András Pándy
András Pándy (1 June 1927 – 23 December 2013) was a convicted Belgian serial killer of Hungarian ancestry. He had been serving a life sentence for the murder of his two wives and four children, after he was arrested when his daughter, Ágnes, with whom he had a long-standing incestuous relationship, confessed to being involved in at least five of the murders. Furthermore, in one of his houses the skeletal remains of seven more unknown women and one man were found.[1] A former clergyman, he was dubbed "Father Bluebeard" by some of the Belgian press.[2] He died in the prison of Bruges on 23 December 2013 in the infirmary.[3][4]
First marriage and incest
Pándy met his first wife, Ilona Sőrés, in 1957. In the wake of the communist takeover, they fled from Hungary to Belgium. A year later, daughter Ágnes was born; sons Dániel and Zoltán were born in 1961 and 1966, respectively. A year later, the couple divorced when Pándy accused Ilona of infidelity. She moved away from the house, taking her sons, but leaving her daughter behind, who soon became the victim of an incestuous relationship with her father.
Second marriage and attempted incest
At the beginning of the 1970s, Pándy began courting other women through dating services, often giving them a false name and job description, using the motto "European Honeymoon" in the ads. By the end of the decade, he visited Hungary again, meeting his future second wife, Edit Fintor, a married woman with three children, Tünde, Tímea and Andrea. He seduced the woman, who, according to her then-husband, eloped with Pándy to Belgium.
In 1984, Pándy began his second incestuous relationship with his stepdaughter, Tímea. Ágnes, in a fit of jealousy, tried to bludgeon Tímea to death like the others, but was startled - and stopped. Tímea fled the house, and later emigrated to Canada.
Disappearances
Disappearances began in 1986: first, wife Edit, then her 13-year-old daughter Andrea - Pándy claimed to Edit's lover they moved to Germany. In 1988, his ex-wife Ilona and her sons disappeared. Pándy first claimed they moved to France, then later claimed South America. Finally in 1990, after sending Ágnes to a vacation with his children, Tünde disappeared. Pándy later claimed that he threw her out of the house.
Ágnes's confession
Ágnes bottomed out in November 1997: after reporting her father in 1992 for sexual abuse, she turned herself in to the police, confessing the murders of the disappeared relatives. According to her, she was solely responsible for the murder of her mother Ilona, and took part in the murder of Dániel, Zoltán and Andrea. (She refused to mention Tünde's case.) The modus operandi presented by her was, in two cases, murder by a handgun, and head trauma caused by a heavy blunt object. The corpses were then dismembered, partly dissolved in acid in the basement, and partly taken to a local abattoir.
Arrest, trial and conviction
Pándy was arrested on 16 October 1997 - a date coinciding with a demonstration for the victims of another Belgian serial killer, Marc Dutroux. The case had worldwide media coverage, especially after Pándy's deadpan reaction to his surroundings. Pándy was sentenced to life in prison. When Pándy turned 80, prison authorities began looking to put him in a retirement home.[5]
See also
References
- ↑ "De zaak Pandy: Chronologie van een familiedrama en een onderzoek". Archived from the original on 28 December 2013.
- ↑ Gazsó L. Ferenc (1998). "Nászút az ördöggel". Archived from the original on 24 August 2007. Retrieved September 9, 2007.
- ↑ De Standaard, 23 december 2013
- ↑ Serial killer Andras Pandy is dead
- ↑ Index - Életfogytiglant kapott Pándy