Peter Kürten

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Peter Kürten
Mugshot of Peter Kürten taken in 1930 or 1931
Born
Peter Kürten
Cause of deathDecapitation by guillotine
Other namesThe Vampire of Düsseldorf
Motivesexual pleasure/to "strike back at oppressive society"
Criminal penaltyDeath
Details
VictimsMurders: 9
Attempted: 7
Sexual assaults: unknown
Span of crimes
1913–1930
CountryGermany
Date apprehended
May 24, 1930

Peter Kürten (May 26 1883 - July 2 1931) was a German serial killer dubbed The Vampire of Düsseldorf by the contemporary media. He committed a series of sex crimes, assaults and murders against adults and children, most notoriously from February to November 1929 in Düsseldorf.

Early life

Kürten was born into a poverty-stricken, abusive family in Mülheim am Rhein, the third of eleven children. As a child, he witnessed his alcoholic father repeatedly sexually assault his mother and sisters. He followed his father's footsteps, and was soon sexually abusing his sisters at a young age. He was a petty criminal from a young age, and often ran away from home. He later claimed to have committed his first murders at the age of nine, drowning two young friends while swimming. He moved with his family to Düsseldorf in 1894 and received a number of short prison sentences for various crimes, including theft and arson. As a youth he was employed by the local dogcatcher, who taught him how to masturbate and to torture dogs.

He progressed from torturing animals to attacks on people. He committed his first provable murder in 1913, strangling a 10 year old girl, Christine Klein, during the course of a burglary. His crimes were then halted by World War I and an eight-year prison sentence. In 1921 he left prison and moved to Altenburg, where he married. In 1925 he returned to Düsseldorf, where he began the series of crimes that would last until his capture.

Murders

On February 8 1929 he assaulted a woman and molested and murdered an eight-year-old girl. On February 13 he murdered a middle-aged mechanic, stabbing him twenty times. Kürten did not attack again until August, stabbing three people in separate attacks on the 21st; murdering two sisters, aged five and fourteen, on the 23rd; and stabbing another woman on the 24th.[1] In September he committed a single rape and murder, brutally beating the servant girl with a hammer in a wood that lay just outside of Düsseldorf. In October he attacked two women with a hammer. On November 7 he killed a five-year-old girl by strangling and stabbing her 36 times with scissors, and then sent a map to a local newspaper disclosing the location of her grave. The variety of victims and methods created among police the assumption that there was more than one killer at large; over 900,000 different names were given to the police as potential suspects.

The November murder was Kürten's last, although there were a spate of non-fatal hammer attacks from February to March 1930. In May he accosted a young woman named Maria Budlick; he took her first to his home and then to the Grafenberger Woods, where he raped but did not kill her. Budlick led the police to Kürten's home. He avoided the police, but confessed to his wife and told her to inform the police. On May 24 he was located and arrested.

Trial and execution

Kürten confessed to 79 offenses, and was charged with nine murders and seven attempted murders. He went to trial in April 1931. He initially pled not guilty, but after some weeks changed his plea. He was found guilty and sentenced to death.

As Kürten was awaiting execution, he was often interviewed by Dr. Karl Berg, whose interviews with and analysis of Kürten formed the basis of his book, The Sadist. Kürten gave his primary motive to Berg as being one entirely of sexual pleasure. The number of stab wounds varied simply because it sometimes took longer to achieve orgasm; the sight of blood was integral to his sexual stimulation.

He was executed on July 2, 1931 by guillotine in Cologne.

Analysis

German authorities wrongly determined Kürten to be insane when he was, in fact, declared to be sane.

Kürten said to the legal examiners that his primary motive was to "strike back at oppressive society". He did not deny that he had sexually molested his victims, but he always claimed during his trial that this was not his primary motive.

In 1931 scientists attempted to examine irregularities in Kürten's brain in an attempt to explain his personality and behavior. His head was dissected and mummified and is currently on display at the Ripley's Believe It or Not! museum in Wisconsin Dells.[citation needed][dubious ]

Cultural references

Fritz Lang's 1931 film M, in which a serial child killer terrorizes a big city, is often said to have been based upon Kürten, but Lang denied that Kürten was an influence. Because of the similarities between the fictional killer in M and real-life Kürten, the film was known as The Vampire of Duesseldorf in some countries. While the location is never mentioned in the film, the dialect used by the characters and the several maps used throughout the film bearing the city's trademark bear symbol heavily suggest that the action takes place in Berlin.

First biopic about Kürten was Robert Hossein's The Secret Killer (Le Vampire de Düsseldorf, 1965).[2]

Playwright Anthony Neilson's 1991 work Normal: The Düsseldorf Ripper is a fictional account of Kürten's life, is told from the point of view of his defense lawyer. Adaptated for screen as Angels Gone.

Kürten is the subject of Randy Newman's song "In Germany Before the War" from the album Little Criminals.

In 1981 the British noise band Whitehouse released an album titled Dedicated to Peter Kürten.

The American heavy metal band Macabre recorded a song called "Vampire of Düsseldorf" about Kürten.

Angels Gone, a film adaptation of Anthony Neilson's play directed by Julius Ševčík was released on 26 March 2009 as Normal.

Further reading

References

  • Lane, Brian and Gregg, Wilfred (1992). The Encyclopedia of Serial Killers. Berkley Books.
  • Fuchs, Christian [1996] (2002). Bad Blood. Creation Books.

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