Beate Schmidt
Beate Schmidt | |
---|---|
Born | Wolfgang Schmidt 5 October 1966 |
Other names | Pink Giant The Beast of Beelitz Beelitz-Murderer |
Conviction(s) | Murder |
Criminal penalty | 15 years in prison and detention in a psychiatric hospital |
Details | |
Victims | 6 |
Span of crimes | 24 October 1989 – 5 April 1991[1] |
Country | Germany |
State(s) | Brandenburg |
Date apprehended | 1 August 1991 |
Beate Schmidt (born Wolfgang Schmidt on 5 October 1966) is a German serial killer and rapist, who killed six people and injured four between 1989 to 1991 in various villages in Brandenburg.
The then-unidentified killer was nicknamed the "Pink Giant" (German: Rosa Riese), from witness descriptions of Schmidt, who stood 190 cm (6 ft 3 in), and the presence of discarded pink lingerie at some of the crime scenes.[2] As the murders and rapes occurred close to Beelitz, Schmidt was also named the "Beast of Beelitz" (Bestie von Beelitz) and "Beelitz-Murderer" (Beelitz-Mörder).[3]
Early life
Schmidt was born Wolfgang Schmidt in Lehnin, East Germany, as the eldest of three children. Schmidt started to engage in cross-dressing around age seven by wearing female underwear to purposely urinate and defecate in them. Schmidt described feeling "overwhelmingly pleasant feelings" in this manner.[1] After finding the dirty garments hidden in a barn, Schmidt's mother refused to let Schmidt go outside to play with other children. After a doctor's visit left the parents without a diagnosis, they began locking their clothing cabinets, with Schmidt instead scavenging women's clothing from dumpsters and landfills. Schmidt began masturbating at the age of eight or nine, gradually developing more specific and definitively sexual practices such as self-covering in feces, defecating into bras and wearing soiled underwear backwards.[1] As a teenager, Schmidt neglected school work, social events and other activities to find time to collect more clothes. Schmidt dropped out of school in tenth grade.[4][5][6]
In 1985, Schmidt applied for a ten-year tenure in the Volkspolizei in Potsdam, reaching the rank of Unteroffizier, and switched from train supervisor to police duty in the 20th unit of Volkspolizei-Bereitschaft.[4] In late April 1989, the precinct terminated Schmidt alongside three other officers for hosting a private neo-Nazi meeting that celebrated Adolf Hitler's 100th birthday. Schmidt was briefly employed as a crane operator for a steel mill, but was fired only months later for repeatedly not showing up. From then on Schmidt worked manual labour jobs, last working as a farmhand on an orchard.[7] Schmidt frequently showed up drunk to jobs, stole items from workplaces, got into physical fights with colleagues and once willfully damaged the apartment of a girlfriend and her family while intoxicated. The couple broke up after a relative of the girlfriend found several knives hidden in Schmidt's bedroom, which were reported to the police, but not investigated further.[2] Schmidt also often went on walks through the surrounding forests while cross-dressing, becoming frustrated with the angry reactions of female passerby.[8]
Murders
On 24 October 1989, Schmidt broke into the house of Edeltraut Nixdorf, 51, in Deetz to steal underwear. Nixdorf saw the intruder from the garden and confronted Schmidt with a rake. Schmidt forced Nixdorf to the ground and choked the victim before bludgeoning her to death with a hammer. Schmidt then raped the corpse and wrapped the body in a blanket before fleeing after being spotted by a neighbor. A large shoe print, size 49 EU, was found at the scene, with the sole imprint identified as that of a NVA-issue boot, worn by soldiers and certain VoPo officers.[9] Nixdorf's husband committed suicide by pesticide poisoning in March 1990.[10][11]
On 24 May 1990, Schmidt fatally strangled Christa Naujoks, 45, with an electric cable near a garbage dump in Ferch. The body was raped post-mortem and discovered the next day by Naujoks' ex-husband, who worked on the site as a groundkeeper. Soiled pink women's underwear was found around the dumping site. Police also received report of a tall individual harassing women in an adjacent forest.[1][12]
On 13 March 1991, Schmidt attacked Inge Fischer, 34, while walking home through a forest between Borkheide and Neuendorf. Fischer was raped and killed with a stab wound to the neck. The body was found over a week later by hikers.[2][10]
On 22 March 1991, Schmidt attacked Tamara Petrowskaja, 44, and her three-month old son Stanislaw during a walk in the woods in Beelitz-Heilstätten. Schmidt tied up and gagged Petrowskaja with two pieces of underwear before killing Stanislaw by crushing the baby's skull against a tree stump. Shoe prints on the infant's clothes also indicate that Schmidt stomped and kicked the child.[9] Afterwards, Schmidt raped Petrowskaja and strangled the victim to death with a bra. Schmidt switched out the victim's panties. A search of the crime scene uncovered several hidden underwear stashes, which filled five trash bags.[9] Both victims were Russian nationals.[12][10][13]
On 6 April 1991, Schmidt broke into an apartment in Fichtenwalde, fatally strangling Talita Bremer, 66. Her corpse was raped and her death discovered two weeks later by a relative. Sperm samples and a pubic hair were found by police forensic teams.[9][14]
Non-fatal assaults and rape
On an unspecified date in summer 1990, Schmidt got into a fight with a homeless woman over recyclable trash at a landfill. The victim was beaten nearly to death with a blunt instrument.[2]
On 9 June 1990, Schmidt attacked and raped Edith Weber, 58, at a garbage dump near Wust. Schmidt had attempted to beat Weber to death with a wooden pole, but the victim was found by construction workers and survived with heavy injuries.[1]
On 6 April 1991, before the murder of Talita Bremer, Schmidt attacked two 12-year-old girls in Sputendorf bei Ludwigsfelde. Schmidt wielded a knife and tried to stab the victims, but fled after they resisted with scratches to the face. The girls provided a detailed description of their assailant to police, allowing for the creation of a composite sketch. A reward of 20,000 DM was issued. Within months, the family of Schmidt's fiancée reported a resemblance to police, but the claim was not investigated closer.[12]
Arrest
In July 1991, Schmidt was illegally camping in a forest near Schmerzke, publicly masturbating near a tent while wearing a bra over a shirt. Schmidt was spotted by jogger Mike Klein, who had noticed underwear hanging in the branches. Klein recognized Schmidt as the suspect on the police sketch, also seeing a number of knives in the tent, and drove to Brandenburg an der Havel to inform police. The area was put under observation by SEK, as the precinct worried that Schmidt might escape an immediate police response. Klein often returned to the forest to watch the police operation, sometimes accompanied by his friend Andreas Siegel. On 1 August, Klein and Siegel coincidentally came across Schmidt camping in a different part of the woods and seizing the opportunity, Klein and Siegel pretended to be foresters and coaxed Schmidt into the covered flatbed of their truck, supposedly to clean up the litter from the other campsite. Upon arrival, Schmidt was overpowered by the SEK officers on watch duty, handcuffed to a tree and transported to Potsdam, where Schmidt confessed to six murders to Volker Kelm, the lead detective in the cases since 1989.[15] By this time, Schmidt was engaged to a 19-year-old woman and living at her house in Rädel.[4][12]
Mike Klein was initially denied the 20,000 DM reward for finding Schmidt, as police claimed that tips from other civilian sources would have led to the arrest anyway. He ultimately received 12,000 DM, with the remaining 8,000 DM being divided amongst the other informers. In a 2018 interview with Klein for RBB crime show Täter|Opfer|Polizei, detective Volker Kelm described Klein's actions as "false imprisonment under any other circumstances", as there was no acute danger to his life, nor had he acted to prevent an actively occurring crime. Chief prosecutor Marianna Böhm called Klein and Siegel "bounty hunters", dismissing their actions as purely financially motivated and disruptive to the police investigation. Klein was thus not called to testify in court or otherwise acknowledged by law enforcement.[15]
Trial and sentencing
Schmidt's trial commenced on 20 October 1992. Before the trial, Schmidt gave an exclusive interview to court reporter Gisela Friedrichsen .[1]
On 1 December 1992, Schmidt was sentenced to 15 years imprisonment at Brandenburg-Görden Prison, followed by detention in a psychiatric hospital[3] in Brandenburg an der Havel.[9][16] Forensic psychiatrist Wilfried Rasch had argued in favor of a punishment with involuntary commitment after diagnosing Schmidt as having a "sexual-pathological development [...] with paraphilic, coprophilic, transvestite, and sadistic elements", resulting in diminished responsibility. Gerhard Mauz criticized press coverage for dehumanizing Schmidt as "a spawn of Hell", finding the response excessive, even for the magnitude of the crimes, as this affected related persons such as Schmidt's fiancée, who had an abortion before the trial due "public pressure" following an open campaign entitled "Abort the child of the Pink Giant" by a Springer newspaper.[2]
Imprisonment
In prison, Schmidt began identifying as transgender. Press footage from 1997 showed Schmidt had received access to women's clothing and make-up and was allowed to decorate the cell with plushed animals and magazine cut-outs.[14] An application for a name change to Beate Schmidt was met by the court in 2001.[16] Since 2009 Schmidt has undergone a hormone treatment for gender reassignment.[16] In 2010, Schmidt was investigated for raping and causing another transgender inmate to attempt suicide.[17] In July 2013, Schmidt's restrictions were loosened for unsupervised walks on the facility's green space. Further privileges for day trips into Brandenburg an der Havel were briefly granted following "first steps forwards" during therapy, but revoked after media published CCTV images of Schmidt buying pornographic magazines at a gas station.[4][5][11]
See also
References
- ^ a b c d e f Friedrichsen, Gisela (November 1992). "Ein Ausholen zum Gegenschlag" [A winding up to the counter-strike]. Der Spiegel (in German) (45).
- ^ a b c d e "Tanz mit der Bestie" [Dance with the Beast]. Der Spiegel (in German). 11 August 1991. ISSN 2195-1349.
- ^ a b Chalk, Titus; Henze, Jacob & Malmgren, Sigrid (5 May 2011). "The haunted sanatorium of Beelitz". Exberliner. Retrieved 30 March 2014.
- ^ a b c d Bischoff, Katrin (31 July 2021). "Die Angst ging um bei Frauen – der „Rosa Riese" tötete sechs Menschen". Berliner Zeitung (in German).
- ^ a b Friese, Andreas (21 August 2019). Boulevard - Die Jagd nach einem Mörder: Die Bestie von Beelitz. tredition. ISBN 978-3749731619.
- ^ Mauz, Gerhard (6 December 1992). "Keine Fragen an den Psychater" [No questions for the psychiatrist]. Der Spiegel (in German). ISSN 2195-1349.
- ^ "Der „Rosa Riese", ein gefährlicher Frauenmörder". WELT.
- ^ "Die "Bestie" heißt heute Beate und trägt Bikini - B.Z. – Die Stimme Berlins". B.Z. (in German). 27 September 2002.
- ^ a b c d e Erbarmungslos: Wolfgang S., zwischen zwei Welten - ZDF History
- ^ a b c "Trotzdem wurde Wolfgang Schmidt lange nicht gefaßt: Der Beelitz-Mörder sah seinem Bild sehr ähnlich". Berliner Zeitung (in German). 20 July 1995.
- ^ a b MAZonline (6 April 2024). "Brandenburg: Chronik der Taten von "Rosa Riese"-Serienmörder Wolfgang Schmidt". www.maz-online.de (in German). Retrieved 26 November 2024.
- ^ a b c d "Der "Rosa Riese" aus Brandenburg: Wolfgang Schmidt tötete vor 33 Jahren fünf Frauen und ein Kind". Märkische Allgemeine Zeitung (in German). 6 April 2024.
- ^ Becker, Claudia (16 July 2013). "Der Serienkiller darf sich ein bisschen frei bewegen" [The serial killer may move a bit freely]. Die Welt (in German). Archived from the original on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 30 March 2014.
- ^ a b Der Rosa Riese von Beelitz - ZDF History
- ^ a b Die Bestie von Beelitz - rbb
- ^ a b c Claus-Dieter Steyer: Beate S. statt „Rosa Riese“: Verurteilter Serienmörder durfte Namen ändern. Tagesspiegel, 7. August 2009. (in German)
- ^ "Hat der Rosa Riese wieder zugeschlagen?" [Has the pink giant struck again?] (in German). B.Z. 9 September 2010. Retrieved 30 March 2014.