Ulrich Schmidt

Last updated

Ulrich Schmidt
Ulrich Schmidt.png
Courtroom sketch of Ulrich Schmidt during a hearing in the Essen District Court.
Born1957 (age 6667)
Other names"The Holiday Killer"
Conviction(s)
Criminal penalty Life imprisonment
Details
Victims
  • 5 killed
  • 4 survived
Span of crimes
1987–1989
Country West Germany
State(s) North Rhine-Westphalia
Date apprehended
8 August 1989

Ulrich Schmidt (born 1957), known as The Holiday Killer, is a German serial killer and rapist who murdered five women in Essen, West Germany, between 1987 and 1989. He also sexually assaulted four other women, most of whom were critically injured as a result. [1] After he left his camera containing photos of him and his victims at the crime scene of his final attack, he was arrested in 1989, and sentenced to life imprisonment in 1991. [2] Schmidt's moniker was derived from the fact that some of his crimes were committed on public holidays.

Contents

Early life

Little is known about Schmidt's childhood. However, he came from a broken family and had been admitted to different homes from an early age. He also ran away several times. [3]

Crimes

The first known crime occurred in Essen-Stadtwald on the night of 14 May 1987, when Schmidt attacked a 49-year-old woman on the stairs to the S-Bahn platform. Schmidt put his arm around her neck from behind and demanded money at knifepoint. While the woman was searching through her purse, he cut her neck and pushed her down the remaining steps of the platform. Later, the victim was discovered by passers-by, who found help. The woman survived her injuries after undergoing an emergency surgery. [4]

Schmidt struck again on 27 May, one day before Ascension Day. At 11 p.m., Schmidt attempted to rape a 46-year-old pool attendant at the Oase leisure pool at an S-Bahn station in Essen-Frohnhausen. Police arrived at the scene after an emergency call from a passenger who heard the victim screaming. Authorities found the naked corpse of the woman on a meadow below the platform. She had been stabbed 48 times with a screwdriver. [3]

On 8 June 1987, Whit Monday, a 59-year-old woman was attacked by Schmidt at a restroom in Grugapark. Schmidt forced the woman into a stall, where he demanded her money at knifepoint. While trying to tie the victim up, the woman fought back. After a scuffle, Schmidt beat the woman unconscious, bound her hands and legs, and cut her neck, severing her trachea and oesophagus. The woman freed herself after regaining consciousness and reached an ambulance station, from where she was immediately transported to the hospital and survived. [2]

On 5 July 1987, Schmidt murdered a 63-year-old woman who was on her way home between Essen-Kray S-Bahn station and her apartment in Essen-Huttrop. He put his arm around her neck and again demanded money at knifepoint, which the victim immediately handed over to him. When Schmidt started to tie the woman up, she began to call for help, causing him to stab her several times with the knife and flee. The woman was found a short time later by bystanders and taken to hospital but died there almost three weeks later from injuries to the liver, pancreas, stomach, and spleen. [3]

In the early morning of 15 March 1989, Schmidt broke into the house of Elisabeth Fey, 81, in Essen-Holsterhausen, gaining entry by breaking a window. After hitting her several times with a blunt weapon, Schmidt stabbed her to death with a kitchen knife he found in the apartment. He then ransacked the apartment before fleeing the scene. The woman's body was found four hours later by her daughter. [5]

The next murder occurred on Maundy Thursday, 24 March 1989, in the Essen-Margarethenhöhe district. A 19-year-old woman on her way home from the Grugabad metro station was assaulted, bound, stabbed twice in the heart, and then dumped behind a garage complex, where her corpse was discovered by her father. Her body was fully clothed, and no money had been stolen from her. [3]

On 6 June 1989, Schmidt murdered Petra Kleinschmidt, a 23-year-old hall supervisor in an amusement arcade of Essen-Altendorf. Although the young woman was still able to press the alarm button, she bled out from two throat cuts before the police arrived. The victim had been partially undressed. [5]

On 19 June 1989, Schmidt attacked a 41-year-old woman in a parking garage in downtown Essen. As the woman walked to her car, Schmidt wrapped his arm around her neck and demanded money. After receiving the money, he tied up the woman, undressed her, raped her, and stabbed her twice in the throat. After Schmidt left, the victim was able to reach a porters' lodge, where she was rescued.

The last attack happened on 5 August 1989, when Schmidt attempted to rape a 38-year-old geriatric nurse at her apartment in Essen-Rüttenscheid. After the victim called for help, the victim's neighbour rushed to help, causing Schmidt to flee. However, he left his camera, which contained photos of him, his wife, and his victims. [6]

Arrest and conviction

On 8 August 1989, Ulrich Schmidt was arrested near his mother's apartment in Essen. Due to advice from his lawyer, he refused to testify. In the meantime, during a search of his apartment, combat boots matching the shoe prints found at the apartment of Elisabeth Fey were discovered. In four other cases, a connection between the victim and Schmidt could also be established by comparing scent traces. In the controversial procedure, specially trained dogs from the Schloss Holte-Stukenbrock police dog school sniffed out the smell of the Schmidt on objects belonging to the victims. [4]

It was also determined that Schmidt often stayed overnight at his brother's workshop, which was located near one of the crime scenes. One of his jackets was found there. The fibres of Schmidt's matched the fibres found at the crime scene of the first murder. Schmidt also confessed to two fellow inmates while he was in custody. He was eventually found guilty of five murders, three attempted murders, five rapes, one attempted rape, one robbery, and two burglaries. [4]

After nearly two years in custody and 19 days on trial, he allowed his lawyer to tell the court that he no longer disputed the allegations of the prosecution. However, he did not want to speak publicly about his actions and motives, but to instead confide in a psychiatrist. After 43 days of sittings and almost a year of proceedings, Ulrich Schmidt was sentenced to life imprisonment in September 1992. [2]

Related Research Articles

Joachim Georg Kroll was a German serial killer, child molester, necrophile and cannibal who murdered a minimum of eight women and young girls in the Ruhr metropolitan region from 1955 until his arrest on 3 July 1976. He was convicted of eight murders and one attempted murder, but confessed to a total of 14. He was sentenced to life imprisonment on 8 April 1982.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Randall Woodfield</span> American serial killer and rapist

Randall Brent Woodfield is an American serial killer, serial rapist, kidnapper, robber, burglar and former football player who was dubbed the I-5 Killer or the I-5 Bandit by the media due to the crimes he committed along the Interstate 5 corridor running through Washington, Oregon and California. Before his capture, Woodfield was suspected of multiple sexual assaults and murders. Though convicted in only one murder, he has been linked to a total of 18 murders and is suspected of having killed up to as many as 44 people.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Carl Großmann</span> German serial killer, sexual predator and alleged cannibal

Carl Friedrich Wilhelm Großmann was a German serial killer, sexual predator, and alleged cannibal, though it was never proven that he cannibalized his victims. He killed himself while awaiting the end of his trial without giving a full confession, leaving the extent of his crimes and motives largely unknown.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Daniel Camargo Barbosa</span> Colombian serial killer

Daniel Camargo Barbosa was a Colombian serial killer and rapist. He is one of the most prolific serial killers in history and is believed to have raped and murdered at least 72 young girls in Colombia and Ecuador during the 1970s and 1980s.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">David and Catherine Birnie</span> Australian couple convicted of four murders

David John Birnie and Catherine Margaret Birnie were an Australian couple from Perth who murdered four women at their home in 1986, also attempting to murder a fifth. These crimes were referred to in the press as the Moorhouse murders, after the Birnies' address at 3 Moorhouse Street in Willagee, a suburb of Perth.

Martin Leach, is a convicted rapist and double murderer in Australia, and has been described as one of, if not the Northern Territory's worst, killer.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Paul Ogorzow</span> German serial killer

Paul Ogorzow, also known as the S-Bahn Murderer, was a German serial killer and rapist who was active in Nazi-era Berlin between 1939 and 1941, during the height of the Second World War. An employee of Deutsche Reichsbahn, he exploited the regular wartime blackouts in order to commit numerous murders and sex crimes, mostly targeting lone female passengers travelling aboard Berlin's S-Bahn commuter rail system, and solitary housewives whose husbands had been called up for military service. Following his arrest by the Kriminalpolizei, Ogorzow was convicted of killing eight women and executed at Plötzensee Prison.

Beate Schmidt is a German serial killer. From October 1989 to April 1991, Schmidt, who is now a transgender woman, murdered five women and an infant.

Horst David (22 November 1938 – 8 November 2020) was a German serial killer.

Manfred Adolf Seel, also known as the Hesse Ripper, Jack the Ripper of Schwalbach and Alaska, was a suspected serial killer believed to have committed five murders in the Frankfurt Rhine-Main area of Germany between 1971 and 2004, and is currently under investigation for other unresolved deaths. Seel died of esophageal cancer before his alleged crimes were uncovered.

Andrzej Kunowski, known as The Beast of Mława, was a Polish murderer, serial rapist and suspected serial killer. A prolific sex offender in his native country, Kunowski later moved illegally to England, where he murdered 12-year-old Macedonian girl Katerina Koneva in 1997. Sentenced to a whole life order for this crime, he was detained at the HM Prison Frankland until his death in 2009. He remains the prime suspect in the disappearances of three girls between 1992 and 2000, for which he was never charged.

Franz Schmidt was an Austrian serial killer who was twice sentenced to life imprisonment, once for a child murder in 1957 and for a double murder in 1984. Accounting sentences for other convictions up to his release in 2013, he was one of the longest-serving convicts in the country's history.

Robert Lee Walden Jr. is an American murderer, serial rapist and suspected serial killer who attacked several women in Tucson, Arizona from 1989 to 1992, raping four and killing two of them. Sentenced to death on one count and to several life terms for his other crimes, Walden confessed to a third murder after his trial, for which he has never been tried.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hugh Morse</span> American serial killer

Hugh Bion Morse was an American serial killer who committed numerous crimes across the United States during the 1950s and 1960s. With the help of the FBI, Morse was arrested, tried, and convicted on one count of murder in Minnesota, and is known to have committed murders in Alabama and Washington beforehand. He also committed rape, burglary, assault, attempted murder, and child molestation in at least four other states.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Daniel O. Jones</span> American serial killer

Daniel Oliver Jones is an American serial killer who raped and stabbed four young women to death in Kansas City, Missouri, between 1998 and 2001. He was arrested shortly after the final murder, and DNA evidence linked him to the previous crimes, after which he confessed and was given multiple life sentences.

Fyodor Nikolayevich Kozlov, known as The Iskitim Maniac, was a Soviet serial killer and rapist who committed a series of murders in three oblasts from 1976 to 1989. Convicted and sentenced to death for these crimes, he hanged himself in prison before the verdict could be carried out.

John Price Hayter Jr. was an American serial killer. A lifelong criminal, he was convicted of killing a fellow prisoner and two women on three separate occasions from 1953 to 1986 in Texas and Florida. Sentenced to multiple life terms, he died while behind bars for his Florida convictions.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Billy Lee Chadd</span> American serial killer

Billy Lee Chadd is an American serial killer and rapist. Raised by two alcoholics, he began committing crimes at a young age, first getting into trouble with the law for a rape he committed when he was 15. Between 1974 and 1978, he raped and fatally stabbed two women in California. After being arrested for those crimes, he confessed to murdering a man at an apartment in Nevada and a male hitchhiker in Kansas, the latter claim never being verified. Initially sentenced to death for one of his murders, his sentence was appealed, and he was sentenced to life imprisonment at his retrial. He is now serving his sentences at a California state prison.

Andrei Olegovich Kiyko, known as The Sosnovsky Maniac, is a Russian serial killer and rapist who assaulted at least fifteen women in Saint Petersburg from 2004 to 2007, three of whom were fatally injured.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Emanuel Lovell Webb</span> American serial killer (born 1966)

Emanuel Lovell Webb, known as The East End Killer, is an American serial killer who raped and killed four women in Bridgeport, Connecticut, from 1990 to 1993. After the murders were connected and a search for the killer was underway, Webb moved to Georgia, where he raped and killed a woman in Vidalia in 1994. He was convicted of that murder and sentenced to 20 years in prison, being paroled in 2001. He was detained for a parole violation in 2005 and afterwards DNA evidence linked him to the Bridgeport murders. He was extradited to Connecticut and pled no contest in 2008 and was sentenced to 60-years in prison.

References

  1. Höller, Gerd (2022). Lexikon Deutscher Serienmörder (in German). Books on Demand. p. 277. ISBN   9783754384329.
  2. 1 2 3 "Kriminalzeit: "Der Serientäter Ulrich S."" [Criminal: "The serial killer Ulrich S."]. tv14. 8 March 2009. Archived from the original on 24 January 2017. Retrieved 28 October 2022.
  3. 1 2 3 4 "Prozeß gegen Frauenmörder begann". Die Tageszeitung: taz (in German). 9 October 1991. p. 6. ISSN   0931-9085 . Retrieved 28 October 2022.
  4. 1 2 3 "Der Feiertagsmörder" [The Holiday Killer]. Westdeutsche Allgemeine Zeitung (in German). 17 May 2021. Archived from the original on 2 December 2021. Retrieved 28 October 2022.
  5. 1 2 Ulrich, Andreas (3 October 1999). ""Mörderisches Mirakel"". Der Spiegel (in German). ISSN   2195-1349. Archived from the original on 8 January 2022. Retrieved 28 October 2022.
  6. Heinrich, Daniel (30 October 2018). "Deutschlands schlimmste Serienmörder | DW | 30.10.2018" [Germany's worst serial killers]. Deutsche Welle (in German). Archived from the original on 7 March 2021. Retrieved 28 October 2022.