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France 24
France 24
National

French serial killer Michel Fourniret dies at 79 in prison hospital

French self-confessed serial killer Michel Fourniret in Reze, France, March 15, 2006. © Fred Dufour, AFP

Michel Fourniret, the French serial killer dubbed the "Ogre of the Ardennes", who was serving two life sentences for murdering eight people, died on Monday aged 79, Paris prosecutor Remy Heitz said. His victims were mostly girls and young women aged between 12 and 22

Fourniret was convicted in 2008 of killing seven women and girls aged between 12 and 22 after raping or attempting to rape them. He died at the La Pitié-Salpêtrière hospital in Paris where he was admitted on April 28 from the nearby Fresnes prison.

His murderous spree spanned from 1987 to 2001. Fourniret, who had admitted a fascination for virgins, was arrested in 2003 after a 13-year-old girl escaped from his van and called the police.

By that time, he was one of Europe's most notorious serial killers. Dubbed the "Ogre of the Ardennes", he committed most of his crimes in the wooded Ardennes region of northern France and in Belgium.

At the time, police missed a series of opportunities to snare Fourniret and the lessons learned helped bring about reforms in the way French police investigate serial murders.

Sordid pact with his third wife

Before his killing spree, he was a bespectacled, chess-playing lover of literature who lived in a sprawling chateau. But then for 15 years, Fourniret roamed eastern France looking for virgins to rape and kill, using his wife to lure young girls to their deaths.

He even boasted of being a "far better" killer than the sadistic Belgian paedophile Marc Dutroux.

Fourniret confessed to 11 murders – including British student Joanna Parish – but has been linked to other disappearances. His youngest victim was a nine-year-old girl who he raped and killed months before he was caught in Belgium trying to kidnap a 13-year-old.

But it was the sordid pact between Fourniret and his third wife, Monique Olivier, that sparked still greater revulsion. She agreed to help him find virgins to rape if he killed her ex-husband.

Hidden gold

He used her to entrap some of his victims and check their hymens to see if they were virgins.

The baleful pair married while Fourniret was still serving his second jail sentence for sexually assaulting young girls.

While in prison he shared a cell with a bank robber from one of France's most infamous gangs. After his release, the robber's wife asked Fourniret to dig up stolen gold buried in a graveyard. But the couple strangled the woman, and used the loot to buy a chateau.

Fourniret later admitted he needed to go hunting for a virgin at least twice a year. And the chateau's extensive grounds became a burial ground for at least two of his victims.

The killer was born on April 4, 1942 in Sedan near the Belgian border in northeastern France. Little is known of his childhood but he served in the French army during the brutal war of independence in Algeria, which was then part of France.

He later worked as a carpenter, electrician and even a supervisor in a school.

Married in prison

His sexual crimes began soon after his return to France, when as a 25-year-old he was given an eight-month suspended sentence for attacking a girl in his native Ardennes region.

His first wife divorced him soon after but he carried on committing sex crimes until 1984, when he was jailed again for attacking a young woman.

After his second wife left him, he placed an ad in a newspaper looking for a pen pal and Monique Olivier replied.

She was waiting for him outside a prison near Paris when he was released in October 1987.

Their first joint attack, barely two months later, set the tone for the others. The couple drove up alongside 17-year-old Isabelle Laville and asked her for directions, persuading her to get into their van and show them the way. She was never seen again.

Olivier's presence, sometimes with their baby son, was aimed at allaying suspicion.

When a girl they kidnapped escaped from his clutches in 2003, Olivier confessed to Belgian police. Fourniret never did kill her ex-husband.

'Under his spell'

Prosecutors said that Olivier was "very much under his spell". But afraid she could get a heavy prison sentence like the one given to the wife of the Belgian Dutroux, she spilled the beans.

The pair were tried in France in 2008, with Fourniret sentenced for life for the murders of all seven of the victims whose bodies had then been found. Olivier, who is now 72, also got a life sentence with no possibility of parole for her complicity.

After close to 13 years behind bars, and in poor health, Fourniret confessed to killing Parish in 2016 and to two more murders two years later.

Last year, the couple – who have divorced – admitted to killing and raping nine-year-old Estelle Mouzin on her way home from school near Paris a few months before their arrest in 2003.

Fourniret collapsed in his prison cell on November 20, only two weeks before police were to start digging for her remains at a remote spot where he said he had buried the child.

The Parisien newspaper reported Monday morning that he was taken to hospital suffering from a heart condition and Alzheimer's, and that doctors had placed him in an artificial coma.

He died in a special secure unit of a Paris hospital Monday after falling ill again in jail last month.

Paris prosecutor Heitz announced an investigation into his death, which is normal procedure in France when a prisoner dies.

(FRANCE 24 with AFP & REUTERS)

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