.

The farmer Michael Markus died eight days ago.

People failed to believe that his wife, only three days after beginning to share household with her beloved.

As a result of the suspicion, she was questioned and she confessed that she acquired the poison from a farmer's wife, Rosalia Peter, and had eliminated him.

The arrest of Peter had the sensational result that six poisonings of husbands by her had been proven.

But she had also murdered her own 18-year-old mentally weak daughter.

Among other things, she is said to be to blame for the murder of the landowner in Csongrad, whose cook had been arrested on weekends after being reported to be under suspicion of poisoning.

[“Mass poisoning in southern Hungary.” (“Massenvergiftungen in Südungarn”) Salzburg Chronicle (Salzburg, Austria), April 20, 1905, p. 4]

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FULL TEXT: Der “FüggetIen Magyarorszag" meldet, daß in Bacs-Petrovoszell Giftmorde in einer Zahl entdeckt wurden, daß sie an den berühmten südungarischen Giftmord prozeß erinnerten. Vor acht Tagen starb der Bauer Michael Markus.

Den Leuten fiel aus, daß seine Frau schon nach drei Tagen mit ihrem Geliebten gemein samen Haushalt, begann.

Infolge des Verdachtes erfolgte, ihre Einvernahme und sie gestand, von einer Bauernfrau Rosalia Peter. Gift für ihren Manner hallen und ihn beseitigt zu haben.

Die Verhaftung der Peter hatte das sensasionelle Ergebnis, daß ihr schon bis Her sechs Giftmorde an Ehemännern nach, gewiesen werden konnten.

Aber auch ihre eigene 18-jährige geistesschwache Tochter hatte sie ermordet.

Unter anderem soll sie, die Mitschuldige an der Ermordung  jenes Gutsbesitzers in Csongrad sein, dessen Köchin nach einer offistellen Meldung vorige Woche unter dem Verdachtedes Giftmordes verhaftet worden war.

[“Massenvergiftungen in Südungarn.” Salzburger Chronik (Salzburg, Austria), 20. April 1905, p. 4]

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***
http://unknownmisandry.blogspot.com/2017/04/husband-killing-syndicates.html

For more than two dozen similar cases, dating from 1658 to 2011, see the summary list with links see: The Husband-Killing Syndicates

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