Ivan Roubal

Ivan Roubal (born May 12, 1951 - June 29, 2015 in the Karviná Prison)[1] was a Czechoslovak serial killer who was convicted of five murders.

Ivan Roubal
Born(1951-05-12)May 12, 1951
DiedJune 29, 2015(2015-06-29) (aged 64)
Conviction(s)Murder
Criminal penaltyLife imprisonment
Details
Victims5-8
Span of crimes
1991–1994
CountryCzechoslovakia, later Czech Republic
State(s)Čachrov, Zákupy, Prague, Veselí nad Lužnicí, Letňany

Life

Youth

Ivan Roubal studied at an agricultural school and graduated in 1970. He worked at the Czechoslovak State Railways as a junior railroad engineer, train operator, worker at a heat-only boiler station, woodcutter and zootechnician. He married in 1973, his son being born the following year (he died in a traffic incident in 2012).

In the late eighties of the 20th century, he briefly worked for the Jehovah's Witnesses. However, his expectations were not fulfilled, so he left before the revolution began and devoted himself to mysticism and occultism.[2] He later extended his religious engagement to the Catholic Church. When his crimes were investigated, he demanded the testimony of cardinal Miloslav Vlk and Abbot of the Brevnov Monastery Jan Anastáz Opasek. See below.

Murders

In 1991, Roubal rented a cottage at Čachrov called Fairy Tales. There he kept hens and pigs. He met there with František Heppner, who wanted to build a water saw. But in December 1991, Heppner disappeared with his Russian girlfriend. The reason for their disappearance was supposedly their departure to Germany. Nothing was suspected until Roubal began using their vehicle and sold their furniture. In addition, one of his sons supposedly said that his father killed both of them and had given their bodies to the pigs. The son recanted his claims in court. The court therefore ruled out that if the missing bodies can not be found, it can not be ruled out that those people lived.

On July 26, 1992, taxi driver Vladimir Strnad disappeared. He was last seen with Roubal, both leaving Prague and driving their respective cars. The body was dumped in a septic tank in Zákupy. The following day, Roubal began to drive two cars. The body was found on May 25, 1993, being in such an advanced stage of decay that it was impossible to ascertain the cause of death.

On December 10, 1992, Václav Horký, a bijou salesman, disappeared. After his disappearance, Roubal started using his vehicle and tried to sell his house. To this day, Horký has not been located. In 1995, the court declared him dead in absentia.

On May 26, 1993, Roubal became acquainted with Josef Suchánek through classified advertising. He killed him and threw his body in a pond in Veselí nad Lužnicí. His apartment was then robbed. The body was not found until October 3 of the same year when the pond was drained.

On November 12, 1993, Václav Dlouhý, who made a living through selling porn movies, was found dead in his apartment in Letňany. He was hogtied and the apartment was again robbed. Roubal later defended himself saying that Dlouhý regularly engaged in sadomasochistic practises.

On March 8, 1994, Roubal committed his last murders. In the evening he came to the ZAPAP car rental office, which was located in the basement of Pod Zvonařkou 2238/4, Prague 2, where he met the owner Petr Kurdna, Peter Magdolen and the occasional visitor of the taxi driver Jiří Semerád. He tied them all together with their legs around their necks. He then robbed the office and disappeared. Kurdna and Magdolen were strangled with the weight of their own legs, but Semerád managed to get out of the bondage and call the police. On March 30, Roubal was arrested.

Conviction

The trial began in 1996. Many scandals surrounded it, one of them being that Judge Jiří Horký forgot to prolong Roubal's detention and he had to be released on September 30, 1997 from the remand prison. Horký's mistake was fixed by police officers who arrested Roubal for suspicion of other crimes (death threats to witnesses, members of the Prison Service and prosecutors) before the prison gates in front of television cameras. In addition, it was suspected that Roubal would flee to Switzerland (there was a request for asylum lodged there). For misconduct, the judge was later punished by a disciplinary panel of the High Court with a twenty percent reduction in salary. In 1998, Roubal was cleared from the murder charges and sentenced to five years in jail for robberies at the ZAPAP car rental. Semerád, the survivor, was unable to determine if he was the killer.[3]

The end of the trial was accompanied by extensive security measures. Shortly before the judgment of Roubal, in the same courtroom two defendants were almost kidnapped. In the final speech, a public prosecutor who had asked for life for Roubal, announced anonymously that there was an explosive in the courthouse. The building was cleared and searched. It was only after an hour and a half that negotiations could continue.

Roubal has repeatedly accused the police and justice of conspiracy, and even handed a copy of the letter to President Václav Havel to the judges in which he filed a motion to prosecute the Minister of Justice Vlasta Parkanová.

Mrs. Parkanová is the main organizer of the conspiracy against me and, in my opinion, along with other unknown offenders committed the crime of a criminal organization...

Roubal himself described himself as "the life prisoner of Havel's conscience", and he has signed hundreds of complaints. He also has asked the court to bring cardinal Miloslav Vlk and Abbot of the Břevnov Monastery Jan Anastáz Opasek in his case.

Roubal continually denied any responsibility, but the court recognized him as guilty of the murders of Kurdna and Magdolen, for which he was sentenced to 22 years in 1999. He was later convicted of the murders of Suchánek, Strnad and Dlouhý (he was not charged for Heppner, his Russian girlfriend or Horký because their bodies were never found, and if ever found, the sentence would not change) and was sentenced to life imprisonment in 2000.

Roubal stayed in jail with constant complaints. In 2010, he sued the VZP insurance company for refusing to provide self-supporting stockings for varicose veins. He also accused the prison service which, according to him, gave him improper treatment worsening his state of health. After each defendant, he claimed 200 thousand crowns as compensation. He also filed a lawsuit with the Ministry of Justice that the prison service had improperly imposed a five-day isolation on his prison service, allegedly not being able to get a job, so he could make money for special medical aids and alleged walking. His complaints were rejected in November 2012. With his murders, Roubal was one of the leading serial killers in the Czech Republic. Psychiatrists have found that Roubal's IQ is 112.

He died in jail in Karviná on June 29, 2015.[1]

References

  1. CTK (29 June 2015). "Deadly serial killer Ivan Roubal died on life" (in Czech). Aktuálně.cz.
  2. "Pig-breeder and mystic Roubal was sentenced to five murders" (in Czech). SecurityMagazin.cz. 4 April 2018. Retrieved 5 April 2018.
  3. "Ivan Roubal is not a murderer, he decides for years in court" (in Czech). iDNES.cz. 10 December 1998. Retrieved 16 January 2018.

Literature

  • Jaromír Slušný: Black Book of Czech Bestial Assassins, XYZ, Prague 2006, ISBN 80-87021-06-1, pg. 160-176
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