Rudolf Pleil

Rudolf Pleil (July 7, 1924 – February 18, 1958) was a German serial killer known as Der Totmacher (literally: "The Deadmaker"). He was convicted of killing a salesman and nine women, but claimed to have killed 25 people. Many of his crimes took place mainly in the Harz mountain range.

Rudolf Pleil
Born
Rudolf Pleil

July 7, 1924
DiedFebruary 18, 1958(1958-02-18) (aged 33)
Cause of deathSuicide by hanging
Other namesThe Deathmaker
Criminal penaltyLife imprisonment
Details
Victims10–25
Span of crimes
1946–1947
CountryGermany
Date apprehended
April 1947

Early life

Pleil was born on July 7, 1924 in a small village, close to the border of former Czechoslovakia. His father was an industrial worker and communist. After the seizure of control by the Nazis, he was arrested and then moved with his family to the Czech town of Vejprty. At the age of nine, Pleil had to support his parents through border smuggling and was repeatedly arrested. He did not attend school regularly because he had to earn money for his unemployed parents and his sister. His brother died prematurely and his older sister submitted to forced sterilization due to her epilepsy, according to Nazi law. At the age of 13, he had his first sexual experience with a prostitute.

In 1939, when he was 15, he left home and began working as a butcher, but quit after a few weeks. He worked as a shipboy on barges on the Elbe and Oder. Here too, he operated smaller, illegal businesses. In the summer of 1939 he was hired as a machine boy on a merchant ship to South America. After the beginning of the Second World War, he came to the Kriegsmarine, where he was sentenced to one year in prison for theft. On October 26, 1943, he was found unfit for service due to epileptic seizures. After his dismissal worked as a waiter, he continued to suffer from seizures, which is why, according to a medical report, he was supposed to be sterilized. A bomb attack destroyed the operating room a few days before the scheduled appointment. Pleil had previously fathered an illegitimate child, which was taken care of by his sister.[1]

Murders

Pleil became a cook in a labor camp, where he killed and ate cats. After the invasion of the Red Army, he was hired as an auxiliary policeman in his home village. During this time, he shot and killed a Soviet soldier while robbing him.

Pleil married a young woman whom he had impregnated. Around the same time, he began sexually assaulting women at night. He admitted to having committed murders as early as 1945, but this could not be proven.

After the war, he worked as a sales representative, eventually starting his own small business on the side; he was soon fired, however, and his enterprise went out of business. In 1946, he moved from Zöblitz to Zorge in the southern Harz.[1]

Between 1946 and 1947, Pleil worked as a frontier worker in the Harz and helped paying people, mostly women, to cross illegally to East and West. In these two years he raped and murdered at least 12 women, with help from two accomplices, Karl Hoffmann and Konrad Schüßler. On April 18, 1947, Pleil was arrested after the robbery of the Hamburg businessman Hermann Bennen, whose dismembered body was found by the Axthieben in Zorgebach.[2]

Murders

From 1945 to 1950, 13 police officers were murdered in the border area of this region, which led to the fact that police went on patrol only in groups. It was not difficult for frontier workers such as Pleil and his two accomplices to evade the patrols, especially as police authority ended at the zonal border. In addition, individual police departments, such as the Kriminalpolizei and the police, did not cooperate effectively. So it came to an investigation of murders of women at the border area to a more serious one, as a Schutzpolizist from Vienenburg reported that body parts were found in a well there. In fact, the corpses of two women whom Pleil had killed on that mountain were also found. Pleil and his accomplices killed at least three other women before they were arrested.[3] When Pleil worked in a Celle prison as an executioner, he boasted that he had prior experience with killing, and had left two of his victims in the Vienenburg Well. Shortly afterward, he was arrested and charged with the murders of several women in the border area.[2]

Pleil was ultimately convicted of several murders:

1946

  • On July 19, he sexually assaulted and killed an approximately 25-year-old woman in the forest between Walkenried and Ellrich on the edge of southern Harz. He used a hammer to kill her.
  • On August 19, Pleil and his accomplice Karl Hoffmann lured a 25-year-old woman to the grounds of the freight depot in the Upper Franconian border town of Hof. Hoffmann stabbed her in the head with his knife while raping her, before slitting her throat.
  • On September 2, Pleil and Hoffmann met a 25-year-old woman crossing the border at Bergen. Pleil killed her with a fieldstone, and Hoffmann buried the body in the forest.
  • In mid-September, Pleil and Hoffmann met a 25-year-old Black woman from Trappstadt who was going towards the zonal border. Hoffmann robbed and killed her in the nearby forest, decapitating her corpse afterwards.
  • At the end of November, Pleil offered to guide a young woman across the border. In the forest between Ellrich and Walkenried, he suffered from a strong alcoholized epileptic seizure. When he came to, the girl lay next to him, dead.
  • On December 12, Pleil and Schüßler robbed a 55-year-old widow near Nordhausen and beat her with clubs. The woman survived this attack, and was a crucial witness in the trial.
  • On December 14, Pleil killed a 37-year-old woman in the guard booth of Vienenburg in the presence of Schüßler, then threw her body in a well. Five days later, he killed a 44-year-old widow, also throwing her body in the well.

1947

  • On January 16, Pleil and Hoffmann offered a 20-year-old woman to take her to the East Zone. Pleil killed her near the road that runs between Abbenrode and Stapelburg. He then disposed of the corpse in a stream.
  • In mid-February, Pleil killed a 49-year-old woman in a forest near Dudersieben, with Hoffmann robbing the corpse.
  • At the beginning of March, Pleil and Hoffmann committed another murder near Zorge in the Soviet occupation zone. Hoffmann stabbed a young woman to death, and then cut off her head. Her body was later found in the British sector.

The beginning of the trial in the district court of Brunswick was set for October 31, 1950.[4] Pleil had already been sentenced to 12 years in prison on a manslaughter charge by the Landgericht Braunschweig.

Background to the arrest

The most frequent references to Rudolf Pleil came from the Harz, but also in other regions one knew about him and pointed towards this person. A resident of Hof, who maintained a small pension for returnees in the 1940s and was informed about the conditions on the border, thought that he still had an impressive memory of Pleil.[5]

Pleil's arrest was initially arrested for killing Hermann Bennen during a physical altercation on a border crossing; Pleil had killed Bennen with a hatchet. Bennen was his second male victim. The court found him guilty of manslaughter, as he was heavily intoxicated at the time. If he had been found guilty of murder, he would have received the death penalty. The remaining crimes remained unsolved, for which a superficial approach was shared by the police and judicial authorities. The fact that many of the victims were not from the area was also considered, as they were often people uprooted as a result of the war and post-war conditions.

While in custody in Celle, Pleil finally confessed to further murders. In a memoir titled Mein Kampf - after Adolf Hitler’s autobiography - he claimed to have committed a total of 25 murders, and thus one more than Fritz Haarmann. In the book, he referred to himself as the "greatest murderer".

The accomplices

  • Karl Hoffmann, born in 1913 in Hausdorf, was a tailor of women’s clothing by profession. He was considered brutal and callous, and killed to get stolen goods. He died in prison in 1976.
  • Konrad Schüßler, from Leukersdorf, was an 18-year-old butcher. He was pardoned in the late 1970s.[4]

Trial

The German press covered the trial of Pleil and his accomplices extensively, and it eventually drew international media coverage as well. Pleil enjoyed the attention and talked to several reporters, often exaggerating his crimes. The smiling Pleil confessed in the so-called "Brunswick trial" to the murders of several women, boasting to have allegedly committed a total of 40 murders.[6]

During the trial, Pleil claimed to suffer from mental illness, in the hopes of being institutionalized in lieu of prison. This ploy was unsuccessful, however; three weeks after the start of the trial, on November 17, 1950, Pleil and his two accomplices were each sentenced to life imprisonment for multiple murders.

Death

On February 16, 1958, Pleil hanged himself in his cell.[4]

Witnesses and later analysis

  • Jutta Schultz, at the time a stenographer, described it as follows: Pleil was then only slightly older than she was, and yet it was not possible to estimate his true age. His hair was already very thin, he wore small round glasses and spoke only broken German. However, she noticed that he always had a small folder with him, in which he apparently took notes. He also appeared very self-confident and stated that he was the "dead man". She later said that she did not believe his claims of mental illness: "He was a sadist and has every action before exactly adjusted: I find myself a woman, robbing her and then I make her cold. That was his logic. The guy knew exactly what he was doing."[7]
  • Erich Helmer, a former prison chaplain, remembered that he was allowed to visit Pleil only under official supervision, as Pleil was considered dangerous. Helmer recalled that during one such visit, Pleil sat in his cell crying and showed him a letter from England in which Christian women wrote that they were praying for him. On that day, Pleil gave Helmer three notebooks, in which he had written a kind of autobiography entitled Mein Kampf - in which he boasted of having committed 25 murders. Another notebook bore the title “Without mercy I will kill the child and the old man, and after a hundred years one should still speak of me”.[8]
  • The criminal psychologist Ulrich Zander said in his analysis of Pleil that he was not stupid, but rather very devious. He examined a letter from Pleil and described it as showing a clear picture of Pleil’s narcissism and egomania, particularly in his boasting of having a “special talent” as a "deadmaker".[9]
  • In 2007, filmmaker Hans-Dieter Rutsch directed the documentary film Der Totmacher Rudolf Pleil about the life of Rudolf Pleil for the Das Erste series Die großen Kriminalfälle.[10]
  • Hella Mock, the daughter of one of Pleil's victims, tells in a newspaper article about her mother's diaries.[11]

Literature

  • Wolfgang Ullrich: The case of Rudolf Pleil and comrades. In: Archive for Criminology, Volume 123, 1959, pp. 36–44, 101-110.
  • Christian Zentner : Illustrated history of the Adenauer era. Munich 1984, ISBN 3-517-00845-1 , p 92ff.
  • Gerhard Feix: Death came by mail. From the history of the FRG-Kripo. Publisher Das Neue, Berlin 1988, ISBN 3-360-00197-4.
  • Hans Pfeiffer: The compulsion to the series - serial murderers without mask, Militzke publishing house, OA (1996), ISBN 3-86189-729-6 , (on- line (P. 163 ff.)), Retrieved on May 30, 2014
  • Kathrin Kompisch, Frank Otto: Monster for the masses the Germans and their serial killers. Militzke, Leipzig 2004, ISBN 3-86189-722-9.
  • Kathrin Kompisch, Frank Otto: devil in human form. The Germans and their serial killers. Bastei-Lübbe, Bergisch Gladbach 2006, ISBN 3-404-60571-3.
  • Reinhold Albert, Hans-Jürgen Salier: The "Deadmaker" Rudolf Pleil. In: border experiences compact: the border regime between South Thuringia and Bavaria / Hessen from 1945 to 1990. Leipzig / Hildburghausen 2009, ISBN 978-3-939611-35-6 , P. 277ff.
  • Does the herring have a soul? In: Der Spiegel. No. 29 , 1958 (online - Pleil Memoiren).
  • Wiltrud Wehner-Davin: The case Rudolf Pleil, Totmacher aD, in: Kriminalistik - independent journal for the criminal science and practice 1985, pp. 339–341.

See also

References

  1. Barnstorf, Fritz (August 11, 1950). "The Pleil case". Der Spiegel (in German).
  2. "The Deadmaker Rudolf Pleil". daserste.de. Retrieved September 19, 2013.
  3. Stachura, Jörn (13 August 2013). "Pleil and the bad time". Braunschweiger Zeitung (in German). Retrieved 19 September 2013.
  4. Zander, Ulrich (30 July 2013). "The beasts of no man's land". Braunschweiger Zeitung (in German). Retrieved 19 September 2013.
  5. Hartmann, Andreas; Kunsting, Sabine (1990). Border Stories - Reports from the German No Man's Land (in German). Frankfurt am Main. p. 187. ISBN 3-10-029906-X.
  6. Andresen, Jan Malte (2010). Diary 10 - Preview 2010. Dates, Anniversaries, Remembrance Days, Birthdays (in German). Hamburg, Germany. p. 325.
  7. Stachura, Jörn (June 9, 2013). "At a table with serial killer Rudolf Pleil". Braunschweiger Zeitung. Retrieved September 19, 2013.
  8. Dartsch, Katja (December 21, 2012). "Eye to eye with the Deadmaker". Piener Zeitung (in German). Retrieved September 19, 2013.
  9. Stachura, Jörn (July 26, 2013). "I shook myself in disgust; Interview with Ulrich Zander". Braunschweiger Zeitung (in German). Retrieved September 19, 2013.
  10. "TV movie about the murdering border guards". Braunschweiger Zeitung. October 18, 2007. Retrieved September 19, 2013.
  11. Survivors from the Wesseling reports: Mother fell victim to serial murder on Kölner Stadt-Anzeiger, accessed on November 9, 2017
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