-Caveat Lector-

 http://cgi.pathfinder.com/time/magazine/archive/toc/960902.toc.html
 INTERNATIONAL COVER
  UNSPEAKABLE CRIMES:
   Child Murders Stun Europe
        After the bodies of two young victims
        were unearthed in the backyard of
        Marc Dutroux, an unemployed electrician,
        shocked Belgians began to learn the extent
        of his crimes


http://cgi.pathfinder.com/time/magazine/archive/1996/dom/960902/covereu.html

TIME International
September 2, 1996 Volume 148, No. 11

THE TERROR AND PITY

AFTER TWO KIDNAPPED GIRLS
ARE SAVED FROM A HELLHOLE
AND TWO OTHERS ARE FOUND
DEAD, BELGIUM ERUPTS IN FURY
AT A SEX OFFENDER WHOSE
SCHEMES AUTHORITIES DID NOT
TAKE SERIOUSLY

BY JAMES WALSH

Fourteen months ago, Julie Lejeune and Melissa
Russo, both eight years old, were two happy little girls.
Playing in the fields near home, they stopped at
an overpass to wave with delight at cars streaming
down the highway below. Then they vanished.
No word, no trace, no hint of what might have
happened. The day was June 24, 1995, and their
hometown of Grace-Hollogne, a suburb of Liege in
southeastern Belgium, lay at the very heart of
West European civilization. Nearby is the German city
of Aachen, the seat of Charlemagne's court
1,200 years ago, and just downstream on the River Meuse
is Maastricht, birthplace of the European Union.
At this crossroads of five countries, the heir of such a
proud history, how could two sunny children
simply disappear? Like Eurydice, they seemed to have
been swallowed up by the earth, taken to some
netherworld that mortals could only guess and shudder
at.

All guessing ended last week when the netherworld's
curtains parted, and Belgians sensed that their
homeland had suddenly transformed into the heart
of darkness. Amid an outpouring of grief and rage
unlike anything in recent memory, Belgium buried
its smallest of missing citizens in a pair of white
coffins. The Liege funeral, broadcast nationally
on television, followed a week of one shock,
heartbreak and outrage after another. Police had
dug up Julie's and Melissa's bodies in the backyard of
a house owned by Marc Dutroux, 39, an unemployed
electrician who had no fewer than six houses in
and around Charleroi, some 70 km southwest of
Liege. After interrogation, Dutroux had led authorities
to the burial place and admitted killing an accomplice,
Bernard Weinstein, whose body was found in the
same backyard garden. Dutroux also disclosed a
hideaway where two other abducted girls, ages 12
and 14, were still alive. They emerged pale and
tearful from a homemade dungeon hidden behind a
cellar cabinet. The 14-year-old's mother said her
daughter had been drugged and raped several times,
and the 12-year-old had been sexually attacked as well.

So wrenching was the pace of these discoveries
that Belgians had not finished feeling relief over the
rescue when they heard of Melissa's and Julie's
fate: starved to death after spending nine months in the
underground dungeon, their food supply cut off
when Dutroux went to jail for another crime. As if all
that were not hideous enough, the jobless handyman
then confessed to the abduction of yet another
pair of girls, An Marchal, 17, and Eefje Lambrecks,
19, friends who had disappeared while vacationing
on the Belgian coast last August. Police said they
had reason to believe these teenagers may still be
alive elsewhere in Europe--perhaps swept up by
an international ring of pedophiles and sex slavers.

Concern for these missing youngsters intensified,
and Europeans in general recoiled in horror from the
tale. It exposed a macabre underground of child
molestation that most people like to think could not
exist--at least not in placid, enlightened Europe.
What revolted public opinion most, however, was the
way authorities had so mishandled these cases.
They had long known about the prime suspect and his
prior record, could have seen that he lived far
beyond his ostensible means and even searched his
premises more than once. Yet they inquired only
in a desultory way, and they cold-shouldered the
victimized families' anxious inquiries and offers to help.

A convicted rapist, Dutroux was paroled in 1992,
just three years after his sentencing to 1312 years on
multiple charges of kidnapping, unlawful confinement
and sexual violation of five girls ages 12 to 19.
The grounds for his release: good behavior. As
recriminations engulfed the Justice Ministry last week,
the police got scorched as well. Leaked documents
disclosed that investigators had received tips about
Dutroux's designs on children as long as three years
ago, and that late last year they had visited the
house where Melissa and Julie were being held
captive. The visitors left when Dutroux told them the
children's voices they heard were those of his own kids.

"The system is worthless," 36-year-old Jean-Denis
Lejeune, Julie's father, told TIME last week. "All
we can hope for now," he said, "is that their deaths
will have served a cause." In fact, throughout 14
months of searching for the little girls, their parents
had complained so outspokenly about police foot
dragging and seeming indifference that the case
became a national cause celebre. Gino Russo, a
steelworker, appealed for help in press and broadcast
interviews. Lejeune, an auto mechanic, made
trips abroad with Russo to Morocco, Spain, Mexico,
Canada and several times to the Netherlands, in
pursuit of possible sightings. The girls' images were
put on the Internet, and posters flooded the region.

As the bodies of the two girls were brought home,
Russo declared about law enforcers, "They had nine
months to find them alive, and they are handing them
back to us today dead from starvation." Public
clamor arose for restoration of the death penalty
and for a shake-up of the criminal-justice system, in
particular of methods of parole. The sentence
mitigated for Dutroux stemmed from the 1985
abductions of the five girls. On each occasion he
had held his victim for 24 hours, inflicted torture, then
let her go. A case had also been brought against
him for the 1983 rape and torture of a 50-year-old
woman, who told police he had inserted a razor
blade into her vagina. Those charges were later
dropped for lack of evidence.

The heaviest opprobrium fell on Melchior Wathelet,
who was Justice Minister at the time of Dutroux's
early release. In his defense, Wathelet pointed out
several unwelcome facts: that Belgian prisons are
scandalously overcrowded, resulting in contradictory
public pressures to lower the prison population
while ensuring that criminals stay behind bars; that
Dutroux had actually served nearly half his full
term, since three years spent in jail before the 1989
trial counted as part of the sentence; and that as
Justice Minister, Wathelet had approved parole
only on the weight of a 4-2 recommendation by
advisers, mainly corrections officials and social workers.

At that, he said, he had appended a handwritten
note to Dutroux's file: "Follow very closely."
Nonetheless, social workers followed up only
perfunctorily. The last report, dated July 27, noted
nothing special except marital frictions between
the man now reviled as the Monster of Charleroi and
his wife, former schoolteacher Michele Martin.
One ghastly feature of the case is that this couple
managed outwardly to maintain a semblance of
normal family life with three young children, when all
the while Dutroux was apparently contriving
nightmares for innocent youngsters. What ought to have
set off alarms was this welfare recipient's life-style.
Besides the six houses in his name, he owned a
variety of cars and vans and associated with shady
types, including Weinstein and a vagrant named
Michel Lelievre, the man who allegedly let Julie
and Melissa starve early this year as Dutroux served
four months in jail on charges connected with a car-theft ring.

By Dutroux's account, these two accomplices
also carried out the actual kidnapping of the
eight-year-olds. The mastermind told interrogators
that he paid the sidekicks the equivalent of $1,600 to
get a girl, after he had fixed up a cell. A police
informant related that Dutroux prescribed a simple
technique: "You just put your hand over their mouth.
Once they're in the car, they can't get out because
of the child-security systems." When two girls were
brought to him, he supposedly snapped, "The cage
isn't ready." The police tipster's story that Dutroux
was quoting prices for abducted children, ranging
from $3,200 to $4,800, suggested an organized ring
of pedophiles, as did the police discovery of 300 to
400 videotapes, clearly intended for sale in the
lucrative black market in such merchandise. "That
indicates this was not a family enterprise," said
Marie-France Botte, Belgium's leading campaigner
against child prostitution. Prosecutor Michel Bourlet
said Dutroux was among those who could be seen
on the tapes making sexual use of underage girls
and declared, "All those who have been identified on
the videos will be prosecuted." With backhoes,
jackhammers and drills, investigators took apart
Dutroux's other houses, finding in one basement
a trench of cells that may have been a holding tank for
victims. Besides Dutroux, Lelievre and Martin,
who have been charged in connection with the
kidnapping of the two rescued girls, three other
people have been charged or arrested.

These discoveries lent more credence to the
families' long-asserted suspicions of a pedophile ring, a
theory the police had refused to consider. Says
Lejeune: "We were told from the beginning that
pedophile rings do not exist here. Other
investigators from other jurisdictions were eager
to collaborate, but we were told this could be a sensitive
issue to the investigators already working on the case."
Although the families felt sure their children were
alive, detectives argued that the abductions were
probably the work of a lone psycho who had
disposed of the bodies. Says Victor Hissel, a Liege
lawyer who has helped the families: "I'm convinced
that after a few weeks the police were looking
only for cadavers. That's why they didn't find the
girls when they searched Dutroux's house.

"It was a disaster," concludes Hissel, who kept
petitioning for greater access to the case files--only to
be repeatedly put off, rejected or fed small bits.
"The criminals have more rights to see the files than
the victims or their families," he notes, adding,
"That's not right. It's the families' obligation to help--they
know their children better than anyone." The
case's most tragic aspect was the investigators' visit last
December to Dutroux's home in the Charleroi
suburb of Marcinelle, an instance in which the girls may
have been drugged or frightened into not crying
out. Their parents were heartsick to learn that had they
been present, the sound of their voices could have
produced a response. Says Russo: "If the authorities
had listened to us, we might have been able to
save our children."

Still in need of saving are the two teenagers who
disappeared on the night of Aug. 22, 1995, when they
were sharing a holiday bungalow with friends near
Westende. An and Eefje, who came from the town
of Hasselt, went off to the seaside resort of
Blankenberge to see a show at a casino. On their return
journey the tram terminated at Ostend because
of the late hour. The motorman saw them off the car
and urged them to take a taxi. That was the last
seen of them. Their housemates raised an alert the
next afternoon, but until Dutroux's confessions,
nothing further had turned up.

All along, apparently, police around Charleroi
had harbored evidence of the paroled child molester's
criminal stratagems. In 1993, leaked reports last
week asserted, a tipster told them Dutroux was
preparing to get back into the abduction business.
The informant said Dutroux was creating a basement
cell to hold kidnapped girls before shipping them
abroad. By July 1995 police reportedly put questions
about the basement work to Dutroux, who said
he was just fixing up the place.

In early August last year, before An and Eefje's
kidnapping, authorities received yet another tip about
Dutroux's conspiracy and his quotation of prices
for abducted girls. At the end of the month,
investigators inspected one of his houses, but in
connection with their probe into a car-theft ring. Then
came the December search, at the house where
Julie and Melissa were. The check was occasioned
by a strange development: at his own place,
Weinstein, described by neighbors as "gentle Bernard," had
been involved in a police raid that exploded
into a shoot-out, which he escaped. Inside were found
three beaten, captive adults--two men and a
woman who had purportedly stolen trucks for Dutroux and
Weinstein but refused to give up the booty.
Dutroux was arrested and jailed for four months on the
charge of theft with violence.

By Dutroux's account, before reporting to prison
for his short stretch, he paid drifter Lelievre $1,600 to
make sure his two abducted eight-year-olds were
kept fed. The steward supposedly provided food for
only six weeks and then shirked the job. When
Dutroux got out in March, he says, one of the little girls
was already dead and the other so close behind
that she practically gave up her young life in his arms.
Around the same time, he admits, he killed
Weinstein, burying the "double-crossing" confederate
drugged but alive. As for the girls, their bodies
were so well preserved by clay surrounding them that
clear signs of sexual assault remained.

The investigators' big break came in pursuing
the disappearance of the two girls who were rescued on
Aug. 15 from the Dutroux dungeon in Marcinelle.
The 12-year-old vanished last May 28 while riding
her bike to school in Kain, a village near Tournai,
northwest of Charleroi. A little more than two months
later, on Aug. 9, the 14-year-old disappeared while
standing in front of a public swimming pool in
Bertrix, near Neufchateau, some 80 km southeast
of Charleroi. This time authorities canvassed the
neighborhood at once. A nun reported seeing a
noisy white van. A teenage boy also saw a white van,
with a disreputable-looking driver. The lad, it turned
out, had a hobby of trying to memorize the
numbers on registration plates, and he rattled off
a sequence. After changing the order of a couple of
digits, police running a trace came up with Dutroux.

The electrician and his wife were picked up
for questioning on Aug. 13, and a mystery man, real estate
agent Jean-Michel Nihoul, was later detained
for associating with Dutroux. Finally the main suspect
broke down under questioning. "I'm going to take
you to the girls," he said, proceeding to show where
they were held, still alive but shattered, in a
white-painted concrete "cave" measuring 2 m by 3 m. The
cell was cleverly concealed by sliding doors behind
a basement cabinet. Front-page news celebrating
the girls' rescue quickly changed to national mourning
when Julie and Melissa were found.

REVULSION! proclaimed the one-word banner
headline on a Belgian newspaper. Discovery of all the
past slipups, botched inquiries and missed leads
compounded sorrow with fury at the criminal-justice
system. As the dismaying disclosures piled up,
suspicions grew that something more sinister than
bureaucratic bungling was to blame. "It's clear
that internationally--and that includes Belgium--for sex
trafficking in children to work, offenders have
to have protection. There must be political and financial
support," said child advocate Botte. "It wouldn't
be surprising to discover that important people in
Belgium and in Europe are implicated in the system."

Some credit was due to the Belgian Central
Bureau of Information's new unit to coordinate
missing-persons inquiries: it pitched in with
quick action following the most recent disappearances. Yet
Europe was not yet ready to give credit, much
less to forgive and forget. At Julie and Melissa's funeral
last week, government officials who turned up
at St. Martin's Basilica in Liege had to find their own
seats in the packed house. Thousands of
weeping citizens lined the cortege's route from
Grace-Hollogne as the tragic motorcade crept by.
Amid a sea of flowers, the children were buried in a
private cemetery, side by side, getting all the
official attention they had not won in life.

--Reported by Jay Branegan/Grace-Hollogne,
Catherine Kotschoubey/Brussels and Rhea
Schoenthal/Bonn


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Any person can stand adversity,
The true test is to give a person power.
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