Peter Kürten (German: [ˈpeːtɐ ˈkʏʁtn̩]; 26 May 1883 – 2 July 1931) was a German serial killer, known as The Vampire of Düsseldorf and the Düsseldorf Monster, who committed a series of murders and sexual assaults between February and November 1929 in the city of Düsseldorf. In the years before these assaults and murders, Kürten had amassed a lengthy criminal record for offenses including arson and attempted murder. He also confessed to the 1913 murder of a nine-year-old girl in Mülheim am Rhein and the attempted murder of a 17-year-old girl in Düsseldorf.
Described by Karl Berg [de] as "the king of the sexual perverts", Kürten was found
guilty of nine counts of murder and seven counts of attempted murder for which
he was sentenced to death by beheading in April 1931. He was executed via
guillotine in July 1931, at age 48.
Kürten became known as the "Vampire of Düsseldorf" because he occasionally made
attempts to drink the blood from his victims' wounds; and the "Düsseldorf Monster" both
because the majority of his murders were committed in and around the city of
Düsseldorf, and due to the savagery he inflicted upon his victims' bodies.
Early life
Childhood
Peter Kürten was born into a poverty-stricken, abusive
family in Mülheim am Rhein on 26 May 1883, the oldest of thirteen children (two
of whom died at an early age). Kürten's parents were both alcoholics who lived
in a one-bedroom apartment, and Kürten's father frequently beat his wife and
children, particularly when he was drunk. When intoxicated, Kürten's father
often forced his wife and children to assemble before him before ordering his
wife to strip naked and have sex with him as his children watched. He was
jailed for eighteen months in 1897 for repeatedly raping his eldest daughter,
who was aged 13. Shortly thereafter, Kürten's mother obtained a separation
order, and later remarried and relocated to Düsseldorf.
In 1888, Kürten attempted to drown one of his playmates.
Four years later, he befriended a local dog-catcher who lived in the same
building as his family and began accompanying him on his rounds. This
individual often tortured and killed the animals he caught, and Kürten soon
became an active and willing participant in torturing the animals.
Being the eldest surviving son, Kürten was the target of
much of his father's physical abuse and frequently refused to return home from
school as a result. Although he was a good student, he later recollected his
academic performance suffered due to the extensive physical violence he
endured. From an early age, Kürten often ran away from home for periods of time
ranging from days to weeks. Much of the time Kürten spent on the streets was in
the company of petty criminals and social misfits. Via these acquaintances,
Kürten was introduced to various forms of petty crime, which he initially
committed as a means of feeding and clothing himself when living on the
streets.
Kürten later claimed to have committed his first murders at
the age of nine, when he pushed a school friend whom he knew was unable to swim
off a log raft. When a second boy attempted to save the drowning youngster,
Kürten held his head under the water, so that both boys drowned. Both deaths
were ruled by authorities as being accidental.
Adolescence
At the age of 13, Kürten formed a relationship with a girl
his age and, although she allowed Kürten to undress and fondle her, she would
resist any attempts he made to engage in intercourse. To relieve his sexual
urges, Kürten resorted to acts of bestiality with sheep, pigs and goats in
local stables, but later claimed he obtained his greatest sense of elation if
he stabbed the animals just before achieving orgasm. Thus, he began stabbing
and slashing animals with increasing frequency to achieve orgasms, although he
was adamant this behaviour ended when he was observed stabbing a pig. He also
attempted to rape the same sister his father had earlier molested.
In 1897, Kürten left school. At his father's insistence, he
obtained employment as an apprentice molder. This apprenticeship lasted for two
years before Kürten stole all the money he could find in his household, plus
approximately 300 gold marks from his employer, and ran away from home. He
relocated to Koblenz, where he began a brief relationship with a prostitute two
years his senior who, he claimed, willingly submitted to every form of sexual
perversion he demanded of her. He was apprehended four weeks later and charged
with both breaking and entering and theft, and subsequently sentenced to one
month's imprisonment. He was released from prison in August 1899 and reverted
to a life of petty crime.
First attempted
murder
Kürten claimed to have committed his first murder in
adulthood in November 1899. In his 1930 confessions to investigators, he
claimed to have "picked up an
18-year-old girl at the Alleestraße" and persuaded her to accompany
him to the Hofgarten. There, he claimed to have engaged in sex with the girl
before strangling her into unconsciousness with his bare hands before leaving
the scene, believing her to be dead.
No contemporaneous records exist to corroborate Kürten's
claims. If this attack did take place, the victim likely survived this assault.
Nonetheless, Kürten later stated that, via committing this act, he had proven
to himself that the greatest heights of sexual ecstasy could only be achieved
in this manner.
First convictions
Shortly thereafter, in 1900, Kürten was arrested for fraud.
He would be rearrested later the same year on the same charge, although on this
second occasion, charges pertaining to his 1899 Düsseldorf thefts, plus the
attempted murder of a girl with a firearm, were added to the indictment.
Consequently, Kürten was sentenced to four years' imprisonment in October 1900.
He served this sentence in Derendorf, a borough of Düsseldorf.
Released in the summer of 1904, Kürten was drafted into the
Imperial German Army; he was deployed to the city of Metz in Lorraine to serve
in the 98th Infantry Regiment, although he soon deserted. That autumn, Kürten
began committing acts of arson, which he would discreetly watch from a distance
as emergency services attempted to extinguish the fires. The majority of these
fires were in barns and haylofts, and Kürten would admit to police he had
committed around twenty-four acts of arson upon his arrest that New Year's Eve.
He also freely admitted these fires had been committed both for his sexual
excitement and in the hope of burning sleeping tramps alive.
As a result of his desertion, Kürten was tried by the
military court and convicted of desertion in addition to multiple counts of
arson, robbery and attempted robbery (the latter charges pertaining to acts he
had also committed that year), and was subsequently imprisoned from 1905 to
1913. He served his sentence in Münster, with much of his time spent in
solitary confinement for repeated instances of insubordination. He would later
claim to investigators and psychologists this period of incarceration was that
in which he first encountered severe forms of discipline, and as such, the
erotic fantasies he had earlier developed while incarcerated in Derendorf
expanded to include graphic fantasies of his striking out at society and
killing masses of people; these fantasies became ever more paramount and
overbearing in his mind, and Kürten later claimed that he derived the "sort of pleasures from these visions
that other people would get from thinking about a naked woman", adding
that he occasionally spontaneously ejaculated while preoccupied with such
thoughts.
"It was on 25 May
1913. I had been stealing, specializing in public bars or inns where the owners
lived on the floor above. In a room above an inn at Köln-Mülheim, I discovered
a child of about 10 asleep. Her head was facing the window. I seized it with my
left hand and strangled her for about a minute and a half. The child woke up
and struggled but lost consciousness ... I had a small but sharp pocketknife
with me and I held the child's head and cut her throat. I heard the blood spurt
and drip on the mat beside the bed. It spurted in an arch, right over my hand.
The whole thing lasted about three minutes. Then I locked the door again and went
back home to Düsseldorf."
Peter Kürten, recounting the murder of Christine Klein at
his trial, 1931
Murders
First murder
Christine Klein
The first murder Kürten definitively committed occurred on
25 May 1913. During the course of a burglary at a tavern in Mülheim am Rhein,
he encountered a nine-year-old girl named Christine Klein asleep in her bed.
Kürten strangled the child, and then slashed her twice across the throat with a
pocket knife, ejaculating as he heard the blood dripping from her wounds onto
the floor by her bed and on his hand.
The following day, Kürten specifically returned to Köln to
drink in a tavern located directly opposite that in which he had murdered
Klein, so that he could listen to the locals' reactions to the child's murder.
He later recollected to investigators that he derived an extreme sense of
gratification from the general disgust, repulsion, and outrage he had heard in the
patrons' conversations. Moreover, in the weeks following Klein's funeral,
Kürten occasionally travelled to Mülheim am Rhein to visit the child's grave,
adding that when he handled the soil covering the grave, he spontaneously
ejaculated.
Two months later—again in the course of committing a
burglary with the aid of a skeleton key—Kürten broke into a home in Düsseldorf.
Discovering a 17-year-old girl named Gertrud Franken asleep in her bed, Kürten
manually strangled the girl, ejaculating at the sight of blood spouting from
her mouth, before leaving the crime scene. Kürten managed to escape from the
scene of this attempted murder and the earlier murder of Klein undetected.
Imprisonment and
release
Just days after the attempted murder of Franken, on 14 July,
Kürten was arrested for a series of arson attacks and burglaries. He was
sentenced to six years imprisonment, although his repeated instances of
insubordination, while imprisoned, saw his incarceration extended by a further
two years. Kürten served this sentence in a military prison in the town of
Brieg (then part of the German Empire).
Released in April 1921, Kürten relocated to Altenburg, where
he initially lived with his sister. Through his sister, Kürten became
acquainted with a woman three years his senior named Auguste Scharf, a sweet
shop proprietor and former prostitute who had previously been convicted of shooting
her fiancé to death, and to whom Kürten initially posed as a former prisoner of
war. Two years later, Kürten and Scharf married, and although the couple
regularly engaged in sex, Kürten later admitted he could consummate his
marriage only by fantasizing about committing violence against another
individual, and that, after their wedding night, he engaged in intercourse with
his wife only at her invitation.
For the first time in his life, Kürten obtained regular
employment, also becoming an active trades union official, although, with the
exception of his wife, he formed no close friendships. In 1925, he returned
with Scharf to Düsseldorf, where he soon began affairs with a servant girl
named Tiede and a housemaid named Mech. Both women were frequently subjected to
partial strangulation when they submitted to intercourse, with Tiede once being
informed by Kürten, "That's what
love means." When his wife discovered his infidelity, Tiede reported
Kürten to police, claiming he had seduced her; Mech alleged Kürten had raped
her. The more serious charge was later dropped, although Tiede's allegations
were pursued, thus earning Kürten an eight-month prison sentence for attempted
seduction and threatening behaviour. Kürten served six months of this sentence,
with his early release being upon the condition he left Düsseldorf. He later
successfully appealed the ruling that he relocate from the city.
1929
On 3 February 1929, Kürten stalked a middle-aged woman named
Apollonia Kühn. Waiting until Kühn was shielded from the view of potential
witnesses by bushes, Kürten pounced upon her, grabbing her by the lapels of her
coat and shouting the words, "No
row! Don't scream!" before dragging her into nearby undergrowth, where
he proceeded to stab her 24 times with a sharpened pair of scissors. Although
many of the blows were inflicted so deeply that the scissors struck her bones,
Kühn survived her injuries.
On 8 February, Kürten strangled a nine-year-old girl named
Rosa Ohliger into unconsciousness before stabbing her in the stomach, temple,
genitals and heart with a pair of scissors, spontaneously ejaculating as he
knifed the child. He then inserted his semen into her vagina with his fingers.
Kürten then made a rudimentary effort to hide Ohliger's body by dragging it
beneath a hedge before returning to the scene with a bottle of kerosene several
hours later and setting the child's body alight, achieving an orgasm at the
sight of the flames. Ohliger's body was found beneath a hedge the following
day.
Five days later, on 13 February, Kürten murdered a
45-year-old mechanic named Rudolf Scheer in the suburb of Flingen Nord,
stabbing him twenty times, particularly about the head, back and eyes.
Following the discovery of Scheer's body, Kürten returned to the scene of the
murder to converse with police, falsely informing one detective he had heard
about the murder via telephone.
Despite the differences in age and sex of these three
victims, the fact that all three crimes had been committed in the Flingern
district of Düsseldorf at dusk, that each victim had received a multitude of
stab wounds likely inflicted in rapid succession and invariably involving at
least one wound to the temple, plus the absence of a common motive such as
robbery, led investigators to conclude the same perpetrator had committed all
three attacks. Furthermore, the seemingly random selection of these victims led
criminologists to remark as to the abnormal nature of the perpetrator.
Although Kürten did attempt to strangle four women between
March and July 1929, one of whom he claimed to have thrown into the Rhine
River, he is not known to have killed any further victims until 11 August when
he raped, strangled, and then repeatedly stabbed a young woman named Maria
Hahn. Kürten had first encountered Hahn—whom he described as "a girl looking for marriage"—on
8 August, and had arranged to take her on a date to the Neandertal district of
Düsseldorf the following Sunday. After several hours in Hahn's company, Kürten
lured her into a meadow in order that he could kill her; he later admitted Hahn
had repeatedly pleaded with him to spare her life as he alternately strangled her,
stabbed her in the chest and head, or sat astride her body, waiting for her to
die.
Maria Hahn
Hahn died approximately one hour after Kürten had begun
attacking her. Fearful his wife might connect the bloodstains she had noted on
his clothes with Hahn's murder, Kürten later buried her body in a cornfield,
only to return to her body several weeks later with the intention of nailing
her decomposing remains to a tree in a mock crucifixion to shock and disgust the
public; however, Hahn's remains proved too heavy for Kürten to complete this
act, and he simply returned her corpse to her grave before embracing and
caressing the decomposing body as he lay beneath her remains. He then reburied
Hahn's body. According to Kürten's later confession, both before and after he
had attempted to impale Hahn's corpse to a tree, he "went to the grave many times and kept improving on it; and every
time I thought of what was lying there and was filled with satisfaction."
Three months after Kürten had murdered Hahn, he posted an
anonymous letter to the police in which he confessed to the murder, adding that
her remains had been buried in a field. In this letter, Kürten also drew a
crude map describing the location of the remains. This letter would prove sufficiently
detailed to enable investigators to locate Hahn's remains on 15 November.
Following the Hahn murder, Kürten changed his choice of
weapon from scissors to a knife in an apparent effort to convince police more
than one perpetrator was responsible for the unfolding crime spree. In the
early morning of 21 August, he randomly stabbed an 18-year-old girl, a
30-year-old man, and a 37-year-old woman in separate attacks. All three were
seriously wounded, and all stated to police their assailant had not spoken a
word to them before he had attacked them. Three days later, at a fairground in
the suburb of Flehe, Kürten observed two foster sisters (aged 5 and 14) walking
from the fairground, through adjoining allotments, en route to their home.
Sending the older girl, Luise Lenzen, on an errand to purchase cigarettes for
him upon the promise of being given 20 pfennig, Kürten lifted the younger
child, Gertrude Hamacher, off the ground by her neck and strangled her into
unconsciousness before cutting her throat and discarding her body in a patch of
runner beans. When Lenzen returned to the scene, Kürten partially strangled her
before stabbing her about the torso, with one wound piercing her aorta. He also
bit and twice cut her throat before sucking blood from the wounds. Neither girl
had been sexually assaulted, nor does the fact only Lenzen’s footprints were
found within seven meters of her body suggest she may have attempted to flee
from her attacker before collapsing.
The following day, Kürten accosted a 27-year-old housemaid
named Gertrude Schulte, whom he openly asked to engage in sex with him. Upon
being rebuffed, Kürten shouted, "Well,
die then!" before repeatedly stabbing the woman in the head, neck,
shoulder, and back. Schulte survived her injuries, although she was unable to
provide investigators with a clear description of her assailant, beyond assuming
his age to be around 40.
Kürten attempted to murder two further victims—one by
strangulation; another by stabbing—in September, before opting to predominantly
use a hammer in his murders.
Hammer attacks
Elizabeth Dörrier
On the evening of 30 September, Kürten encountered a
31-year-old servant girl named Ida Reuter at Düsseldorf station. He
successfully persuaded Reuter to accompany him to a café, and then for a walk
through the local Hofgarten close to the Rhine River. At this location, he
repeatedly struck her about the head with a hammer both before and after he had
raped her. At one stage in this assault, Reuter regained consciousness and
began pleading with Kürten to spare her life. In response, Kürten simply "gave her other hammer blows on the
head and misused her".
Eleven days later, on 11 October, he encountered a
22-year-old servant girl named Elizabeth Dörrier outside a theatre. As had been
the case with Reuter, Dörrier agreed to accompany Kürten for a drink at a café
before the pair took a train to Grafenberg, to walk alongside the Kleine Düssel
River. Here she was struck once across her right temple with a hammer, then
raped. Kürten struck her repeatedly about the head and both temples with his hammer
and left her for dead. Dörrier was found in a coma at 6:30 a.m. the following
morning; she died from her injuries the following day. On 25 October, Kürten
attacked two women with a hammer; both survived, although in the second
instance, this may have been because Kürten's hammer broke in the attack.
On 7 November 1929, Kürten encountered a 5-year-old girl
named Gertrude Albermann in the Flingern district of Düsseldorf; he persuaded
the child to accompany him to a section of deserted allotments, where he seized
her by the throat and strangled her, stabbing her once in the left temple with
a pair of scissors as per his modus operandi. When Albermann "collapsed to the ground without a
sound", Kürten stabbed the child 34 further times in the temple and
chest before placing her body in a pile of nettles close to a factory wall.
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