Michel Fourniret

Michel Fourniret
Born (1942-04-04) 4 April 1942
Sedan, France
Other names The Ogre of Ardennes
The Beast of Ardennes
Criminal penalty Life imprisonment[1]
Killings
Victims 7-9+
Span of killings
1987–2001 (2003?)
Country France, Belgium
Date apprehended
26 June 2003

Michel Fourniret (born 4 April 1942) is a convicted French serial killer who confessed in June and July 2004 to kidnapping, raping and murdering nine girls in a span of 14 years from the 1980s to the 2000s. He was also accused of 10 additional murders, nine in France and one in Belgium, and was found guilty of seven of these charges. The trials started on 27 March 2008,[2] and ended on 28 May. He is sometimes referred to as the "Ogre/Beast of the Ardennes".[3]

Fourniret was arrested after a failed attempt to kidnap a Belgian girl in June 2003. His wife, Monique Olivier, exposed him after hearing the news of another child murderer's wife (Michelle Martin, wife of Marc Dutroux) being convicted. Fourniret was charged with the abduction of minors and sexual misconduct, and has been in detention since June 2003 for the attempted kidnapping of a 14-year-old girl in 2000. Olivier was charged with one murder and for helping him with a further six.[4]

Fourniret buried at least two of his victims at his Sautou chateau near Donchery in the French Ardennes in the late 1980s. On 3 July 2004, a team of French and Belgian police recovered the bodies of two of Fourniret's victims near the chateau. Fourniret was sentenced to life in prison; Olivier was sentenced to life with no possibility of parole for 28 years.[1]

Confessed murders

Fourniret's wife has also said that Fourniret killed a 16-year-old girl who had worked as an au pair at their house. Fourniret allegedly killed her in 1993, but this has not been confirmed. The identity of this alleged victim is not known.

Other crimes

Fourniret himself says he did not commit any crimes between 1990 and 2000, however police in at least five countries (France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Germany and Denmark) have taken a fresh look at old rapes, disappearances and murders during that time period. In Denmark, police noticed that a police sketch of a rape suspect looked a lot like Fourniret, but a DNA test showed no similarities. In the Netherlands, investigators in the disappearances of Tanja Groen and Nicky Verstappen have investigated Fourniret.

In 2006 rumors circulated that Fourniret might have been the real murderer of eight-year-old Marie-Dolorès Rambla. Christian Ranucci had been convicted of the crime, and beheaded on 28 July 1976. The case has become controversial since Gilles Perrault, two years after Ranucci's beheading, wrote a novel questioning his guilt.

New evidence showed that Fourniret was taking a holiday in Marseille at the same time and place Rambla was murdered. On 3 June 1974, Rambla and her brother Jean met a man in a car who claimed he was searching for his dog. Marie-Dolorès joined the man in his car and was kidnapped. Over an hour after her disappearance, the car of the kidnapper was involved in a car accident with a person named Martinez but the kidnapper drove away. Followed by an elderly couple, he was seen fleeing in the bushes. The police suspected there was a connection between the kidnapping and the fleeing driver. Following an extensive search, the body of Marie-Dolores Rambla, stabbed to death, was found in some bushes. Ranucci was arrested since he was in a car accident that day and was carrying a child. In Ranucci's car, the police discovered a pair of pants with dried blood of the same blood type as Rambla.

Ranucci confessed to abducting and killing the girl and told the police where the knife was hidden (the bushes).

Later, five people told the police they saw the kidnapping but none of them identified Ranucci as the perpetrator.

Several facts point to Fourniret's possible involvement in the crime. He was on vacation in Marseille in June 1974, drove a car of the same color (grey), was 32 years old and, unlike Ranucci, had a record of sex offences. Fourniret used many tricks, similar to the lie about the lost dog. Also, Rambla showed no signs of being sexually molested. Fourniret often ejaculated in front of his victims instead of sexually assaulting them.

He was named as a suspect in connection with the murder of 20-year-old Englishwoman Joanna Parrish, whose body was found in an Auxerre river on 17 May 1990. She had been raped and strangled. However, he has never been charged with her murder and 25 years on the murder remains unsolved.[7]

References

  1. 1 2 "Life sentence for French killer". BBC News. 29 May 2008. Retrieved 24 April 2015.
  2. "French 'serial killer' on trial". BBC. 27 March 2008.
  3. "The couple who 'hunted virgins'". BBC. 28 May 2008.
  4. Campbell, Matthew (23 March 2008). "Wife lured virgins for ‘Ogre of the Ardennes’ serial killer". The Sunday Times (London). (subscription required (help)).
  5. "Closed Cases". The Doe Network. Retrieved 1 July 2007.
  6. "French child killing case widens". BBC. 1 February 2005.
  7. "Daughter murder 'may be unsolved'". BBC News. 17 May 2010.
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