Seewen murder case

Last updated

Grave marker for the victims. Ehrengrab auf dem Friedhof Hornli, Riehen, Basel-Stadt .jpg
Grave marker for the victims.

The Seewen murder case (1976) was one of the biggest Swiss crime cases and is the biggest Swiss murder case. Five people were killed, and the suspect remained unknown after the 30-year statute of limitations expired in 2006. [1] [2]

Contents

Course of events

The killings took place on 5 June 1976 in a weekend house named "Waldeggli" that stood on a meadow by the forest edge near Seewen, Solothurn, Switzerland. Five people were killed with a Winchester rifle, with a total of 13 rounds being fired. Eleven of the shots hit the head of the victims while the other two shots hit the chest and arm of the victims. Robert Siegrist, the son of two of the victims Eugen and Elsa Siegrist-Säckinger, wrote in his book Der Mordfall Seewen that one of the victims was shot four times in the head, with each shot hitting the victim with precision.

The five victims were: [3]

The crime was discovered on 6 June 1976, by the daughter of two of the victims. When the police arrived, they found four corpses in the house with the fifth wrapped in a carpet on the terrace. It is suspected that only Elsa and Eugen Siegrist-Säckinger were meant to be killed, but the killer was surprised at the presence of the other three people and killed them as well.

Suspects

Carl Doser

The criminal investigation department followed many leads and systematically searched for owners of Winchester rifles. However, there was little hope of finding the culprit until the autumn of 1996, when a Winchester rifle was found hidden in the walls of a kitchen of a house belonging to a woman named Doser. The gun, which belonged to Carl Doser, was an Italian Winchester imitation with a short barrel. It was identified as the weapon used to kill the victims.

It was discovered that Carl Doser was a loner living in Basel. [4] He had legally bought the rifle in 1973 from Hofmann & Reinhart Waffen AG. [5] He had earlier been interviewed by the police, but he lied, telling them he had sold the gun on the flea market. However, Doser was not charged because a clear motive for killing the victims could not be found, with no recorded meeting between Doser and the victims. [6] However, the majority of the Swiss population still believe Doser was the killer[ citation needed ].

Adolf "Johnny" Siegrist

A man named Hans Blaser felt that his business acquaintance Adolf "Johnny" Siegrist, who was related to the murdered couple, was the main culprit, with Doser assisting in the murder. Blaser, a combat shooter, claimed that Johnny had asked Blaser for a machine pistol.

The ammunition was bought three weeks before the crime, from R. Mayer AG at the Basler Steinenvorstadt, and was likely to have been bought by Johnny. The shop assistant at R. Mayer AG recalled that the man who bought the ammunition had asked for two packages of Kal. 38 Spez ammunition, with each package containing 50 rounds. The customer had asked for ammunition with extra heavy lead bullets and had asked if the rounds would fit in his Italian Winchester rifles. He had mentioned that he was obtaining the ammunition for someone else.

Johnny was described as being occasionally irascible, and styropore heads that had been shot through were discovered in his flat. It is suspected that his motive for killing the victims was related to his relationship with the victims. In addition, Johnny, who was 1.5m tall and had a voice that sounded like a woman's voice, had an inferiority complex which could have played a part in his motive for killing the victims. It was also suspected that he wanted revenge against the Siegrist-Säckinger couple for having nicknamed him "Dölfeli", which is a belittling name for "Adolf", and "Globi", which is the name of a Swiss children's book's protagonist. He was arrested temporarily but died in the mid-1980s.

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mass murder</span> Act of murdering many people in a short span

Mass murder is the violent crime of killing a number of people, typically simultaneously or over a relatively short period of time and in close geographic proximity. A mass murder typically occurs in a single location where one or more persons kill several others.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hinterkaifeck murders</span> Unsolved 1922 killings in Germany

The Hinterkaifeck murders occurred on the evening of 31 March 1922, when six inhabitants of a small Bavarian farmstead, located approximately 70 kilometres (43 mi) north of Munich, Germany, were murdered by an unknown assailant. The six victims were Andreas Gruber, his wife Cäzilia Gruber, their widowed daughter Viktoria Gabriel, Viktoria's children, Cäzilia and Josef, and the maid, Maria Baumgartner. They were all found struck dead with a mattock, also known as a "grub axe". The perpetrator(s) lived with the six corpses of their victims for three days. During this time, they would eat the food in the house, feed the animals on the property, and start fires in the home's fireplace. The murders are considered one of the most gruesome and puzzling unsolved crimes in German history.

Joseph Thomas Schwab, also known as Josef Schwab was a spree killer, who murdered five people in the Top End region of the Northern Territory and the Kimberley region of Western Australia during June 1987. Schwab, a German citizen, was visiting Australia on a tourist visa; the media dubbed him The Kimberley Killer.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ernst August Wagner</span> German spree killer (1874–1938)

Ernst August Wagner was a German teacher with depression who became a mass murderer when on 4 September 1913 he killed his wife and four children by stabbing in Degerloch. He subsequently drove to Mühlhausen an der Enz where he set several fires and shot 20 people, of whom at least nine died, before he was beaten unconscious by furious villagers and left for dead.

The Nighttime Killers is the media epithet for the killers responsible for a string of brutal murders in Kyiv, Ukraine, between 1991 and 1996. Two men, Vladyslav Volkovich and Volodymyr Kondratenko were arrested and charged with 16 murders. Most victims were shot with a .22 sporting rifle and stabbed or bludgeoned with a wide variety of weapons ranging from stitching awls to bricks and iron bars. The killers claimed that they began the murder spree in order to prepare themselves for an eventual career as contract killers, practicing on the homeless, and continued killing for profit and for fun. Kondratenko killed himself in prison during the trial. Volkovich was found guilty and sentenced to life in prison.

Wolfgang Werlé and Manfred Lauber are German half-brothers who were convicted of the 1990 murder of actor Walter Sedlmayr. The murder, and subsequent trial and conviction of Werlé and Lauber in 1993, received extensive media coverage in Germany and elsewhere.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">National Socialist Underground murders</span> 2000s Neo-Nazi serial murders in Germany

The National Socialist Underground murders were a series of racist murders by the German Neo-Nazi terrorist group National Socialist Underground. The NSU perpetrated the attacks between 2000 and 2007 throughout Germany, leaving ten people dead and one wounded. The primary targets were ethnic Turks, though the victims also included one ethnic Greek and one ethnic German policewoman.

The Feme murders were extrajudicial killings that took place during the early years of the Weimar Republic. They were carried out primarily by far-right groups against individuals, often their own members, who were thought to have betrayed them.

In the Rupperswil murder case, four people were found dead on December 21, 2015, after a house fire in Rupperswil, Aargau in Switzerland. The perpetrator, Thomas Nick, was found guilty in March 2018 and sentenced to life imprisonment.

On July 30, 2016, a mass shooting occurred during a house party held by students of the University of Washington and Kamiak High School in the community of Mukilteo. Three people were killed and a fourth was injured. Afterwards, the gunman fled the scene.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2016 Hamburg stabbing attack</span>

The 2016 Hamburg stabbing attack, also referred to as Murder at the Alster or Alster Murder, was an attack on 16 October 2016 in the city of Hamburg, Germany. A 23- to 25-year-old man "of southern appearance" was named as the suspect. On 30 October 2016, the Islamic State (IS) claimed responsibility for the attack, though police later said a terrorist background or motive for the attack was "unlikely".

The Saw-Killer of Hanover is the name of an unidentified German serial killer, who is supposedly responsible for murdering and dismembering at least four women and two men, whose body parts were found in Hanover and the surrounding area in the 1970s. None of the victims have been identified, and the case is also referred to as The Found Corpses of Hanover. The "SOKO Torso" Unit of the Hanoverian police, directed by Commissioner Günter Nowatius, investigated the murders at the time.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Walter Lübcke</span> German politician (1953–2019)

Walter Lübcke was a German local politician in Hesse and a member of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU). On 2 June 2019, he was assassinated at his home by a neo-Nazi extremist. Stephan Ernst was arrested on 15 June 2019 and confessed to the crime on 25 June 2019. The Federal Prosecutor's Office classified the murder as a political assassination.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Murder of Walter Lübcke</span> 2019 murder of a German politician

The murder of Walter Lübcke occurred on 2 June 2019 in Wolfhagen-Istha, Germany, near the city of Kassel. Walter Lübcke, the head of the public administration of the Kassel region, was killed in front of his home by a shot to the head at close range. On 15 June 2019, right-wing extremist Stephan Ernst was arrested as the prime suspect. On 25 June 2019, he made a confession, which was recanted on 2 July 2019. Ernst was convicted of murder on 28 January 2021.

On September 18, 2021, a fatal attack with a firearm on the 20-year-old employee of a gas station was carried out in Idar-Oberstein, Germany. The perpetrator, a 49-year-old man, had been requested by the employee to wear his surgical mask as mandated by the German government in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The shooting received a lot of public attention and was related by some to the increasing radicalization of the so-called Querdenken movement or to the recent rise of right-wing conspiracy theories, while criminal psychologists pointed to the possibility that the shooter may have been driven by personal or psychological problems. In September 2022, the perpetrator was convicted of murder and sentenced to life in jail; both prosecution and defence lodged appeals against the verdict.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Heidelberg University shooting</span> 2022 mass shooting in a German university

The Heidelberg University shooting occurred on 24 January 2022, when an 18-year-old male student, Nikolai G., opened fire on a crowd during an ongoing lecture in Heidelberg University in Baden-Württemberg, Germany, killing one student and injuring three others. The shooter then fled the scene and later committed suicide by shooting himself.

Souzan Barakat was a 13-year-old Yazidi girl who was shot dead on December 5, 2011, by her father Ali Askar Hasso Barakat on the street in Stolzenau, Lower Saxony, Germany.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hans Anhalt</span> Auschwitz guard

Hans Anhalt was a member of the Nazi Party who served in the SS. During World War II, he was stationed in Auschwitz concentration camp. There, Anhalt personally murdered multiple prisoners, selecting them to be gassed or experimented on. After the war, he settled down in East Germany, until being exposed in 1962. Anhalt was sentenced to life in prison, where he died in 1975.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Murder of Keira Gross</span> 2018 murder in Berlin, Germany

Keira Gross was a 14-year-old German girl who was stabbed to death at her home in Berlin on 7 March 2018. In November 2018 15-year-old Edgar H. was found guilty of Keira's murder and sentenced to nine years in youth detention. The murder attracted the attention of the far-right who spread false information blaming immigrants for the killing.

References

  1. Meyer, Adrian; Schwegler, Gabi (13 May 2016). "Bestie von Rupperswil ist gefasst: Die schlimmsten Mörder der Schweiz" [Beast of Rupperswil is caught: The worst murderers in Switzerland]. Blick (in Swiss High German). Retrieved 15 May 2016.
  2. "Chronik der Amokläufer in der Schweiz". Beobachter (in Swiss High German). 8 October 2001. Retrieved 22 July 2023.
  3. "Fünffachmord von Seewen: Auch nach 40 Jahren ungeklärt". Schweizer Radio und Fernsehen (in Swiss High German). 16 May 2016. Retrieved 3 October 2024.
  4. "«Mordfall Seewen» von 1976 bleibt trotz Hinweisen ungeklärt". Schweizer Radio und Fernsehen (in Swiss High German). 27 November 2013. Retrieved 3 October 2024.
  5. Knechtli, Peter (3 June 2001). "Beim "Waldeggli" herrscht Grabesruhe". OnlineReports (in Swiss High German). Retrieved 3 October 2024.
  6. Karpf, Noëlle (21 September 2019). "Ungeklärter Mordfall von Seewen: Dieser Mann glaubt, Mörder und Motiv zu kennen". Solothurner Zeitung (in Swiss High German). Retrieved 3 October 2024.