Marcel Petiot

French serial killer
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Quick Facts
Born:
Jan. 17, 1897, Auxerre, France
Died:
May 26, 1946, Paris (aged 49)

Marcel Petiot (born Jan. 17, 1897, Auxerre, France—died May 26, 1946, Paris) was a French serial killer who preyed on Jewish refugees attempting to flee France during the Nazi occupation. His crimes were the inspiration for Henri Troyat’s novel La Tête sur les épaules (1951; “A Good Head on His Shoulders”) and the film Docteur Petiot (1990).

Petiot was unusually intelligent as a child but exhibited severe behavioral problems in school and was expelled several times before completing his education. At age 17 he was arrested for mail theft but was released after a judge determined that he was mentally unfit to stand trial. In 1917, while serving in the French army during World War I, he was tried for stealing army blankets but found not guilty by reason of insanity. Despite his mental state, he was returned to the front, where he suffered a mental breakdown. He was eventually discharged for abnormal behaviour, for which some of his examiners said he should be institutionalized.

Despite his history of instability, Petiot then enrolled in school and eventually obtained a medical degree in 1921. He established a practice in the town of Villaneuve, where he became a popular figure. He was elected mayor in 1926 but was suspended for four months in 1930 after being convicted of fraud. Later one of his patients was murdered, and another patient (who had accused Petiot of the crime) also died mysteriously. Again removed as mayor in 1931, he soon won election as a local councillor, though he lost his council seat after being convicted of stealing electric power from Villaneuve. In 1933 he moved to Paris, where he enjoyed a good reputation as a doctor and continued to commit various crimes.

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During World War II Petiot concocted a scheme to increase his wealth at the expense of Jews wishing to escape from Nazi-occupied France. Offering them help, Petiot injected them with poison, which he told them was medicine to protect them from disease; after watching his victims die, he plundered their cash and valuables and placed their bodies in a basement furnace in his specially soundproofed home. Suspected of aiding Jews and the Resistance, Petiot was arrested in 1943 by the German Gestapo but was released after several months.

In 1944, after the liberation of France, Petiot was arrested, and nearly 30 corpses were discovered in his home. Dubbed “Doctor Satan” by the French media, Petiot claimed that the bodies were those of Nazis killed by the French Resistance. He was subsequently charged with 27 murders and was convicted of 26. At his trial he admitted to more than 60 killings, though he maintained that all the victims were German. He was guillotined in 1946.

John Philip Jenkins