Roberto Succo
Roberto Succo | |
---|---|
Born | Roberto Succo 3 April 1962 |
Died | 23 May 1988 | (aged 26)
Cause of death | Suicide |
Other names | "The Monster of Mestre" "The Killer with the Eyes of Ice" "The Full Moon Assassin" "The Cherubino Nero" Roberto Kurt |
Conviction(s) | Murder |
Criminal penalty | Never tried |
Details | |
Victims | 7 |
Span of crimes | 1981–1988 |
Country | Italy, France |
Date apprehended | February 28, 1988 |
Roberto Succo (April 3, 1962 in Mestre – May 23, 1988 in Vicenza) was an Italian serial killer who committed several murders and other violent crimes mostly in Italy and France in the 1980s.
Murders
Succo was born in Mestre. On 3 April 1981 he fatally stabbed his mother Maria 32 times, and his father, a police officer, who had refused to lend him their car. He hid their bodies in the bathtub covered in water and lime to delay the discovery of the murders and fled with his father's service pistol.
He then fled from Mestre,[1] but an investigation into the murders of the Succo couple immediately connected them to the son, who was arrested two days later at the exit of a pizzeria in San Pietro al Natisone, not far from the border with Yugoslavia, after he had briefly returned to the crime scene.
After Succo was caught, he was judged mentally ill and sentenced to ten years in a psychiatric prison in Reggio Emilia. While serving his sentence, he was a model prisoner who studied geology at the University of Parma.[2]
After serving five years of his sentence, on May 15, 1986 while on freedom privileges, Succo escaped from the psychiatric hospital. He evaded police and escaped to France by rail, using fake documents and changing his surname to "Kurt".[3] In the next few years, he committed numerous crimes, including burglary, rape and murder. In France, he killed two women, a physician, and two police officers.[4][5] He kidnapped, hijacked, and terrorized people in three European countries. He was considered Public Enemy number one by France, Italy, and Switzerland.
After being recognized by a student in Aix-les-Bains on April 6, Succo returned to Italy. On 28 February 1988 he was caught in Mestre,[1] his hometown. On March 1, 1988, in the course of an escape attempt, he fell from the roof of the Treviso prison.[6]
He committed suicide in his cell in Vicenza, in the "San Pius X" prison on May 23, 1988, suffocating himself with a plastic bag.[7]
Victims
- Maria and Nazario Succo, his parents, whom he killed in Mestre on April 12, 1981.
- Michel Morandin, inspector of the gendarme, killed in Toulon, Var on February 2, 1987. His colleague Claude Aiazzi was also injured.
- André Castillo, sergeant of the gendarme, killed in Tresserve, Savoie on April 2, 1987. His corpse was found in Veyrier-du-Lac, Haute-Savoie and his car was found in Lausanne, Switzerland.
- France Vu-Dinh, killed in Annecy, Haute-Savoie on April 3, 1987. The body has never been found.
- Michel Astoul, possibly killed in Sisteron, Alpes-de-Haute-Provence on April 3, 1987. The body was found on October 28 in Epersy, Savoie.
- Claudine Duchosal, raped and killed in Menthon-Saint-Bernard, Haute-Savoie on October 6, 1987.
Later references
In 1988, Bernard-Marie Koltès wrote a play (Roberto Zucco)[a] loosely based on Succo's life and crimes. French journalist Pascale Froment wrote a non-fiction account of Succo's crimes that appeared as Je te tue. Histoire vraie de Roberto Succo assassin sans raison in 1991, and it served as the basis for the 2001 film Roberto Succo directed by Cédric Kahn. French police officers criticized the film for allegedly glorifying Succo.[9] Froment's book was reissued in 2001 under the title Roberto Succo.
See also
Notes
References
- ^ a b "Six-time assassin "Yes, I like killing"" (in Italian). La Repubblica. 1 March 1988.
- ^ Vergès, Jean-Pierre (26 September 2007). Les tueurs en série (in French). Hachette Pratique. ISBN 9782012301573.
- ^ "Succo, the ice-eyed killer terrified Mestre and France" (in Italian). Il Gazzettino. 18 August 2003.
- ^ Pelletier, Eric (3 April 2008). "La cavale de Roberto Succo". L'Express (in French). Retrieved 2 January 2018.
- ^ The Italian is sought fter N.1 in France, La Repubblica, February 12, 1988
- ^ The last venture of the Rambo-killer, La Repubblica, March 2, 1988
- ^ Better dead than a prisoner, La Repubblica, May 24, 1988
- ^ Reisinger, Deborah Streifford (2007). Crime and Media in Contemporary France. Purdue University Press. pp. 65, 84. ISBN 9781557534330. Retrieved 23 October 2018.
- ^ Romney, Jonathan (1 June 2002). "Cédric Kahn: Inside the mind of a killer". The Independent. Retrieved 23 October 2018.