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Pierre Bodein

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French criminal and spree killer
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Pierre Bodein
BornPierre Fernand Bodein
(1947-12-30) December 30, 1947 (age 76)
Obernai, France
Other names"Pierrot le fou"
Conviction(s)Murder
Criminal penaltyLife imprisonment
Details
Victims3
Span of crimesJune 18, 2004 – June 25, 2004
CountryFrance
State(s)Alsace
Date apprehendedJuly 14, 2004

Pierre Fernand Bodein (born December 30, 1947, in Obernai) is a French criminal and spree killer who, since 1969, has alternated stays between psychiatric hospitals and prisons. Nicknamed "Pierrot le fou" meaning "Pierre the fool", his criminal record includes seven convictions, three of which are murders, including violent rapes. He is the 11th child of a family of 16 children, descending from a Yenish community.

Crimes

After his first prison term, served in 1969, Bodein, a member of a family of "basket makers" (names for travelers settled in Alsace) would have many other stays in prisons, including for robbery, theft and robbery but also for sexual assault. In 1976, due to his health state he was deemed "incompatible for detention". A psychiatric director at the time, Michel Patris, said this about him: "He was in a vegetative state, frozen, shutting himself in silence." Bodein swallowed his excrements, and was now moved in a wheelchair. Released in 1980, he resumed his robberies. He was re-arrested in 1989, and was again considered crazy. According to psychiatrist Henri Brunner, "all psychiatric experts on that date considered Bodein crazy, myself included.".

In December 1992, he left his wheelchair to escape through a skylight of the psychiatric hospital in Erstein, which had remained open. In a span of three days, he took two women hostage, before sequestering and raping one of them, robbing a bank and armory afterwards. He also attacked several gendarme checkpoints and shot at two policemen, wounding one of them seriously before being intercepted. This event, widely relayed by the media, earned him the nickname "Pierrot le fou".

He was sentenced in 1994 to 30 years imprisonment for these crimes, but was retried in February 1996 on appeal by the cour d'assises of Bas-Rhin, which re-sentenced him to 28 years imprisonment (it was further reduced to 20 years in cassation) in 1996. Bodein then adopted a new strategy, and was described as a "model inmate". Due to his good behaviour, years of pretrial detention, automatic sentencing and remission, he was released on parole on March 14, 2004, a few months before the end of his sentence. He then began living in his brother's caravan, who was a scrap dealer in Bourgheim.

Four months later, Bodein was charged with the kidnapping, rape and murder of 38-year-old Hedwige Vallée, stabbed to death on June 21; 10-year-old Jeanne-Marie Kegelin, found on June 29 and 14-year-old Julie Scharsch, found on July 3. He was first arrested on June 26 before being released for a lack of evidence, but was rearrested and charged on June 30. Some psychiatrists speculated that these constituted substitutes for his own daughter and one of his fellow prisoners, with whom he had established an "obscene" correspondence. He denied the accusations and defended his innocence, but the DNA evidence proved him guilty.

List of known victims

Murder Discovery Identity Age
Date Place Date Place
June 18, 2004 Rhinau June 29, 2004 Valff Jeanne-Marie Kegelin 10
June 21, 2004 Obernai June 22, 2004 Hindisheim Hedwige Vallée 38
June 25, 2004 Schirmeck July 3, 2004 Nothalten Julie Scharsch 14

Trial and sentencing

On April 11, 2007, the trial of Bodein began at the cour d'assises in Strasbourg, in an adjoining room of the court specifically arranged for the occasion. The "real" life imprisonment sentence (in France the maximum imprisonment is at most 30 years, but in this it was true life imprisonment) was imposed on him on July 4, 2007. The jurors accepted the General Counsel's decision a week later. He was the first prisoner in France to be sentenced to life imprisonment, followed up a year later by Michel Fourniret in May 2008, then in January 2015 by Nicolas Blondiau. His appeal was rejected by the court of Colmar on October 2, 2008. On January 21, 2010, his appeal of cassation was rejected by the Court of Cassation, finalizing his sentence.

The complicity of Fuhrmann and Remetter, two fellow Yenish people, in the kidnapping, murder and rape of Jeanne-Marie Kegelin was not retained, but the Attorney General demanded they receive sentences ranging from 3 to 30 years. The Kegelin family, defended by Wallerand de Saint-Just, denounced a "mess in the procedures that prevented their mourning". The lawyer also felt that "those who, by their spirit, their politics and their abstention, allowed the death of Jeanne-Marie Kegelin are much more responsible than Pierre Bodein."

On November 13, 2014, the European Court of Human Rights said that the conviction of Bodein did not violate Article 3 (the convicted person alleged that the sentence was inhumane and with degrading treatment), nor Article 6 (Bodein complained about the lack of motives of the cour d'assises' judges) of the European Convention of Human Rights.

References

  1. Isabelle Monnin (14 June 2007). "Night of the hunter" (in French). Le Nouvel observateur. Retrieved 23 June 2007.
  2. Thomas Calinon (16 August 2006). ""Pierrot le fou" panics psychiatrists and lawyers" (in French). Libération.
  3. "Polemic around a liberation". L'Humanité. 11 April 2007.
  4. Reuters (10 July 2007). "On the last day of his trial, Pierre Bodein maintains his innocence". Le Monde. Retrieved 10 July 2007. {{cite web}}: |author= has generic name (help).
  5. AFP (2 October 2008). "Maximum penalty confirmed on appeal for Pierre Bodein". Le Monde. Retrieved 2 October 2008..
  6. Reuters (11 July 2007). "Life sentence for Bodein, acquittal for his co-defendants". Le Monde. Retrieved 11 July 2007. {{cite web}}: |author= has generic name (help).
  7. CEDH, Bodein c. France, 13 November 2014, n°40014/10.
  8. "European justice validates the "real life" applied in France", article published November 14, 2014 Le Figaro.

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