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词条 Marcel Barbeault
释义

  1. Youth

  2. Murders and the investigation

  3. Trial and sentencing

  4. Notes and references

  5. See also

      Bibliography    TV documentary    Radio shows    External links  
{{refimprove|date=September 2018}}{{Infobox serial killer
| name = Marcel Barbeault
| image =
| image_size =
| caption =
| alt =
| birth_name = Marcel Henri Barbeault
| alias = "The Shadow Killer"
| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1941|08|10}}
| birth_place = Liancourt, France
| death_date =
| death_place =
| cause =
| conviction = Murder
| sentence = Life imprisonment
| victims = 8
| beginyear = 1969
| endyear = 1976
| country = France
| states = Nogent-sur-Oise
| apprehended = December 14, 1976
| imprisoned =
}}

Marcel Henri Barbeault (born August 10, 1941, in Liancourt) is a French serial killer who murdered in Nogent-sur-Oise in the 1970s. He is responsible for the murder of seven women and one man. Because his crimes were always in the evening or early in the morning, he was given the nickname "The Shadow Killer".

Youth

The eldest son of a father working as a steam locomotive conductor and a mother working in the textile industry, Marcel left school at a very young age after missing his certificat d'études primaries. At the age of 14, he began working in a workshop called "Établissements Rivière" in Creil as a riveter.[1] With a valiant heart he then joined the YCW. On December 13, 1960, he joined the army and was mobilized during the Algerian war, where he was a stretcher bearer.[2] Upon his return, he returned to the factory and worked in Saint-Gobain. He soon began to practice boxing and judo, and said that he'd like to become a paratrooper or a gendarme, but was subjected to vertigo and failed the tests 8 times. In 1964 he married a woman named Josiane and fathered two boys - Patrice in 1966, and Laurent in 1972. His mother, Micheline, died of cancer in 1968, followed by his two brothers. At this time he began to burglarize homes, and when driving his moped on his way back from work he would steal weapons. The deaths in Marcel's family seem to be the key events for his dive into crime and violence (his mother had both breasts removed before her death, and this trauma could have led to a desire for revenge and similar sexual rites).[3]

Murders and the investigation

On January 10, 1969, he committed his first murder by killing Françoise Lecron, wife of a Saint-Gobain engineer, and his last murder was committed in January 1976.[4]

He attacked his victims along the railway line, striking them with a shovel then stabbing them in the heart, or would kill them using his .22 Long Rifle at nightfall (between 9PM and 11PM).[5] All of his victims were rumoured to be brown women, killed after he had watched them for a long time (during his days off) in order to monitor their actions. He undressed the corpses but did not violate them, and stole their handbags, which is rare among serial killers.[6] Despite this, Marcel Barbeault was regarded as a wonderful husband and an exemplary father who was self-contained and "banal". It is this schizophrenic behaviour that allowed him to pass through police nets for years.

Finally, after more than 7 years of stalking, he was arrested thanks to an anonymous phone call which described him: "aged 35, 1.80 cm tall, married to a blonde, with two children, no driving license. He served in Algeria, has practised boxing and worked at the Rivière..". Commissioner Christian Jacob did not identify the "killer" but he pinned Barbeault as a suspect. Inspector Daniel Neveu, freshly promoted to the judicial Police of Creil, managed to make the connection between Barbeault and the murders, through a 22 LR found in a cemetery and a rifle discovered in the basement of the accused.[7] He found that the key to the enigma was the cemetery of Nogent-sur-Oise, which was in the center of the triangle area where all the murders took place. In addition, the double homicide of a couple occurred on the parking lot of the Laigneville cemetery. But this murder, although different from the others, was also attributed to the "Shadow killer". Inspector Neveu concluded that, unlike the others, it was not premeditated, but was more of an "opportunistic" murder - the killer was on the scene before the couple's arrival and perhaps frequented the cemetery regularly.

The officer's reasoning was corroborated by the discovery of a .22LR bullet near a water tap in the cemetery. The tap was located behind the church, making it hard to find for anybody besides those who visited regularly. Neveu decided to cross out the names of the letters of denunciation and the surnames engraved on the cemetery's graves. The list of 30 names was eventually traced back to Barbeault. His beloved mother had died of breast cancer in her son's arms after much agony, and she had been buried in the Nogent cemetery since 1968.[8]

Neveu interviewed the suspects one by one. While searching Barbeault's home in Montataire on December 14, 1976, he found in his cellar a sawed rifle with a silencer, a raincoat and various caps. Ballistic analysis revealed that the weapon was used in one of the two murders. The weapons used in the other homicides could not be found but the similar modus operandi left little doubt about a single killer. Due to Barbeault having already been sentenced for burglary in the past, the police reviewed all his crimes in the region and discovered that he had also stolen a rifle. The owner had practised shooting with the weapon in his garden, and the investigators found sockets in it, showing that they had been used for some of the murders. Authorities then pointed out that the days of the murders corresponded to those in which Barbeault had days off.

Trial and sentencing

His trial began at the Beauvais Courthouse on May 25, 1981, in the cour d'assises of Oise.[9] Barbeault was charged with the five murders, but the three other crimes charges attributed to him were dropped due to lack of evidence. He denied being "The Shadow Killer" despite the evidence and acted coldly during the trial. The general advocate wanted to give him the death penalty, but that fell through because François Mitterrand had just been elected President of the Republic and announced the death penalty's upcoming abolition. Despite the five hour speech of his lawyer Jean-Louis Pelletir, Marcel Barbeault was sentenced to life imprisonment on June 10, 1981. He tried to appeal his sentence at the Court of Cassation but it was rejected in November 1983, and he was resentenced to life imprisonment.

Marcel Barbeault remains incarcerated in the central prison of Saint-Maur in Indre, and is employed as the prison librarian.

Notes and references

1. ^{{Citebook|author=Pascal Dague|title=Serial Killers|publisher=Mon Petit Éditeur|date=2012|page=57|language=French}}.
2. ^{{Citebook|author=Pascal Dague|title=Serial Killers|publisher=Mon Petit Éditeur|date=2012|page=407|language=French}}.
3. ^{{Citebook|author=Jacques Expert|title=Crime scenes|publisher=Place des Éditeurs|date=2015|page=122}}
4. ^{{Cite web|url=http://www.francesoir.fr/actualite/faits-divers/grands-crimes-du-xxe-siecle-marcel-barbeault-41340.html|title=The great crimes of the 20th century: Marcel Barbeault|date=9 August 2009|publisher=France-Soir|language=French}}
5. ^{{Citeweb|url=http://www.liberation.fr/cahier-special/2002/08/05/lignee-sanguinaire_411902|title=Bloodline|author=Patricia Tourancheau|date=5 August 2002|publisher=liberation.fr|language=French}}.
6. ^This same rumour pushed some women in Nogent-sur-Oise to dye their hair blonde. It turned out that his victims looked like his mother (same size, hair colour, etc.).
7. ^{{citebook|author=Alain Hamon, Jean-Charles Marchand|title=Dossier P … as Police|publisher=A. Moreau|date=1983|page=93|language=French}}
8. ^{{citebook|author=Pascal Dague|title=Serial Killers|publisher=Mon Petit Éditeur|date=2012|page=408|language=French}}.
9. ^{{citebook|author=Pascal Dague|title=Serial Killers|publisher=Mon Petit Éditeur|date=2012|page=419|language=French}}

See also

  • List of serial killers by country

Bibliography

  • Daniel Neveu, Le mort n'a pas le profil d'un assassin, Anabet Publisher, 2010, 462 pages, {{ISBN|2352660661}}
  • François Lapraz, Alain Morel, Terreur en banlieue, l'affaire du tueur de l'Oise, Guy Authier Éditeur, 1977.
  • Georges Moréas and Bill Waddell, Murder Case, Investigation of the great crimes of our time, vol. 28: The Shadow Killer. Marcel Barbeault: for seven years, this good father sowed terror in Nogent-sur-Oise, Paris, ALP, 1991, 30 p.
  • Alain Hamon, Un tueur dans l'ombre. L'Affaire Marcel Barbeault, I read, 1994 (out of print), January 4, 1999, 186 pages, {{ISBN|227707067X}}
  • Pascal Michel, 40 ans d'affaires criminelles 1969-2009 (chapitre : L'affaire Marcel Barbeault, le tueur de l'ombre) pages 7 and 13, April 17, 2009, 208 pages, {{ISBN|978-1-4092-7263-2}}
  • Pascal Dague, Tueurs en série, éd. Publibook, pages 407 and 425, May 11, 2012, 430 pages, {{ISBN|2748383923}}

TV documentary

  • Get the Accused, presented by Christophe Hondelatte in February 2005, October 2007 and July 2010 in "Marcel Barbeault: The Shadow Killer" on France 2.

Radio shows

  • "Marcel Barbeault, the killer of the Oise" March 18, 2014 and "Marcel Barbeault case" March 24, 2016 in The Double Hour of Jacques Pradel on RTL.
  • "The Marcel Barbeault Affair" August 22, 2016 in Hondelatte tells on Europe 1.

External links

  • Biography of Marcel Barbeault on tueursenserie.org.
  • Biography of Marcel Barbeault on 13emerue.fr.
  • Biography of Marcel Barbeault on murderpedia.org.
{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Barbeault, Marcel}}

5 : French serial killers|Male serial killers|Murder in France|1941 births|Living people

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