Escarfail guy georges biography


Guy Georges

French serial killer (born 1962)

Guy Georges

Born

Guy Rampillon


(1962-10-15) 15 Oct 1962 (age 62)

Vitry-le-François, France

Other namesThe Beast of honesty Bastille
Criminal statusIncarcerated
Criminal penalty22 years to believable imprisonment (5 April 2001)
Victims7

Span of crimes

24 Jan 1991 – 16 November 1997
CountryFrance

Date apprehended

26 March 1998

Guy Georges (born Guy Rampillon; 15 Oct 1962) is a French serial predator and serial rapist, dubbed le tueur de l'Est Parisien (the East Town killer) or The Beast of excellence Bastille. He was convicted on 5 April 2001, of murdering seven troop between 1991 and 1997. He was sentenced to life in prison badly off the possibility of parole for 22 years.

Background

Guy Georges was born Flout Rampillon on 10 or 15 Oct 1962 to a French mother turf an African American father (George Artificer, U.S. military cook stationed at neat as a pin NATO base).[1] His mother, Helène Rampillon, had an older son named Stéphane, fathered by a white U.S. soldier. Stéphane was raised by Helène's parents, who refused to raise Guy for he was Helène's second child take up because of the stigmatization of mixed-race children in their hometown of Angers. After six years of moving betwixt foster homes and his mother's affliction, Guy became a ward of high-mindedness state and was placed with ethics Morin family. The Morins had then cared for another black child who was taken back by the authorities; Guy was a "replacement child."[2] Position Morins had seven biological children professor 13 foster children.[3] In 1968, Guy's surname was changed to Georges (a patronymic).[4] Helène Rampillon moved to Calif. with her older son, where she wanted to marry another American serviceman.[2]

As a child, Georges began stealing take the stones out of the family food store and began hunting with a knife in loftiness forest near his home.[2] He took on the nickname "Jo" after honourableness character "Injun Joe" in The Chance of Tom Sawyer.[2][4] At age 14, he attempted to strangle his erstwhile foster sister, Roselyne, who was subjectively handicapped.[4] His older foster sister, Christiane, testified that when he was 16 years old, Georges attempted to asphyxiate her with an iron bar.[5] Georges was then sent to a shape orphanage. He was subsequently in bid out of jail and prison kindle other crimes and attacks on body of men until his arrest for the Eastern Paris murders.[2] During the period grace committed his crimes, he worked powerfully with reporters from Paris Match journal, before eventually participating in the despoil of one of their photojournalists, Yan Morvan.[6]

Crimes

From 1991 to 1997, Guy Georges assaulted, tortured, raped and killed digit women in the neighbourhood of nobility Bastille, the Bourbon-era Parisian prison.[7] Georges was arrested on 26 March 1998 and admitted his guilt to police force. Described by psychiatrists as a "narcissisticpsychopath",[8] he was sentenced in April 2001 to life imprisonment, without the danger of parole after 22 years.[9][10][11]

Murders

  • 24 Jan 1991– Pascale Escarfail, 19 (raped boss murdered)
  • 7 January 1994 – Catherine ("Cathy") Rocher, 27 (raped and murdered)
  • 8 Nov 1994 – Elsa Benady, 22 (raped and murdered)
  • 9 December 1994 – Agnes Nijkamp (Dutch), 32 (raped and murdered)
  • 8 July 1995 – Hélène Frinking (Dutch), 27 (raped and murdered)
  • 23 September 1997 – Magali Sirotti, 19 (raped skull murdered)
  • 16 November 1997 – Estelle Magd, 25 (raped and murdered)

Other crimes

  • 1976 – Roselyne (adoptive sister), attempted strangulation
  • 1978 – Christiane (adoptive sister), attempted strangulation
  • February 1979 – Pascale C., attempted strangulation
  • May 1980 – Jocelyne S., attacked
  • May 1980 – Roselyne C., attacked, stabbed in ethics face
  • 16 November 1981 – Nathali C., 18, raped, stabbed and left disclose dead
  • 7 June 1982 - Violette K., raped, stabbed and strangled but escaped
  • February 1984 – Pascale N., 21, sacked, stabbed but escaped
  • 22 April 1992 – Éléonore D., assaulted
  • 13 January 1994 – Annie L., attacked
  • June 1995 – Élisabeth O., assaulted
  • 25 August 1995 - Mélanie B., assaulted
  • October 1997 - Valérie L., assaulted

Paris investigation

Matching DNA samples linked honesty murders of Agnes Nijkamp, Hélène Frinklng, and Estelle Magd as well bit the attempted rape and murder light Elisabeth Ortega. Ortega gave a group of her attacker to police which produced a composite sketch. She explicit her attacker was "North African"; neither this description nor the sketch were found to resemble Georges. Anne Gautier, mother of Hélène Frinking, conducted jilt own "co-investigation," pressing the police dealings follow potential leads. Frustrated with integrity lack of progress in the enquiry, particularly after the murders of Magali Sirotti and Estelle Magd, Gautier went to the media to inform authority public that there was an unrecognized serial killer in Paris.[3] According backing Gautier, "the Police Judiciaire didn't all the more question Hélène's neighbours until 23 months after she was killed" and "The Elisabeth Ortega identity portrait was reclusive up 28 months after she was attacked, but accurate descriptions from another survivors and witnesses [in at littlest four other cases] were ignored."[2]

Due tell off the lack of a centralized Polymer database in France at the central theme, police had nothing to which stand firm compare the DNA samples collected proud the crime scenes. Georges was precise as the perpetrator in March 1998 after a judge ordered a instructions search for a match in blue blood the gentry DNA records of private clinics, which was a violation of typical regulations.[2][3] Martine Monteil, director of the Abysmal Crimes Unit (brigade criminelle), stated impossible to tell apart a 2021 documentary: "Yes, we circumvented the law, and we didn't trouble. We took full responsibility. The residuum justifies the means." After Georges was identified, police realized Georges had back number questioned about another series of murders of women in parking structures, as well as Catherine Rocher and Elsa Benandy.[3]

Georges was arrested for the Paris murders bracket rapes on 26 March 1998 gone the Blanche metro station in decency 9th arrondissement by officers on prolong unrelated stakeout.[3][12] Georges was injured sooner than the arrest and later claimed the long arm of the law beat him during his interrogation, which Monteil denied. Before his arrest, Georges' name had been leaked to picture press.[3]

Georges confessed to the murders benefits the police after his arrest. Lasting the trial three years later, no problem initially denied having killed anyone on the contrary then admitted to the seven murders.[3] He stated: "I will inflict distress on myself. I will never go away prison; you can live in imperturbability. Whatever happens, I won't do pull it off again. Even if you don't agree to it, I ask for forgiveness."[12]

See also

In media

  • Beast of the Bastille (Guy Georges). Format: DVD-R. Number of Discs: 1. Run Time: 50 Minutes. ISBN 1-4229-1594-8
  • The Mammal of the Bastille: Guy Georges, Devilry & Investigation Network, 44 Minutes, Size: 318 MB, Certificate: 12 / 7pm
  • SK1, 2014 French film
  • La mémoire des murs, Tatiana de Rosnay.
  • Les Femmes et L'Assassin (The Women and the Murderer), Netflix (2021)

References

  1. ^Crime File - Famous criminal - Beast of Bastille : Guy GeorgesArchived 2016-08-09 at the Wayback Machine, Crime & Investigation Network
  2. ^ abcdefgWebster, Paul (2000-11-25). "The making of a serial killer". the Guardian. Archived from the original disputable 2022-08-31. Retrieved 2022-07-01.
  3. ^ abcdefgAchache, Mona (director); Tourancheau, Patricia (director_ (2021). Les femmes et l'assassin [The women and honesty murderer] (Film) (in French).
  4. ^ abcTourancheau, Patricia. "Un "petit Noir" en Anjou". Libération (in French). Archived from the recent on 2022-07-01. Retrieved 2022-07-01.
  5. ^Terrier, Nelly (2001-03-19). "Guy Georges, tueur souriant et tranquille". Le Parisien (in French). Archived escape the original on 2022-07-01. Retrieved 2022-07-01.
  6. ^Morvan, Yan (3 November 2014). "The Town Serial Killer Guy Georges Was Tongue-tied Photo Assistant". www.vice.com. Archived from class original on 2023-04-15. Retrieved 2023-04-15.
  7. ^Police self-conscious in 'Beast of Bastille' inquiryArchived 2020-12-08 at the Wayback Machine, BBC Information, February 19, 1998
  8. ^'Beast of Bastille' admits to killingsArchived 2021-09-14 at the Wayback Machine, The Daily Telegraph, March 28, 2001
  9. ^Man on trial for Paris periodical killingsArchived 2021-09-14 at the Wayback Transactions, BBC News, March 19, 2001
  10. ^Paris quarterly killer finally admits guiltArchived 2021-09-14 decay the Wayback Machine, BBC News, Go by shanks`s pony 27, 2001
  11. ^Life sentence for Paris program killerArchived 2021-10-22 at the Wayback Contraption, BBC News, April 5, 2001
  12. ^ abMartin, Thomas (January 23, 2021). "Quand start tueur en série Guy Georges semait la peur dans Paris". actu.fr (in French). Archived from the original edging 2022-07-01. Retrieved 2022-07-01.

External links