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词条 Carl Großmann
释义

  1. Early life

  2. Arrest

  3. Bibliography

  4. References

  5. See also

{{Infobox serial killer
| name=Carl Großmann
| image=Karl Großmann.jpg
| image_size = 240px
| caption= Großmann mug shot
| birthname=Carl Friedrich Wilhelm Großmann
| alias= Jack the Slaughterer
The Berlin Butcher
| birth_date={{Birth date|1863|12|13|df=y}}
| birth_place=Neuruppin, Germany
| death_date={{Death date and age|1922|7|5|1863|12|13|df=y}}
| cause=Suicide by hanging
| victims=26–100+
| country=Germany
| states=Berlin
| beginyear=1918
| endyear=21 August 1921
| apprehended= 21 August 1921
| conviction=Assault,
child molestation,
murder,
trespassing,
cannibalism
| sentence=Death
}}

Carl Friedrich Wilhelm Großmann (13 December 1863 – 5 July 1922) was a German serial killer who cannibalized his victims. He committed suicide while awaiting execution without giving a full confession, leaving the extent of his crimes and motives largely unknown.

Early life

Little is known about Carl Großmann's early life, except that he had sadistic sexual tastes and had several convictions for child molestation. As a young man, he served a 14-year prison sentence for attacking a seven-year-old girl.[1]

During World War I, Großmann sold meat on the black market and even had a hotdog stand at a train station near his home. It is believed the meat contained the remains of his victims, their bones and other inedible parts having been thrown into the river. Pieces of missing women were found in the canal near Andreas Square and off the Luisenstadt Canal.[1]

Arrest

On 21 August 1921, Großmann was arrested at his apartment in Berlin after neighbours heard screams and banging noises, followed by silence. The police burst into the apartment, finding on the bed the body of a young woman who had recently been murdered. Großmann was taken into custody and charged with first degree murder. Neighbours reported that he seemed to have had a steady supply of female companions, mostly destitute-looking young women, over the previous few years. Many went into the apartment, but few emerged from it. How many lives Großmann took is not known. Only the body of his final victim was found, along with bloodstains in the apartment that indicated at least three other persons had been butchered in the few weeks leading up to his arrest. One 1921 report claims Großmann had confessed to about twenty murders over twenty years.[1] A 1922 report claims that Großmann had admitted to killing four women.[2] Some have suggested as many as 50 women entered Großmann's apartment and ended up being murdered, dismembered and eaten by unwitting customers of Großmann's meat business.

Großmann was convicted of murder and sentenced to death. Before his sentence could be carried out, he hanged himself in his prison cell.[3]

Bibliography

  • Matthias Blazek (2009), Carl Großmann und Friedrich Schumann – Zwei Serienmörder in den zwanziger Jahren, Ibidem-Verlag, Stuttgart, {{ISBN|978-3-8382-0027-9}}.
  • Horst Bosetzky (2004), Die Bestie vom Schlesischen Bahnhof, Jaron-Verlag, Berlin, {{ISBN|3-89773-078-2}}.
  • Peter Haining (2005), Cannibal Killers Murderers who kill and eat their victims, chapter: "The Bread And Butter Brides", Magpie Books, UK, {{ISBN|978-1-84529-792-3}}.
  • Maria Tatar (1995), Lustmord: Sexual Murder in Weimar Germany, Princeton, NJ (English), {{ISBN|0-691-01590-2}}.
  • Masters, R.E.L.; Lea, Eduard; Edwardes, Allen, (1963), Perverse Crimes in History: Evolving Concepts of Sadism, Lust-Murder, and Necrophilia from Ancient to Modern Times, NY: Julian Press

References

1. ^{{cite web|title=Butcher Held For Killing Twenty Girls And Selling Flesh|url=http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84026749/1921-09-19/ed-1/seq-3/|newspaper=The Washington Times|publisher=Times Publishing Company|location=Washington D.C.|date=September 19, 1921|via=chroniclingamerica.loc.gov}}
2. ^{{cite news|title=German Bluebeard Takes Own Life|url=http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn87065609/1922-07-14/ed-1/seq-7|newspaper=East Mississippi Times|location=Starkville, Mississippi|date=July 14, 1922|via=chroniclingamerica.loc.gov}}
3. ^{{cite book|first=Matthias|last=Blazek|authorlink=Matthias Blazek|title=Carl Großmann und Friedrich Schumann – Zwei Serienmörder in den zwanziger Jahren|publisher=Ibidem-Verlag|location=Stuttgart, Germany|date=2009|ISBN=978-3-8382-0027-9|page=61|language=German}}

See also

  • Karl Denke
{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Grossmann, Karl}}

18 : 1863 births|1922 deaths|German serial killers|Male serial killers|People from Neuruppin|People from the Province of Brandenburg|Serial killers who committed suicide in prison custody|Suicides by hanging in Germany|German people convicted of murder|People convicted of murder by Germany|German people who died in prison custody|Prisoners who died in German detention|German prisoners sentenced to death|Prisoners sentenced to death by Germany|German people convicted of child sexual abuse|German cannibals|Male suicides|20th-century German criminals

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