Jean de Koven

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jean de Koven (1915 - July 1937) was a dancer from Boston, Massachusetts who was murdered in Paris, France in 1937. She had been staying with her aunt, Ida Sackheim, in a hotel on the Left Bank,[1] where she disappeared on the afternoon of July 23. Her body was discovered beneath the front porch of a villa at La Celle-Saint-Cloud in December 1937. De Koven was the first of five victims of serial killer, Eugene Weidmann, also known as Karrer, a gang leader who confessed to his crimes and had as many as nine accomplices.

Contents

[edit] Resolution of crime

De Koven resided in Brooklyn, New York prior to going abroad. She taught classical dancing and had trained ballet students in New Jersey schools. She arrived in Normandy on July 19.[2] Prior to her disappearance De Koven was corresponding with a man who resided in another hotel in Paris from which he later moved away.[1] On the afternoon of her disappearance she took her camera and told her aunt that she would return by 8 p.m., in time to go to the opera.[2]

Sackheim received a letter requesting $500 for her niece's safe return which police investigated.[1] Later ransom notes arrived and she received mysterious telephone calls. Police could not locate the contact man even though he advertised frequently in the Paris edition of an American newspaper. By September Sackheim offered a reward requesting information which would lead to the finding of De Koven's presumed abductors.

Police found De Koven's body doubled up in a shallow grave under a porch. They placed it in a coffin and transferred it to a morgue prior to a final burial. Weidmann's other victims were male. They were a rental agent, an Alsatian youth, a theatrical impressario, and a taxi driver. The impressario was lured to his car by one of two female decoys , where he was killed at Neuilly.

[edit] Killer's profile

Weidmann murdered De Koven in July 1937. He was a German who came to Paris the previous March to avoid military service. In 1926, at the age of 18, he emigrated to Canada where he joined a gang that robbed a wheat company's paymaster in Saskatchewan. He was sentenced to a year in prison and was later deported. A native of Frankfurt, Germany, Weidmann served prison time there for assault and robbery before he was released in December 1936.

Weidmann and his helpers preyed on persons who appeared wealthy, primarily American and English tourists. It is thought that Weidmann met De Koven while he was working as an interpreter at the Paris Exhibition. He spoke the English language and the French language fluently. Police traced him to an expensive dance bar, the Pavillon Bleu, in La Celle-Saint-Cloud, approximately a fifteen minute walk from his villa. Weidmann strangled his victims or shot them from behind. He apparently had a fetish for men's shoes, as the four men he murdered were found without shoes.[2]

[edit] Funeral

A funeral service was held for De Koven in the West End Funeral Chapel, 200 West 91st Street, in New York City, on December 31, 1937. Rabbi I. Mortimer Bloom, Minister at Temple Oheb Sholom, performed the ceremony. Bloom knew De Koven from her youth and remarked there was something fine, distinctive, and superior about Jean, even in her childhood.[3]

[edit] Book about the murder of Jean de Koven

"Beaux Tenebres" by Michel Ferracci-Porri (Ed. Normant, 2008 France)

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c Paris Police Seek Dancer, New York Times, August 7, 1937, pg. 7.
  2. ^ a b c U.S. Dancer Slain; Paris Gang Leader Admits 5 Murders, New York Times, December 10, 1937, pg. 1.
  3. ^ Slain Dancer Buried, New York Times, January 1, 1938, pg. 36.