Sep. 17, 2020 -- This case is discredited by research into Hungarian newspapers. Details will be added later. The story below is an embellishment of an actual case of a farm-woman and the series of suicides is merely an embellishment of an article that lists a group of unrelated suicides that includes Josephine Szanyi.
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Note: Various different spellings are used in English
language sources: “Josefa,” or “Josephine,” in various combination with “Tzany,”
“Szany,” “Szanyi.” – “Józefa” is the proper Hungarian spelling.
Several articles from French newspapers appear at the end of this post.
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FULL TEXT (Article 1 of 5): Budapest – Charged with inciting
six different young men to commit suicide, a young Budapest widow has been
taken into custody by the local police.
A seventh, instead of yielding to her persuasive argument
that “it would be beautiful to take poison and die in the arms of beautiful
woman,” broke away from her embraces and rushed to the nearest police station.
The woman's mentality in wishing to have the young men die m
her presence promises several weeks of interesting study to local psycho-analysis.
The method which she employed was to induce her victims to commit suicide with
her. To each she gave real poison while she drank a harmless potion of the same
color.
[“Widow Induces Suicides – Persuades Men to Take Poison and
Die in Arms of Beautiful Woman,”
syndicated (U.P.), Lawrence Daily Journal-World (Ka.), Aug. 11, 1926, p. 2]
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FULL TEXT (Article 2 of 5): Budapest, Aug. 9. – Not even the
most lurid film drama of modern days can equal in horror and fascination the
story of Josephine Szany, ballet dancer at the Budapest Opera, a bewitchingly
beautiful girl who has sworn vengeance upon the entire masculine sex.
Eight men, every one of them a nobleman or at least
belonging la the social elite of the Hungarian capital, have died in her arms.
Morally the little black-eyed dancer is their murderess, but
so far the authorities here are at a loss as to what charge can be laid against
her.
Three years ago when Mlle. Szany was brought to the Budapest
Opera she attracted wide attention by her dancing, her gayety at supper parties
and her sensational affair d’amour with a young Husar officer of Admiral Horthy's bodyguard.
There were rumors that the dashing young cavalryman would
wed the dancer, but at the last moment he accepted the advice and bowed to the
threats of his parents and was transferred to a far-away garrison on the
Rumanian frontier.
~ Wears Stoic’s Mask. ~
For a time Mlle. Szany, who is of Gypsy extraction, seemed
inconsolable over the loss of her lover. For three months she did not appear at
the theatre and when she finally returned it was noticed that she had assumed a
mask of stoicism. She did accept invitations from her many admirers, but her
laugh was forced and unnatural and she became gay and vivacious only after a great
deal of champagne.
The death of the eight men is her vengeance for the blighted
love affair.
Her latest victim is a member of one of the oldest and most
aristocratic Hungarian families. The man leaves a wife and three children.
Josephine Szany dressed in the height or Parisian elegance,
entered one of the most fashionable grills in the Hungarian capital on the arm
of the aristocrat, whose presence there in her company attracted the attention
of the diners and caused considerable surprise and comment. For the aristocrat
was married and Josephine was not his wife.
The couple were shown a secluded corner table where they
conversed in low tones, apparently oblivious to the stares and whispers in the
dining room. Suddenly, the woman rose from her chair, shrieked and staggered to
the middle of the floor. Her companion also jumped into her in his arms, but
sank to his knees, the woman clasped in his arms.
Walters and diners rushed to the man and woman on the floor,
lifted them and discovered that the man was dead.
Josephine was still breathing and with the aid of a doctor
who happened to be among the guests, she was soon revived. She left the room a
moment later on the pretext of going to adjust her disordered gown and has not
been heard from since.
When a post-mortem examination was held the examining
physicians discovered that the man had died of poison. The day after the
incident in the grill room his wife received a letter in which he stated that
he intended to put an end to his life in company with Josephine Szany, because
he “loved her to desperation.”
The tragic affair has become the gossip of all society, and
the Budapest papers now make open allusions to a whole series of mysterious
deaths and disappearance of men who were last seen in the company of the
voluptuous Josephine.
~ Pay for Love With Death. ~
Eight lovers who succumbed to her irresistible charms and
who have paid for their infatuation with the dreadful fate that the siren metes
out to those who come under her spell.
The coroner’s inquest into the circumstances of the death of
the last victim of the human vampire caused the presiding magistrate to come to
a conclusion that Josephine used her fateful and diabolical beauty to persuade
each of her lovers to enter into a solemn suicide pact with her.
Her greatest thrill was to gratify her morbid vengeance and
to see the men die in her arms or before her eyes.
Ever since the unfortunate affair of the officer who left
her, this young woman seems to be possessed with an insatiable hatred for the
masculine sex. Her eight victims represented some of the finest and most
athletic types of the Hungarian smart world.
The legal authorities are now considering whether she was
really responsible for her actions, and, if so, what charges can be brought
against her on the ground of effectively suggesting suicide.
The men, it is pointed out, took their lives
on their own free accord, they were not murdered.
While the legalists try to solve this point the Hungarian
police are searching the country for Josephine, who, it is feared, has managed
to cross the Bessarabian border to Russia.
[Pierre Van Paassen, “Bewitching Dancer of Budapest Opera,
Jilted, Makes Eight Lovers Die in Her Arms; Probe Ordered Hungarian Noblemen
Who Pay Penalty - Officers Faked Her Parts in Suicide Pacts,” Springfield
Republican (Mo.), Copyright. 1926. (New York World), Press Publishing, Aug. 10,
1926, p. 1]
***
FULL TEXT (Article 3 of 5): In one sense the kisses of a
vampire are poison for her victims, but in actual fact those of Josephine
Tzany, a beautiful woman of the Budapest underworld, were morally and
physically poisoned, for after poisoning the soul of the victim they brought
death as well.
The woman is known as the world’s worst real life vamp with
justice, if only half the charges made against her are true. It is stated that
for some years now her love affairs have been notorious, and always ended with
violent death for the male victims.
At least a dozen lovers have died in her arms in as many
years, but she has always come out of the death pact ordeals unharmed.
It is now suggested against her by the prosecution that she
has deliberately brought her victims to the point of mad passion for her in
which they readily assented to her suggestion of a death pact, out of which she
backed after her victim had taken poison. It is declared that in at least one
instance she passed the poison from her own lips to the mouth of her victim in
the act of passionately kissing him.
~ “I Am Dying.” ~
The drama was enacted in public in one of the restaurants of
the city. She entered the building with her latest lover, a well-known military
officer, whom she had taken from his young wife. When she had talked to him for
some time she rose to her feet with a cry and swayed as though about to faint.
Her companion rushed to her aid.
“Kiss me, darling, I am dying,” she said in tragic tones.
When the lover made to obey she flung her arms about him and kissed him
passionately. Locked in a passionate embrace, the two fell on the floor, and
when the startled onlookers went to them the woman was sobbing hysterically and
the man was dead. He had absorbed the poison the woman had carried on her lips.
The woman herself suffered no ill effects on this or any of
the other occasions when she was supposed to have taken poison or administered
it in this way to victims.
The accused woman defies the authorities to bring home to
her the charge of murder
“I am an enemy of the male sex,” she declares. “Years ago a
man wronged me deeply and broke my
girl’s heart. I vowed to be revenged on him and his sex. I have kept my word,
for I have made men suffer something of what I have suffered. They may say I am
responsible for the death of these men, and they may even take my life for what
they call my crime. If they do I shall be glad to die with the knowledge that I
have paid my debt in full.
“I do not deny that I have derived pleasure from the
sufferings of the men they call my victims. I have enjoyed every pang they
suffered, every agony they endured. Pangs and agony have been balm to my
wounded and bruised heart. My one regret is that I was not able to strike
directly at the man who wronged me.”
~ A Home-Breaker. ~
Something of the hatred Josephine Tzany had for men she
manifested towards her own sex, for in every case she chose as her lovers men
who were happily married to young and beautiful wives.
“When my heart was breaking they had no sympathy, no word of
comfort for me,” she declares. I will show them that I have the power to master
the souls and bodies of men, that the strongest are weaker than children in my
hands.”
“I glory in the fact that I have broken up homes that should
have been happy. The fact that the man who blighted my life was married happily
did not weigh with him. The wife from whom he came laughed at me when my misery
was greatest. I have paid her back in full, and have made others suffer, too.
My debt against Society is paid, and I have no further interest in the world.”
~ Gloating Words. ~
She might have added that she had struck at the wife of the
man who had wronged her a greater blow than he had dealt, greatly as she may
have been wronged. Learning that this wife had a lover she made it her business
to find the man out, and once she had him in the toils she did not release her
bold until the infatuated man had provided the first victim In the series of
strange deaths that have been associated with her love affairs.
After that she waited patiently until the idolised son of
the wife had reached the threshold of manhood, when she cast her spell over
him, and the boy figured in yet another of the dramas of passion and death.
When he lay dead in her arms she caused the mother to be admitted to see the
havoc she had wrought, and when she came the vampire spoke gloating words that
stung. The mother was subsequently taken away hopelessly insane. The accused
woman discusses frankly the different affairs with which she has been
associated. She has preserved diaries in which she records with amazing details
the facts of each case, describing the sufferings of the victims as each in
turn lay writhing in her arms in his death throes.
“I had no compunction about it at all,” she says, “for was I
not merely viewing the death throes of the viper that had stung me and killed
my soul just when it was at its best?”
Since the facts came out she has been the object of one of
the most amazing demonstrations of hostility that any woman could be subjected
to. Wives and children of some of the victims have turned up at the courts and
in public places to denounce her as murderess and home-wrecker, but so far from
being moved by their anger, she has laughed at them and taunted them with the
fact that she made the man they mourned her abject slave before he passed out
of the world.
The latest sensation is that the daughter of one of her
victims has challenged the woman to a duel with pistols or swords, and declares
that if the challenge is not accepted and the vampire escapes legal punishment
she will shoot her dead on sight.
[“Vampire’s Poisoned Kisses. - Men As Victims. - Her Thirst
For Vengeance.” The Auckland Star (New Zealand), Sep. 25, 1926, p. 23]
***
FULL TEXT (Article 4 of 5): Fatally lovely, and as wicked as
she is beautiful, Josephine Szany has seen eight lovers die in her arms. Years
ago, Josephine was cruelly wronged in a love of her own, and ever since she has
used her compelling beauty for the destruction of men.
The amazing story of her latest vengeance and the strange
dilemma of the Budapest authorities is told below. No vampire of a film
melodrama has had such an astounding career as Josephine Szany, a bewitchingly beautiful women who has
sworn vengeance upon the entire masculine sex.
~ Morally a Murderess ~
Morally Josephine a murderess, but the legal authorities of
Budapest are baffled to know what charges, if any, can be brought against her.
Amazing revelation have follows the death of her latest
victim, member of a Hungarian aristocratic family.
Josephine Szany, dressed in the best Parisian style, entered
one of the most fashionable grills in the Hungarian capital on the arm of the
aristocrat whose presence there in her company attracted the attention of the
diners and caused consider able surprise and comment. For the aristocrat was
married, and Josephine was not his wife.
~ Dramatic Methods ~
Seated at table, the couple conversed in low tones during
their repast. Suddenly the woman rose from her chair and staggered as though
about to faint. Her companion also got up and hurried to help her, but instead
he fell to the floor with the woman clasped in his arms.
The guests and waiters ran to their assistance. They lifted
the man, only to find that he was dead.
His companion was breathing and with the aid of smelling
salts quickly revived. Under the pretext of adjusting her disordered dress,
slipped away and never came back,
~ Died of Poison ~
When a post-mortem examination was held. It was discovered
that the man had been poisoned.
Soon afterwards the news came out that the man had left a
letter for his wife informing her that he intended to put an end to his life in
company with Josephine Szany.
The tragic affair became the topic of all society gossip,
and whispered allusions were made to a whole series of mysterious death or
disappearances of men who from time to time had been known to associated with
the alluring beauty.
From lip to lip passed the names of eight lovers who had
succumbed to the irresistible charms of the siren within the last few years and
who had died in circumstances similar to those which marked the tragic fate of
the young Hungarian aristocrat.
~ Morbid Vengeance ~
In view of all the evidence, the magistrate conducting the
inquiry arrived at the conclusion that Josephine Szany had used her diabolical
beauty to persuade each of her lovers to enter into a suicide pact with her
solely to gratify her morbid vengeance and to feel them die in her arms.
This beautiful Hungarian is said to have been possessed with
an in satiable hatred of the masculine sex ever since an unfortunate love affair
had poisoned her existence.
The legal authorities are now considering whether she was
really responsible for her actions and, if so, what charges, if any can be
brought against her on the ground of effectively suggesting suicide to others
while not trying to take her own life.
[Author listed in other appearances of this text is O. D.
Tolischus, Universal Service Staff Correspondent, “Vampire, Wronged in Youth,
Lures Lovers to Death – Suicide Compacts Made With Dupes Amazes Budapest –
Distorted Brain of Beautiful Girl Works Out Unique Means of Revenge on Men – Records
Show Eight Victims Coaxed Into Self-Destruction.” The Winnipeg Evening Tribune
(Canada), Sep. 4, 1926, Magazine section, p. 1]
***
FULL TEXT (Article 5 of 5): Berlin, Germany, Oct. 23. — A
neglected wallflower who became a vampire, a man-hating old maid who turned
into a siren and who, to wreak her vengeance upon the haughty male, lured seven
men to their deaths in fake suicide pacts, triumphantly watched them drink the
poisoned cup for love of her while she emptied the harmless one and, in the
death agonies of her victims, laughed at their folly.
This story, too fantastic for a movie, now is being written
in the criminal annals of Hungary.
The name of this modern Circe is Josefa Szanyi, and the
police are holding her on charges of sevenfold murder. The scene is a small
town near Budapest.
~ Police Begin Probe. ~
Her deadly work was revealed by the wife of the last of her
victims, Hans Hansmann. Hans had written a farewell letter to his wife saying
life wasn’t worth living any more and that, together with Josefa Szanyi, he
would seek relief in death.
Yet up to a few days before his death, Hansmann had been
noted for his jollity and for his devotion to his wife. The latter immediately
urged upon the police that things were not as they seemed and that Hansmann
could have known the woman only a few days.
“Because,” she said, “I would have been the first to feel if
he had learned to know and love another woman.”
When the police began to investigate, they soon stumbled
upon clews that are making the case one of the most remarkable in criminal
history.
~ Genuine Pact. ~
It was found that Josefa Szanyi’s transformation came after
her first belated love affair. Discouraged by previous experience and fearing
to lose “her man,” she persuaded him to a suicide pact which was genuine. Both
were found dying, but only the man did die. Josefa Szanyi recovered.
This experience, police believe, gave her the idea, just as
its discovery put the police itself on the track.
A man was soon discovered who testified that Josefa Szanyi
tried to persuade him to enter into a suicide pact with her, hut that he had
refused.
Then, investigating recent suicides in the town, of which there
had been almost an epidemic, police found that Josefa Szanyi had played a role
in most of the victim’s lives — just
before their death.
Josefa, however, denies everything and is defending herself
with great skill.
[“Man-Hating Old Maid Causes Seven To Die In Fake Death
Pacts,” El Paso Herald (Tx.), Oct. 23, 1926, p. 1]
***
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More: Champion Black Widow Serial Killers
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FULL TEXT: (De notre correspondant particulier) Budapest, 21
Juillet. — On signale un cas
d'empoisonnement particulièrement
étrange, survenu dans un restaurant à la mode de la capitale hongroise.
Récemment, un dîneur et sa compagne une personne d'une grande beauté nommée Joséphine Szany,
tombaient évanouis, à la fin du repas. Mais, tandis que la jeune femme
reprenait bientôt ses sens et s'esquivait, il fut impossible de ramener à'da
vie son ami. L'autop sie révéla qu'il était mort empoisonné.
Ce qui rend cette affaire extrêmement troublante, c'est que
Joséphine Szani avait précédemment assisté à l'émpoisonnement de sept de ses
amis, en des circonstances identiques. Bien qu'on n'ait pu relever contré elle
aucune chargé matérielle, elle semble moralement responsable de ces suicides.
On se trouve, sans doute, en présence de cas de suggestion morbide. Barbe-Bleue
n'avait supprimé que sept femmes; Joséphine Szany en est à sa huitième victime.
[“Plus Fort Que Barbe-Bleue - Une belle Hongroise cause huit
suicides,” Le Petit Journal (Paris, France), Juillet 11, 1926, p. 1]
***
FULL TEXT: Joséphine Szany qui exerce sur les hommes une fascination
redoutable, dînait la semaine dernière dans un grill-room de Vienne (capitale
de la république autrichienne), en compagnie d'un gentilhomme hongrois, en
puissance de femme légitime.
Tout à coup, les deux convives tombaient à. terre. La femme n'était qu'évanouie, tandis que l'homme était mort.
L'autopsie démontra que ee dernier avait été empoisonné et on apprit, d'autre part, qu il avait annoncé à sa femme qu'il mettrait fin à ses jours en compagnie de Joséphine Szany.
Cette mort tragique a motivé une instruction judiciaire et on a tout lieu ôe croire que la belle Hongroise qui est affligée d'une haine terrible pour le sexe fort, a empoisonné tous ses amants connus, au nombre de huit jusqu'ici, pour se procurer le plaisir morbide des voir agoniser dans ses bras..
Elle n'a. pas encore été arrêtée, car le juge d'instruction n'ose jusqu'ici l'inculper de crime.
Tout à coup, les deux convives tombaient à. terre. La femme n'était qu'évanouie, tandis que l'homme était mort.
L'autopsie démontra que ee dernier avait été empoisonné et on apprit, d'autre part, qu il avait annoncé à sa femme qu'il mettrait fin à ses jours en compagnie de Joséphine Szany.
Cette mort tragique a motivé une instruction judiciaire et on a tout lieu ôe croire que la belle Hongroise qui est affligée d'une haine terrible pour le sexe fort, a empoisonné tous ses amants connus, au nombre de huit jusqu'ici, pour se procurer le plaisir morbide des voir agoniser dans ses bras..
Elle n'a. pas encore été arrêtée, car le juge d'instruction n'ose jusqu'ici l'inculper de crime.
[“La Belle Hongroise a-t-elle empoisonne huit Amants?” La
Presse (Paris, France), Juilliet 22, 1926, p. 1]
***
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FULL TEXT (translated): From Budapest is reported
that the local authority is the deeds of a female barbarian descend on the
track, a woman named Josefa Szanyi, who ought to have no less than seven
murders on her conscience. If the statements of various reports are true, we
are dealing here with a horrible case of a systematic murder mania. Miss Szanyi
was not driven to ruin by plain hatred, nor hatred of her individual victims,
but rather out of hatred of the men in general, because in her past every man
she loved had spurned her.
Just
like a mesmerizing song of a mythical Siren, this woman’s razor-sharp cunning
was overwhelming to the ordinary man. In some respects, the Greek Siren
myths, long celebrated by the poets, evoke the method of the vicious crimes of
notorious Austrian serial killer, Hugo Schent. He killed one of her victims,
the poor housemaid Ketterle, in the following manner. He pressured her,
complaining:"If you do not love me, I'll shoot myself!" He then pressed
a pistol against his breast and squeezed the trigger, but no bullet was
fired. He then asked the girl to imitate
her. The unfortunate woman perceived it was a jocular game, but meanwhile Hugo
Schenk had secretly loaded the weapon and as the Ketterle pulled the trigger a
bullet hit her in the head. . .
The man-slayer of Budapest is now said to have made
her victims commit a “double suicide” with her. Her demonic influence succeeded
in leading the men to their desperate oath. But when the deed was done, it was
only the man who made a corpse. The woman remained alive to seek and find a new
victim, with whom she performed the same black comedy.
Seven Lovers as Victims.
The case arose by through the testimony of a woman
named Sigmung Bögre, who reported the following to the Budapest City
authorities:
While she was recovering from illness in the
hospital, she was visited daily by her lifelong friend, Josef Hansmann. During
her illness there was nothing in her friend’s demeanor indicated that he had
begun a love affair. About three weeks before she received news that Hansmann
had committed suicide on the very day for which he made a stark declaration
during one of their visits, announcing that he is going to die together with
the Szanyi. On that day, Hansmann and Szanyi had emptied their wine glasses in
an inn (after spending a long time murmuring together). Both sank to the
ground. The man died instantly, but Szanyi soon left the scene and has since
disappeared. Ms. Bögre, reported that she was convinced that her friend had
poisoned himself only under the seductive spell of hypnotic influence.
Uncanny Stories.
The police initiated the investigation on the basis
of this declaration. Szanyi could not be interrogated. Since the suicide of
Hansmann detective officers have repeatedly tried to verify the claims, but
each time she managed to escape
questioning.
At
the inn where the suicide was committed, the guests told that Szanyi was
unhappily in love and has since been transformed. She associates men at the
inn, and sometimes asks her admirers to die together with her.
She ordered each of her new acquaintances to commit
suicide, yet she herself was reluctant to do so, because she was stricken by an
uncanny terror. Josef Hansmann is said to be the seventh victim of the Budapest
man-slayer.
A short time after Hansmann's death, Szanyi tried a
similar maneuver at the same inn, but the execution of the crime was prevented
in time.
[“Die
Männermörderin von Budapest. Nach dem Muster Hugo Schents. – Gieben Todesopfer
ver Berführerin. – Nicht Habgier, sondern Männerseindschaft. – Die Nache der
Berschmühten.” Illustierte Kronen Zeitung (Vienna, Austria), Jul. 15, 1926, p.
2]
***
FULL
TEXT: Aus Budapest wird berichtet, dass die dortige Behörde den Untaten einer
Berbrecherin auf die Spur dekommen ist, einer Frau Josefa Szanyi, die nicht
weniger als sieben Mordtaten auf dem Gewissen haben soll. Wenn sich die Angaben
verichiedener Anzeigen bestätigen, dann hat man es hier mit einem grauenhasten
Fall einer förmlichen Mordmanie zu tun. Nicht durch Habjucht und auch nicht
durch Hass gegen ihr jeweiliges Opfer soll die Szanyi zu ihren Berbrechen
getrieben worden sein, sondern aus Hass gegen die Männer im allgemeinen, weil
jeder Mann, den sie liebte, sie verschmäht hatte.
Wie
man dies bei vielen von einer siren Idee besallenen Versonen mit einer
rassinierten Schlauheit vor, wie sie haum ein normaler Mensch auszubringen
vermag. In gewisser Beziehung erinneri die Art ihres Vorg ihres Vogehens an
eines der teuslischesten Verbrechen des berüchtigten Mädchenmörders Hugo
Schent. Dieser hat eines seiner Opfer, das arme Dienstmädchen Ketterle, auf
folgende Weise ums Leben gebracht: Er sesste mit den Worten: “Wenn du mich
nicht liebst, erschiesse ich mich!” eine ungeladene Pistole an seine Schläse und
drückte los. Dann forderie er das Mädchen auf, ihm nachzuahmen. Die
Unglückliche ging auf, ihm vermeintlichen Scherz ein, aber Hugo Schenk hatte
unterdessen heimlich die Waffe geladen und als die Ketterle losdrüdte, drang
ihr die Kugel in den Kopf . .
Die
Männermörderein von Budapest soll nun ihre Opfer dazu verenlasst haben,
gemeinsam mit ihr einen “Doppelselbstmord” zu begehen. Ihrem bämonichen
Einfluss gelang es, die Männer zu dem verzweiselten Entschluss zu bringem. Als
es aber zur die Aussführung der Tat kam, da waren es nur die Männer, die dem
Tode verseilen. Die Frau blieb leben und – suchte und fand ein neues Opfer, mit
dem sie bieselbe graufige Komödie in Szene sente.
Die Lebensgesährtin des siebenten Opfers.
Die
Sache kam durch die Anzeige einer Frau Sigmung Bögre auf, die bei der
Budapester Oberstadthauptmannschaft folgendes mitteilte:
Während
sie im Spital lag, erheilt sie täglich den Besuch ihres Lebensgesährten Josef
Hansmann. Nichts in seinem Benehmen deutete darauf hin, dass er während ihrer Krankheit
eine Liebschaft mit einer anderen eingegangen wäre. Vor etwa brei Wochen
erhielt sie an einem Tage, für den er seinen Besuch in bestimmte Ausficht
gestellt hatte, die Nachricht, Hansmann habe Selbstmord verübt. Er und die
Szanyi hatten in einmem Gasthaus (nachdem sie längere Zeit miteinander
getuschelt hatten) ihre Weingläser geleert. Beide sanken zu Boden. Der Mann war
sofort tot, die Szanyi aber exholte sich bald und war seither verschwunden, in
welchem Hansmann mitteilt, dass er gemeinsam mit der Szanyi in den Tod gehe.
Frau Bögre erflärte, als sie die Anzeige erstattete, sie sei überzeugt, dass
ihr Lebensgesährte nur unter dem Bannee eines hypnotischen Einflusses sich
vergiftet haben könne.
Uncanny Stories.
Die
Polizei hat auf Grund dieser Angaben die Untersuchung eingeleitet. Die Szanyi
konnte nicht einvernommen werden. Seit dem Selbstmord Hansmanns haben
Kriminalbeamte wiederholt versucht, sie enzuvernehmen, doch gelang es ihr
jedesmal, sich den Befragungen zu entziehen.
In
dem Gasthaus, in welchem der Selbstmord verübt wurde, erzählen die Gäste, bie
Szanyi sei unglücklich verliebt, und sei seither wie verwandelt. Sie mache in
Wirtshaus und bei anderen Gelegenheiten Herrenbetanntschaften, um ihre Verehrer
dann auszusordern, mit ihr gemeinsam zu sterben.
Sie
sorderte jeben neuen Bekannten zum Selbstmord auf und wurde beshalb in der
lesten Zeit gemeiden, da man ihre unheimliche Ueberredungögabe sürchtete. Josef
Hansmann soll das siebente Opfer der Männermörderin von Budapest sein.
Kurtze
Zeit nach dem Tode Hansmanns hat die Szanyi augeblich in demselben Gasthaus ein
ähnliches Manöver versucht, doch wurde die Ausfürung der Tat damals rechtzeitig
verhindert.
[“Die
Männermörderin von Budapest. Nach dem Muster Hugo Schents. – Gieben Todesopfer
ver Berführerin. – Nicht Habgier, sondern Männerseindschaft. – Die Nache der
Berschmühten.” Illustierte Kronen Zeitung (Vienna, Austria), Jul. 15, 1926, p.
2]
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More: Champion Black Widow Serial Killers
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For more cases like this one, see: Vamps – Femmes Fatales – Predatory Women
For more cases of misandric fixation see: What Is Misandric Fixation?
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