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Joseph Vacher

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Joseph Vacher
Joseph Vacher wearing his trademark rabbit-fur hat
Born(1869-11-16)16 November 1869
Died31 December 1898(1898-12-31) (aged 29)
Cause of deathExecution by beheading
Other namesThe French Ripper[1]
The South-East Ripper
Details
Victims11–27
Span of crimes
1894–1897
CountryFrance
Date apprehended
4 August 1897

Joseph Vacher (16 November 1869 – 31 December 1898) was a French serial killer and necrophile, sometimes known as "The French Ripper"[1] or "L'éventreur du Sud-Est" ("The South-East Ripper") owing to comparisons to the more famous Jack the Ripper murderer of London, England, in 1888. His scarred face and plain, white, handmade rabbit-fur hat composed his trademark appearance. He killed 11 to 27 people, many of whom were adolescent farm workers, between 1894 and 1897.[1][2]

Life

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Early life and teenage years

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Vacher was born as the second youngest of 16 children to illiterate farmer Pierre Vacher (1810–1889). Joseph's mother, Marie Rose Ravit (1825–1882), was Pierre's second wife after his first wife Virginie Didier, mother of four of Joseph's siblings, died in 1849, aged 30. Pierre and Rose became Joseph's parents at a relatively old age, being 60 and 45 years old respectively. Vacher had a twin brother, Eugène, who choked to death on food during infancy on 15 July 1870.

In the summer of 1884, a ten year old boy named Joseph Amieux was raped and murdered in a neighboring town. Although the crime is blamed on vagabonds, then-14-year-old Vacher would later be suspected as having been the true perpetrator. At age fifteen, Vacher was sent to a very strict Marist Brothers school in Saint-Genis-Laval where he was taught to obey and to fear God. He was meant to be educated there until he was 18, but expelled after only two years, as monks at the school noted Vacher for torturing animals and masturbation. He found work as a restaurant worker and moved in with his sister and her husband in Marcollin. While living with them, Vacher contracted syphilis and had to have his left testicle surgically removed at Antiquaille Hospital six months following the diagnosis.

At age 19, he was reported for the attempted rape of 12-year-old boy on a farm in Beaufort on 29 June 1888. The victim, Marcelin Bourdon, was pushed down while baling hay in a barn, but managed to punch Vacher and alert fellow workers to the scene. Vacher avoided a charge of pederasty as he fled town and his employers were unaware of his residence. He was evicted in 1889 by his brother-in-law due to his aggressive behaviour and went to Geneva to ask to live with his brother Auguste, to whom he admitted to the attempted rape in Beaufort and possibly referenced other violent crimes he committed. In 1891, Vacher was briefly confined to an asylum for voicing persecutory delusions.[3][4]

Army and attempted murder-suicide

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Seeking escape from the intense poverty of his peasant background, he joined the army in 1890, serving in the 60th infantry regiment and reaching the rank of sergeant. Frustrated by slow promotion and no recognition, and infused with the grandiose belief that he was not receiving the attention he deserved, Vacher attempted to kill himself by slicing his throat. This was the first of two suicide attempts.[1] Although he served for under three years, Vacher would later claim to have been a non-commissioned officer with the Zouaves, which, while unsubstantiated and unlikely, was widely repeated in contemporary English-language media. Related to this, Vacher stated he had evaded arrest in 1895 by repeating this claim to a gendarme who was about to book him for running from law enforcement; said gendarme was looking for the perpetrator in a nearby murder committed by Vacher.[5]

In the spring of 1893, while Vacher was stationed in Besançon, he fell in love with a young maidservant, Louise Barant. After his attempted suicide led to a four-month dismissal from the military, he invited her to a meal and proposed to Barant during this first rendezvous. She declined because Vacher said he would "kill [her] if she betrayed [him]" in the same breath, after which he stalked her for several weeks, often begging Barant to give their relationship another chance. Barant eventually accepted an invitation to go to a dance with him, but ran off when Vacher attacked a man who spoke to Barant during the date. Barant moved back to her mother in Baume-les-Dames, so Vacher instead began sending her love letters, again trying to court her, and repeating his marriage proposal. After leaving the letters unanswered for weeks, fed up with his advances and uninterested in his offer, she mocked him and his proposal. This second slight also motivated violence: on 25 June, Vacher entered Barant's home and in a rage, shot her four times and then tried to commit suicide. Both attempts were unsuccessful— Barant was badly injured from a shot through the mouth and grazes by both temples, but survived the shooting, and Vacher severely maimed himself. Shooting himself twice in the head, Vacher succeeded in paralyzing one side of his face, deforming him severely. One of the bullets remained lodged in his ear for the remainder of his life, and the damage to his brain likely exacerbated his existing mental illness. He felt that the shooting damaged him more than physically: he later claimed, after his arrest, that the reactions of strangers to this self-inflicted deformity drove him to hatred of society at large. On 2 August, Vacher was discharged from the army in relation to the attempted killing.

This second suicide attempt led to his confinement to a mental institution, Saint-Ylle Psychiatric Hospital in Dole, Jura, where he often attacked staff, destroyed furniture, and wrote letters to officials, claiming he suffered abuse there. He briefly escaped the facility on 25 August 1893, but was caught a few weeks later, once more fleeing by jumping out of a train window while he was being transported back to Dole. When he was found and brought back two days later, he tried to commit suicide by repeatedly bashing his head against a wall. On 21 December of the same year, a court found him not guilty of the attempted murder of Louise Brabant by reason of insanity, after which he was transferred to the state-run Saint-Robert Psychiatric Hospital outside of Grenoble. He stayed there for three months until his doctors pronounced him "completely cured," and released on 1 April, 1894. In total, Vacher spent less than ten months in treatment.[1][2]

Murders

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Vacher began murdering his victims shortly after his release at the age of 25. During a three-year period beginning in 1894, Vacher murdered and mutilated at least 11 people (one woman, five teenage girls, and five teenage boys). Many of them were shepherds watching their flocks in isolated fields. The victims were stabbed repeatedly, often disemboweled, raped, and sodomized, the latter two occasionally post-mortem. Vacher became a drifter, travelling from town to town, from Normandy to Provence, staying mainly in the southeast of France and surviving by begging or working on farms as a day labourer. Most murders occurred in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region. By most accounts, he was unkempt and frightening, wandering from town to town as a vagrant in filthy clothes, begging in the streets and surviving on the scraps he received from anyone who spared him kindness. The few times he took temporary work such as shepherding from farmers, Vacher would often quit midway and still demand full payment. During this time, he was twice arrested for vagrancy, but never suspected of the killings. He reportedly attributed being undetected by police to God's grace and would regularly pilgrimage to Lourdes to pray to the statue of the Virgin Mary.[4][6]

On 17 October 1896, Vacher passed through the commune of Job, where he knocked on the house of a woman surnamed Gouttebel and asked her for cheese. Gouttebel turned to the kitchen to bring him some food when Vacher threw himself on her when she returned. Gouttebel tore away from his grip and ran outside to alert her neighbours. He was arrested for the assault, but eventually let go after a short stay in jail.

According to a family who let Vacher lodge with them for a few days in July 1897, they took him in after seeing him beg outside of a pub, playing the accordion while tending to a small dog he bought a few days earlier, named Loulette, and a magpie, and he was kind to the couple's four daughters, for whom he performed music and made funny faces. He had reportedly asked their neighbors if there were any open shepherd jobs. On 2 August, Vacher was ousted from the area by locals following an incident at the farm of Régis Blanc. Blanc had given Vacher some stew, which Vacher then tried to share with his dog Loulette. When the animal did not eat, Vacher said "If you don't want to eat this, I will kill you" before grabbing Loulette and throwing her to the ground until the dog's head caved in, doing the same to his pet bird. Blanc gave Vacher a shovel to bury the animals before telling him to leave.[4]

On 4 August 1897 Vacher tried to assault Marie-Eugénie Héraud gathering wood and pinecones in a field in Champis. She fought back and her screams soon alerted her husband Séraphin Plantier who came rushing to her aid. Although Plantier was of slight build and shorter than Vacher, he fought off the attacker, with four neighbours, who were also collecting cinder, hearing the commotion and rushing to Plantier's aid. They locked him in a shed at a nearby house, with Charlon, the homeowner and the four neighbours keeping watch as Plantier left with his wife to get police from the station in the next town six hours away.

Charlon would later recall that Vacher spouted all manner of obscenities at them and ranted about how he had "rights" and wanted to exercise them on "all women". When Charlon joked that Vacher should "pay for the personnel, get married", Vacher took the statement serious, saying "No, I have as many rights as anyone over all women and I want to use them". When Vacher noticed Charlon's wife and children were in the house, he exclaimed "La garce!" ("The bitch!") and continued to scream vulgar insults for the next hours, refusing to interact further with Charlon outside of spitting at him when he got close. Vacher would attempt twice to escape the shed, being prevented by Charlon, who would kick him back. At one point, Vacher asked for a drink. Charlon gave him a glass and while in the process of filling it with fresh water, a few drops landed on Vacher's shoe. This caused resulted in Vacher throwing the glass in Charlon's face, who reciprocated by hitting him with the metal water jug and kicking him to the ground. While Vacher proceeded to threaten Charlon and his family with death and torture once he got out of prison, Charlon asked why he didn't just hire prostitutes instead of attacking random women, to which Vacher replied "No, no, I respect myself more than you do. I don't want the ones you talk about. I need young girls, shepherdesses or cowgirls".[a] Charlon then asked why he attacked Héraud, a middle-aged mother, if he wanted "young girls", with Vacher stating "Oh, I would have much preferred to have the other one, the young girl from Gravin [a nearby farm]. That's the one I had wanted".[b]

When Plantier returned with two officers, Vacher was sitting near a tree, playing his accordion. He was first charged with public indecency, for which he received a three month prison sentence. Vacher wrote extensively about his murders during his stay, attracting the attention of police. Despite their belief that they had apprehended the man responsible, the authorities had little evidence that Vacher was responsible for the series of murders. However, and with little apparent prompting, Vacher confessed to committing all eleven murders, saying, "I committed them all in moments of frenzy."[1][2][7]

Insanity plea

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After his arrest, Vacher claimed he was insane and attempted to prove it in a variety of ways. He claimed that a rabid dog's bite had poisoned his blood, causing madness, but later blamed the quack cure he received for the bite. He also claimed he was sent by God, comparing himself to Joan of Arc. Despite his protestations, he was pronounced sane after lengthy investigations by a team of doctors that included the eminent professor Alexandre Lacassagne. He was tried and convicted by the Cour d'Assises of Ain, the departement where he had murdered two of his victims, and was sentenced to death on 28 October 1898. On 26 January 1898, Vacher broke out of his cell and seriously injured the on-duty guard by battering him with a chair before he was subdued by other staff.[8] Vacher was executed by guillotine at dawn on 31 December 1898. He refused to walk to the scaffold under his own power and was dragged to the guillotine by the executioners.[9]

Victims

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A list of Vacher's known victims.[4][10][11]

During his trial, Vacher was also accused of the following murders:[2][12][13]

  • 18 July 1884 in Eclose: Joseph Amieux (10)
  • 26 June 1888 in Joux: Unidentified woman (c.35)
  • 1 July 1888 in Chambérat: Clémence Grangeon (14)
  • Unknown date between 11 April and November 1889 in Moirans: Augustine-Mélanie Perrin (23)
  • 29 September 1890 in Varacieux: Olympe Buisson (9)
  • 22 October 1892 in La Comelle: Unidentified man, vagrant
  • 10 June, 1893 in La Romieu: Léa-Catherine Marie Anne Gourrange (7)[f]
  • 24 February 1894 in Tencin: Jean-Baptiste Piraud[g]
  • 6-7 December 1894 in Châteaudouble: Jean Honorat (75) and Marianne Perrimond (71), husband and wife (possibly committed with an accomplice)
  • 22-23 July, 1895 in Chamblet: Marguerite Renaud (66)
  • 7 September 1895 in Autun: Francine Rouvray (30s)
  • 22 September 1895 in Four: Madeleine Martelât (64)
  • 24 September 1895 in the arrondissement of Die, close to Bourdeaux and Dieulefit: Unidentified woman (18-20) (admitted by Vacher in court)
  • 22 December 1895 in La Baronnière, near Guéret: Unnamed elderly woman
  • May-June 1896 in Tain: Unidentified man, vagrant
  • 22 August 1896 in Reims: Maria Clement (17)
  • 6-7 September 1896 between Chambost and Sain-Bel: Antoine Bonassieux, chicken farmer
  • 22 September 1896 in Allègre: Marie Monatte (60), washwoman
  • 26 September 1896 in Moux: Mme Charlot (70s)
  • 29 October 1896 in Parnans: Marie Ageron (65)
  • 11 Novemer 1896 in Brive: Louradour, soldier
  • 23 November 1896 in Baume-d'Hostun: Unnamed elderly woman
  • February 1897 in Couloubrae near Lacaune: Louise Farenc (née Loup; 40)
  • 22-23 February 1897 in Lacaune: Célestin Gautrais (39), vagrant from Bourberain
  • 18 March 1897 in Belfort: Adrienne Reuillard (9)[h]
  • 5 April 1897 between Vienne-le-Château and Binarville: Thérèse Ply (19), woodworker
  • 11 April 1897 in Les Haïes: Geneviève Heymein-Benoît (née Cadet, 68)
  • 1 May 1897 between Chaumont-la-Ville and Vrécourt: Jeanne-Elise-Clémentine Henrion (14), seamstress
  • 18 May 1897 in Communay: Francois Castigliano, busker, originally from Alpette, Italy (66)[i]
  • 6 July 1897 in Volvent: Jean Marie Lagier (née Faure; 60)
  • 23-24 July 1897 in Coux: Mélanie Victoire Laville (née Vianet; 61) (possibly committed with an accomplice)

In addition to Louise Barant, Vacher was alleged to have made the following murder attempts:[2]

  • 1 July 1888 in Saint-Pal-de-Chalençon: Unidentified female sherpherd (occurred after the Grangeon murder)
  • 17 May 1894 in Roches: Victorine Gay (née Gueyfier; 55), gardener (also attempted rape)
  • 18 May 1894 in Roches: Mme Eydan, gardener (also attempted rape)
  • 19 May 1894 in Roches: Mélanie Pallas (née Jay), gardener (also attempted rape)
  • 31 March 1895 in Saint-Fons: Antoinette-Augustine Marchand (28), saleswoman
  • 14 April 1895 in Lyon or Dijon: Unnamed female orange vendor (also attempted rape)
  • 15 or 20 August 1895 in Belley: Alexandre Léger (7), shepherd
  • 25 February 1896 in Nouans: Mlle de L. (38) (also attempted rape)
  • 1 March 1896 in Noyen: Alphonsine Derouet (11) (also attempted rape)
  • 30 September 1896 in Varenne-Saint-Honorat: Alphonse Rodier (13), shepherd
  • 26 April 1897 in Graffigny: Léonie Soyer (18), glovemaker
  • 1 May 1897 in Daillecourt and Vrécourt: Blanche Humbert (15), shepherd, and Mme Henriot
  • 18 July 1897 in Rochemaure: Mme Siratat
  • 20 July 1897 in Baix: Mme Malarte and her son
  • 21 July 1897 in Darbres: Marie Vantalon (28), Henri Marnas (8) and Louis Delhomme (14), shepherds
  • 25 July 1897 in Valettes near Flaviac: Maria Pradal (18-20), silk factory worker
  • 4 August 1897 in Champis: Fanny Issartel (16), shepherd[j]

Additionally, Vacher is suspected to have committed serial rapes in the departements of Drôme, Puy-de-Dôme, and Isère. A rape against a female juvenile in Brioude during December 1896 was linked to Vacher.

Also, on 31 July, 1896, while in Précy, Vacher went to the home of a ferryman named Abel Sandrin, with whom he had an unspecified dispute, and started a fistfight. Sandrin deflected each blow and retaliated with punches of his own, which left Vacher bloodied while Sandrin remained unharmed.

American newspapers would somewhat exaggerate Vacher's killings, claiming the number of victims to be as high as 38.[15] The newspapers also named victims that are not mentioned in surviving French newspapers nor alleged by court or investigators.[k] One of the most widely shared, yet unconfirmed cases of this kind is the supposed murder of a French nobleman, named only as the "Marquis de Villeplaine", who had fallen victim to a fatal robbery during a park walk near the French-Spanish border. After his execution, it was widely reported by the same sources that Vacher was a self-admitted anarchist and his murders related to his "oppos[ition] to society, no matter what form of government may be [sic]".[5][8]

Legacy

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Vacher's place in French social history is similar to Jack the Ripper's place in British social history.[1][2]

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  • In 1976 French filmmaker Bertrand Tavernier made a film called Le juge et l'assassin (The Judge and the Murderer) that was inspired by Vacher's story. The name of the murderer, played by Michel Galabru, is slightly changed into "Joseph Bouvier" (in French, the words bouvier and vacher describe the same profession, herdsman).
  • In the 1949 novel The Sheltering Sky by Paul Bowles, in a private dialogue with her husband Port, the character Kit Morseby says of the Eric Lyle character: "He looks like a young Vacher".
  • In the episode "Probable Cause" of the TV series Castle, serial killer 3XK uses Vacher's name as an alias.
  • In the film Psychopathia Sexualis Vacher is the first case study of a sexual mental illness presented.
  • In the video game Genshin Impact, the character "Vacher" (Marcel) during the Fontaine Archon Quest is inspired by the real-life Vacher.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ French: "Non, non, je me respecte plus que toi. Je ne veux pas de celles dont tu parles. Il me faut des jeunes filles, bergères ou vachères."
  2. ^ French: "Oh, j ’aurais bien préféré avoir l'autre. La jeune fille du Gravin. C’est celle-là que je voulais."
  3. ^ Some sources describe her as also moonlighting as a sex worker
  4. ^ Some sources mistakenly identify this victim as male, mistaking Rosine with her 13-year-old brother Alphonse, whom Vacher had planned to attack on 30 September, but relented due to the arrival of other workers
  5. ^ He is sometimes mistakenly identified as "Bully". This comes from reporting regarding previous victim Claudius Beaupied, who, before being identified, was rumored to be a 17-year old boy named "François Bully". It was later used by Vacher as mockery in a letter to the investigating judge. Due to the relative infamy of the letter in the case, American media ended up incorrectly attributing the name to Vacher's final victim, as his killing was more prominent.
  6. ^ Generally subject to dispute due to the long distance between Besançon and La Romieu, taking around 13 days back and forth on foot, although not impossible to rule out as there is a 15 day gap between the killing and Vacher's later murder-suicide in Baumes-de-Dames
  7. ^ Although the location fits, being near Grenoble, Vacher was still institutionalised at the time, albeit with much laxer security with no surviving protocol records about his movements
  8. ^ 1897 census records listed a Adrienne Amélie Reuillard of Belfort as being aged 4 years and 6 months
  9. ^ Supposedly Vacher stole his accordion from Castigliano, although his death was reported as an accident in Le Journal de Vienne[14]
  10. ^ Vacher initially intended to abduct another shepherd, 12-year-old Fanny Lebrat, from a neighbouring farm on 1 August, but relented after a boy told him his brothers were present too
  11. ^ From the New York Journal and Advertiser, apparently quoting "Courrier de Lyon" and claiming a total of 14 confirmed victims (unique names only): Philomenc Lozere (18), 1889, Marie Terrier (16), 1890, Attalle Pedron (14), 1891, Nanette Poirier (11), 1891, Gabrielle Maret (14), 1892, Severine Troncon (14), 1893, Armande Rosier (17), 1893, Suzanne Flairet (14), 1894, Llzette Tliiriot (14), 1894[16]

Citations

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g Bouchardon, Pierre, Vacher l'éventreur, Albin Michel, 1939
  2. ^ a b c d e f Lacassagne, Alexandre, Vacher l'éventreur et les crimes sadiques, 1899 On-line (French)
  3. ^ Thadeusz, Frank (21 January 2011). "The Original Sherlock Holmes: How a French Doctor Helped Create Forensic Science". Der Spiegel. ISSN 2195-1349.
  4. ^ a b c d Starr, Douglas (November 2011). The Killer of Little Shepherds: A True Crime Story and the Birth of Forensic Science. ISBN 978-0307279088.
  5. ^ a b "RIPPER PUT TO DEATH: Murdered and Mutilated More Than a Score of People". Williamsport Sunday Grit. 1 January 1899.
  6. ^ "Isten kegyeltjének tartotta magát a francia Hasfelmetsző Jack". 24.hu (in Hungarian). 16 September 2017.
  7. ^ "VACHER'S HORRIBLE MANIA: Monumental Crimes of the Frenchman Who Killed For the Sake of Killing Not Jack The Ripper". Marion Daily Star. 20 November 1897.
  8. ^ a b "A JACK THE RIPPER'S CAREER ENDED". Sacramento Daily Union. 1 January 1899. p. 1.
  9. ^ Grillet, Clement (19 September 2022). "Sur les traces du Jack l'Éventreur du Sud-Est : l'affaire Joseph Vacher". Retrieved 19 September 2022 – via www.ledauphine.com.
  10. ^ Summers, Montague (15 May 1980) [1929]. The Vampire in Europe. ISBN 978-0850302219.
  11. ^ Gibson, Dirk C. (14 February 2012). Legends, Monsters, Or Serial Murderers?: The Real Story Behind an Ancient Crime. ISBN 978-0313397585.
  12. ^ "Les Vagabonds Criminels". Revue des Deux Mondes. 1899.
  13. ^ Duchamp, Loïc (30 April 2021). "Emission 12 - Sur les traces et l'histoire de Joseph VACHER". Duchamp GénéaServices (in French).
  14. ^ Duchamp, Loïc (30 April 2021). "Emission 12 - Sur les traces et l'histoire de Joseph VACHER". Duchamp GénéaServices (in French).
  15. ^ "HE KILLED THIRTY EIGHT: A Peasant Jack the Ripper Did Murder For The Love Of It". Naugatuck Daily News. 28 January 1898.
  16. ^ "Image 26 of New York journal and advertiser (New York [N.Y.]), November 7, 1897, (AMERICAN MAGAZINE)". Library of Congress. 7 November 1897.

General bibliography

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  • Lacassagne, Alexandre, Vacher l'éventreur et les crimes sadiques, 1899 On-line (French)
  • Bouchardon, Pierre, Vacher l'éventreur, Albin Michel, 1939, 252 p.
  • Deloux, Jean-Pierre, Vacher l'éventreur, E/dite Histoire, 2000 (1995), 191 p. (Main source used to improve this article)
  • Garet, Henri and Tavernier, René, Le juge et l'assassin, Presses de la cité, 1976, 315 p.
  • Kershaw, Alister. Murder in France, Constable, London, 1955, 188 p.
  • Lane, Brian. "Encyclopedia of Serial Killers", Diamond Books, 1994.
  • Koq. La peau de Vacher, Edilivre, 2013, 404p.
  • Starr, Douglas: The Killer of Little Shepherds: A True Crime Story and the Birth of Forensic Science. Alfred A. Knopf, New York 2010. ISBN 978-0-307-26619-4 [hard cover, 300 p], ISBN 978-0-307-59458-7 [eBook]
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