Kurt-Friedhelm Steinwegs

Kurt-Friedhelm Steinwegs (born December 5, 1960 in Viersen, North Rhine-Westphalia), nicknamed "The Monster from Lower Rhine", is a German serial killer who murdered six people between 1974 and 1983.[1]

Kurt-Friedhelm Steinwegs
Born (1960-12-05) December 5, 1960
Other names"The Monster from Lower Rhine"
Conviction(s)Murder
Criminal penaltyCommitted to a psychiatric institution
Details
Victims6
Span of crimes
1974–1983
CountryGermany
State(s)Lower Saxony
Date apprehended
1984

Childhood

Kurt-Friedhelm Steinwegs was born as the fifth of eight children of a casual worker and his wife. The mother died in 1970 at the age of only 35 years. After his father looked after the children alone for two years, he invited a female friend to look after the children with him, both living in a marriage-like relationship.

The youngest brother was given for adoption, two brothers were housed in children's homes, and another became a criminal and was detained for it.

Home accommodation

In November 1974, Steinwegs was housed in a youth centre in Gifhorn, Lower Saxony. During this time he killed 59-year-old Ernst Dorf with a stone, but this was not revealed until years later.[2]

In April 1976, the institution saw no further funding opportunities and requested a transfer for the boy. Eventually, in October 1976 he was housed in a curative education facility in Burglengenfeld, Bavaria. In July 1977, he was released and returned to live with his father in Willich.

Murder of Andrew Robinson

While living with his father, he murdered 13-year-old Willich resident Andrew Robinson in 1978.[3] In the broadcast of Aktenzeichen XY … ungelöst, the case was reported on on June 1, 1979, but no evidence was determined to allow the authorities to track down the perpetrator. Steinwegs was not suspected of the crime.

Arrest and trial

A little while later, Steinwegs was admitted to the Psychiatric State Hospital in Viersen. During this time, according to later revelations, he killed another four people, including a fellow patient. Among other things, he separated the genitalia from his victims' bodies.

Only in 1984, the police arrested Steinwegs after he had committed another murder. In the interrogations he freely confessed to six homicides.[4] At the trial, however, he recanted his confessions.[5] He was later called a "beast" and nicknamed "The Monster from Lower Rhine" by the tabloids due to the brutality of his crimes.

Kurt-Friedhelm Steinwegs was sentenced in 1985 by the district court of Mönchengladbach to years of juvenile detention with subsequent preventative detention in a psychiatric institution. He was acquitted in two cases because he was considered not at fault at the time due to "intellectual development errors".[6] To this day, he remains imprisoned in the forensic clinic in Bedburg-Hau.

gollark: ```Within the grove the mist thickened to a warm and bitter-tasting fog; from somewhere up ahead came the sound of bubbling water. The trees parted, and Djishin found himself in a clearing where four nuns in white robes sat contemplating a monolith of glistening black basalt. On its face were inscriptions such as the monk had never seen: (>>=) :: m a -> (a -> m b) -> m b return :: a -> m a“What is this stone, great ladies?” asked Djishin.“We call it the Monad,” said the first nun.“Why do you venerate it so?” asked Djishin.“Through it, we may touch the impure without being corrupted,” said the second nun. “We can fell a Maybe-tree with a Maybe-ax and always hear a Maybe-sound when it crashes down—even if the sound is Nothing at all, when the ax isn’t real or there’s no tree to fall.”```
gollark: …¿
gollark: JS is dynamically typed, look where that got usm
gollark: Or at least === as default.
gollark: S T A T I C T Y P I N G

References

  1. "The deeds of the most notorious serial offenders in criminal history" (in German). Die Welt. 10 October 2004.
  2. "Monday, December 24, 2007" (in German). wheniwasbuyingyouadrinkwherewereyou.blogspot.de. 24 December 2007. Retrieved 26 May 2015.
  3. Article in: La Vanguardia, February 15, 1984
  4. Hamburger Abendblatt of December 8,
  5. Hamburger Abendblatt of December 4,
  6. Hamburger Abendblatt of December 22,
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.