Bruno Lüdke (born 1909, Köpenick, Ger.—died April 8, 1944, Vienna, Austria) was a German serial killer who may have murdered more than 80 people. Although he is commonly regarded as continental Europe’s deadliest serial killer, some criminologists have questioned the scale of his activity, maintaining that many of his confessions were coerced by police.
Lüdke was a drifter and a petty thief with powerful sadistic urges. His murders, which often involved sexual crimes, began in 1928 and continued for 15 years. Many notorious cases of serial murder took place in Germany in the 1920s, perhaps because the economic and political chaos of the period made it easy for killers to find victims whose disappearance would not be quickly noticed. Killers such as Peter Kürten attracted enormous media attention, and serial murder became a common theme in German popular culture. Lüdke was unusual, however, in that he reportedly continued to kill well into the Nazi period—a time when one would expect policing to be more effective.
Characterized as a “mental defective,” Lüdke was sterilized under the Nazi government’s eugenics policies. In 1943, following his arrest on a charge of murder, Lüdke confessed to numerous other killings, claiming that most of them had been sexually motivated. Nazi authorities sent him to a Vienna hospital, where he was subjected to medical experimentation that caused his death in 1944.