Juliette Brucy, née Tourneau (39 in 1927), born at
Loiret; Erroneous spellings in the German press: Bruzi; Brusy.
***
FULL TEXT (translated from German): Paris, 24.—At Aïnay-sous-Bois, a small town
in the Seine, arrested 39-year-old Juliette Claire Bruzi a few days ago on suspicion
of poisoning her late husband. In the course of the investigation, it turned
out that Mrs. Bruzi was married four times and her husbands have died under
obscure circumstances. She has already admitted a murder. It is beyond doubt,
on the basis of the grounds of suspicion, that her earlier spouses are divorced
from their lives by her hands. Moreover, there is a more reasonable suspicion
that she also killed the five children of her first marriage by poisoning them,
thus leaving a total of nine lives on her conscience.
[“Four
Spouses and the Five Children Poisoned.” New Grazer Tagblatt (Graz, Austria),
Nov. 25, 1927, p. 2]
***
HEADLINE:
The widow of Mr. Brucy who died a month ago is arrested in Aulnay-sous-Bois; To
get rid of her husband, this woman had imagined, by her own admission, the
staging of a gas poisoning of which she herself would have almost been the
victim.
FULL
TEXT: Among all your criminal wives who preceded her, it seems that Juliette
Brucy, who was arrested yesterday in Aulnay-sous-Bois, deserves special mention
for the Machiavellianism of which she used and who, she believed, was to ensure
impunity.
Our
readers have perhaps not yet forgotten the “news item” that we reported in our
issue of October 21. The day before, in the small villa they lived in, 24
avenue de Mun, in Aulnay-sous-Bois, the Brucy spouses were found to be
inanimate. At least, the husband, Maurice, forty-three years old, a laborer at
the slaughterhouses of La Villette, had already ceased to live. He was lying on
the floor. His wife, née Juliette Thoreau, thirty-nine, was lying motionless on
the bed, but her heart had not stopped falling and her breathing seemed
regular. Soon, indeed, she was reopening them. But, as she was questioned about
the circumstances in which her husband had died, she tirelessly replied that
she did not realize what had happened. one attributed this silence to the
unknown physiological disorders of which she had been a victim; food poisoning,
gas poisoning? This last version was the first adopted by Commissioner Tillet,
who made the first observations. Indeed, the smell of gas floated in the house as
soon as the door had been opened. Mab, nice detail, the taps of all the
appliances were carefully closed.
~ An
enigmatic death ~
To
elude this mystery, they began by having the body of Mr. Brucy autopsied.
Doctor Dorrôme, forensic doctor at the Pontoise prosecutor's office, who was in
charge of it, noted undeniable traces of carbon monoxide. But where did this
intoxication come from? It was still the same riddle.
It
was also in vain that at the Pontoise hospital, where she had been transported,
Ms. Brucy was asked for questions by investigators, judges, police officers,
and doctor. To all of them she opposed the same stubborn ignorance that she had
shown on the first day.
Tired
of war, they waited. Mme Brucy left Pontoise and returned to Aulnay-sous-Bois.
This return, an apparently unimportant event, was to precipitate the progress
of the investigation. Indeed, when the neighbors of the widow Brucy saw this
one reappear among them, they could not contain their indignation. Annoying
rumors had been circulating about this woman for a long time. Already married
three times when she married M. Brucy, she had divorced her first husband, the
second had hanged himself and the third had died under circumstances as strange
as the fourth, this brave M. Brucy, of whom all the people liked to praise the
affable character, the qualities of work. He too was a widower when, a few months
ago, he had married Juliette Thoreau. He brought to the little villa in
Auinay-sous-Bois the two children from his first marriage, Madeleine, six, and
Emile, five. The poor little ones had found a true stepmother in their father's
wife. To avoid painful scenes, Mr. Brucy had even resigned himself, a few days
before his death, to placing the two children in boarding school.
Indifferent
to this hostility, the widow Brucy continued to display a serene face. But, a
few days ago, we saw his attitude change. An investigator had returned to La
Toir, Inspector Crusol, from the first mobile brigade. On several occasions he
came to speak at length with the widow. And. Yesterday, as he had come once
more from, urging her with questions, Juliette Brucy, as if she was freeing
herself from a burden, released this confession: “Well! yes, it was I who
killed Brucy!” And, as if she had found relief in the pose, she added:
~ The
vigil in the cellar ~
-- That is what I had imagined on October 18, in the evening, when we had gone to
bed, I waited until he had fallen asleep. It was long. Finally, when I was sure
he was in a deep sleep, I thought I went wide open the taps of the gas stove in
the kitchen, those of the lighting devices. Then I went down to the cellar. How
long did I stay there? I cannot say exactly. When I got back up, I went to take
a quick look around the bedroom. My husband was lying on the bed vomiting. It
had to be fini. . . I went back down to my shelter. I lived there for thirty
hours during which I fed on some provisions that I had brought with me. I had
no doubt that those around us, and mainly my parents who live near us, would
soon be worried. Finally, on Thursday, in the morning, I went upstairs. I went
to half-open the windows behind the closed shutters and waited for the air to
freshen up a little. When I heard people approaching the villa, I threw my
husband's body on the parquet floor, closed the windows side by side, lay down
on the bed, waited. You know what followed.
Inspector
Crusol didn't want to know so much. He hastened to inform the Pontoise
prosecutor's office. A few hours later, under an arrest warrant, he brought
Juliette Brucy before Judge Jodelet.
To
the magistrate, the criminal repeated her confession, then, as M. Jodelet asked
her the motive to which she had obeyed, she gave him this answer.
I
couldn't get along with my mother-in-law anymore. Every day, there were
discussions between us for the slightest pretext and, every time I mentioned it
to my husband. this one proved me wrong. In the end I came to hate him and, as
much to get rid of my husband as to avenge myself on his mother, I resolved to
put him to death. . .
The
magistrate, who could not yet question the widow Brucy on the merits, contented
himself with recording this declaration. But he will certainly not be satisfied
with it. The investigation has not already established that before their
marriage, while they lived in Paris, rue Rouvet. Juliette Thoreau had tried to
poison Maurice Brucy? At that time, however, Mrs. Brucy mother was not living
with them. To explain Juliette Thoreau's crime, would it not be necessary to
seek the benefit of whom Mr. Brucy took out, in 1924, life insurance? The
investigation that follows will certainly focus on this question.
[“We
arrested in Aulnay-sous-Bois the widow of Mr. Brucy who died a month ago; To
get rid of her husband, this woman had imagined, by her own admission, the
staging of a gas poisoning of which she herself would have almost been the
victim.” Le Petit Parisien (Paris, France), Nov. 19, 1927, p. 1]
***
EXCERPT
(translated from German):
~
Madame Brusy, the spouse and child murderer. ~
39-year-old
landlady Claire Brusy married a wealthy widower in 1912, who brought five
children into the marriage. Brought eight years later. Madame Brusy filed for
divorce against her husband, quite curiously, at that time all five children
had already died, and it happened that a very short time after the trial the
man was found dead under mysterious circumstances. The woman married again, but
the wedding was not long over when the second husband was found hanged one day.
The
police interrogated Madame Brusy. The woman stated that she had had repeated
quarrels with the second man and thus a violent appearance on the day the body
was found. She wants to have run away excitedly and her husband was supposedly
already dead when she returned. The authorities could not do anything about the
woman.
Madame
Brusy married a third time and a few days ago the third man was found dead in
the gas-filled apartment. Now the woman was arrested. At first, she stated that
she had traveled. After hours of interrogation, she got involved in
contradictions and finally confessed to having poisoned her third husband while
he was sleeping by the incoming gas. The Paris authorities are now working to
prove to the arrested Madame Claire Brusy that she has no doubt committed the
murders of her first two spouses and five children, since each of the spouses
had left her a fortune.
[“Two
women as murderers of their husbands. Two sensational crime cases in Paris and
Athens. - Female Landrus. - Murdered from addiction to profit and from
religious madness.” Illustrated Kronen-Zeitung (Vienna, Austria), November 25,
1927. P. 6]
***
FULL
TEXT (Translated from German): A terrible chain of crimes was recently
discovered in the town of Aunay sous Bois.
The
maid of the Bruch couple had come to their employer's bedroom in the morning,
and the smell of coal gas filled the room. Herr Bruch crouched lifelessly on
the floor, his wife Juliette lay in bed.
The
girl made a noise. Help was soon on hand and efforts were made to help the
unconscious. Frau Juliette quickly recovered from her faint, but the man could
not be saved. That seemed puzzling. The gas tap had been open all night and the
poison had killed the strong man. How was it possible that it did so little to
the delicate woman?
The
woman was questioned. Finally, she confessed to having poisoned the man with
coal gas. She herself had hidden in the basement for the night and had only
come into the room just before she was discovered.
When
the crime became known, people remembered that so much of the life of the
beautiful Frau Juliette, who is now thirty-nine years old, was thirsty to be
right. The police looked a little bit at the suspects' past, and the deeper
they dug, the stranger things they came up with. Frau Juliette had been married
four times.
She
had married her first husband in 1912. The husband was a wealthy widower,
eighteen years older than Juliette, and he brought five minor children into the
marriage. The connection turned out to be quite unfortunate, the young woman
did not look after the children at all.
In
1920, the couple filed for divorce. In the course of the trial, the husband
died suddenly and the wife would have become a universal heir - if it hadn't
been for the five children. A puzzling epidemic suddenly broke out in the Bruch
house; all five children died in the course of half a year. Now Julliette
received her husband's entire fortune.
~ The
mysterious suicide. ~
Shortly
afterwards, Juliette entered into a new marriage. She married a wealthy
businessman. After a very short marriage, one morning the husband, who had
never expressed suicidal intentions, was found hanged in the bedroom. Juliette
explained that she slept soundly all night and only saw the man dangling from
the window cross to her horror that morning. This second man also left a great
fortune.
~ The
third husband went insane. ~
In
1924 Juliette married for the third time. Soon after the tranquility there was
quarrel and quarrel between the spouses. The man complained to his friends that
his wife was undermining his health. But nothing more than this suggestion came
from him. After six months of marriage, he began to show signs of madness. At
the request of his wife, he was taken to a mental hospital, where he is still
sitting.
Ms.
Juliette denies that she is to blame for the fate that befell her first three
husbands. But since she has been assigned to the murder of her fourth husband,
it hardly seems credible that she should be the victim of a series of tragic
accidents.
[“A
female bluebeard. Four men and five children murdered." (“Ein weiblicher
Blaubart. Vier Männer und fünf Kinder ermordet.”), Die Kleine Blatt (Vienna,
Austria), Nov. 25, 1927, p. 6]
***
GERMAN
& FRENCH TEXTS
***
HEADLINE:
On arrête à Aulnay-sous-Bois la veuve de M. Brucy qui mourut il y a un mois; Pour
se débarrasser de son mari, cette femme avait imaginé, de son propre aveu, la
mise en scène d'une intoxication par le gaz dont elle-mime aurait failli être
la victim.
FULL
TEXT: Parmi toutes tes épouses criminelles qui la précédèrent, il semble bien
que Juliette Brucy, que l'on arrêta, hier, à Aulnay-sous-Bois, mérite une
mention spéciale pour lo machiavélisme dont elle usa et qui, croyait-elle,
devait lui assurér l'impunité.
Nos
lecteurs n'ont peut-être pas encore oublié le “fait divers” que nous relations
dans notre numéro du 21 octobre dernier. La veille, dans la petite villa qu'ils
habitaient, 24, avenue de Mun, à Aulnay-sous-Bois, les époux Brucy étaint
découverts inanimés. Du moins, le mari, Maurice, quarante-trois ans, ouvrer chevillard
aux abattoirs de la Villette, avait déjà cessé de vivre. Il gisait sur le
parquet. Sa femme, née Juliette Thoreau, trente-neuf ans, était étendue
immobile sur le lit, mais son cœur n'avait pas cessé de lattre et sa
respiration semblait régulière. Bientôt, en effet, elle rouvrait les eux. Mais,
comme on la questionnait sur les circonstances où son mari avait trouvé la
mort, elle répondait inlassablement qu'elle ne se rendait pas compte de ce qui
s'était passé. un attribua ce mutisme aux troubles physiologiques inconnus dont
elle avait été victim; empoisonnement alimentaire, intoxication par le gaz?
Cette dernière version fut la première retenue par le commissaire Tillet, qui
procéda aux premières constatations. En effet, une odeur de gaz flottait dans
la maison dès que la porte en eut été ouvert. Mab, détail eurieux, les robinets
de tous les appareils étaient soigneusement fermés.
~ Une
mort énigmatique ~
Pour éludider
ce mystère, on commença par faire procéder à l'autopsie du corps de M. Brucy.
Le docteur Dorrôme, médecin légiste près le parquet de Pontoise, qui en fut chargé,
releva des traces indéniables d'oxyde de carbone. Mais d’où provenait cette intoxication
? C'était toujours la même énigme.
C'est
en vain aussi qu'à l'hôpital de Pontoise, où elle avait été transportée, Mme
Brucy était sollicitée de questions par les enquêteurs juges, policiers,
médecin. A tous elle opposait la même ignorance têtue qu'elle avait montrée le
premier jour.
De
guerre lasse, on attendit. Mme Brucy quitta Pontoise et rentra à Aulnay-sous-Bois.
Ce retour, événement en apparence sans importance, allait précipiter la marche
de l'enquête. En effet, quand les voisins de la veuve Brucy virent celle-ci
réapparaître au milieu d'eux, ils ne purent contenir leur indignation. Des
bruits fâcheux couraient depuis longtemps sur cette femme. Mariée déjà trois
fois quand elle épousa M. Brucy, elle avait divorcé d'avec son premier mari, le
second s'était pendu et le troisième avait succombé dans des circonstances aussi
étranges que le quatrième, ce brave M. Brucy, dont tout le monde se plaisait à
louer le caractère affable, les qualités de travail. Lui aussi était veuf
quand, il y a quelques mois, il avait épousé Juliette Thoreau. Il amenait dans
Il petite villa d'Auinay-sous-Bois les deux enfants de son premier mariage
Madeleine, six ans, et Emile, cinq ans. Les pauvres petits avaient trouvé dans
la femme de leur père une véritable marâtre. Pour éviter des scènes
douloureuses, M. Brucy s'était même résigné, quelques jours avant sa mort, à
placer les deux petits en pension.
Indifférante,
à cette hostilité, la veuve Brucy continuait à afficher un front serein. Mais,
il y a quelques jours, on vit son attitude se modifier. Un enquêteur était
revenu la Toir, l'inspecteur Crusol, d'e la première brigade mobile. A
plusieurs reprises, il vint s'entretenir longuement avec la veuve. Et. hier,
comme il venait une fois de plus de, la presser de questions, Juliette Brucy,
comme si elle se libérait d'un fardeau, lâcha cet aveu: “Eh bien! oui, c'est
moi qui ai fait mourir Brucy!” Et, comme si elle v eut trouvé un soulagement au
posé, elle ajouta
~ La
veillée dans la cave ~
– Voilà, ce que j'avais imaginé Ie 18 octobre,
au soir, quand nous nous fûmes mis au lit, j'attendis qu'il se fût endormi. Ce
fut long. Enfin, quand je fus certaine qu'il était plongé 'dans un sommeil
profond, je me ievei j'allai ouvrir tout grand les robinets du fourneau à gaz
de Ia cuisine, ceux des appareils d'èclairage. Puis je descendis à la cave.
Combien de temps y restai-je? je ne puis le dire exactement. Quand je remontai,
j'allai jeter un coup d'oeil rapide dans la chambre. Mon mari était étendu sur
le lit au milieu de vomissements. Ce devait être flni. . . Je redescendais dans mon abri. J'y vécus trente
heures pendant lesquelles je me nourris de quelques provisions que j'avais
emportées. Je ne doutai pas que notre entourage, et principalement mes parents
qui habitent près de nous, ne tarderaient pas à s'inquiéter. Enfin le jeudi,
dans la matinée, je remontai. J'allai entre-bâiller les fenêtres derrière les
volets clos et j'attendis que l'air se fût un peu renouvelé. Quand j’entendis
les gens approcher de la villa, je jetai if corps de mon mari sur le parquet,
je fermai les fenêtres ct, me couchant sur le lit, j'attendis. Vous savez ce
qui s'ensuivit.
L'inspecteur
Crusol n'en voulait pas tant connaître. Il se hâta de prévenir le parquet de
Pontoise. Quelques heures plus tard, en vertu d'un mandat d'arrêt, il amenait
Juliette Brucy devant M. le juge Jodelet.
Au magistrat, la criminelle répéta ses aveux,
puis, comme M. Jodelet lui demandait le mobile auquel elle avait obéi, elle lui
flt cette réponse:
Je ne
pouvais plus m'entendre avec ma belle-mére. Tous les jours, c'étaient, entre
nous, des discussions pour le moindre prétexte et, chaque fois que j'en parlais
a mon mari. celui-ci me donnait tort. A la fin j'en vins à le haïr et, autant
pour me débarrasser de mon mari que pour me venger dc sa mère, je résolus de le
faire mourir. . .
Le
magistrat, qui ne pouvait d'ailleurs pas encore interroger la veuve Brucy sur le
fond, se contenta d'enregistrer cette déclaration. Mais il ne s'en contentera,
certainement pas. L'enquête n'a-t-elle pas déjà établi qu'avant leur mariage,
alors qu'ils vivaient Paris, rue Rouvet. Juliette Thoreau avait tenté
d'empoisonner Maurice Brucy? A cette époque, cependant, Mme Brucy mère
n'habitait pas auprès d'eux. Pour expliquer le crime de Juliette Thoreau, n'y
aurait-il pas lieu de chercher au profit de qui M. Brucy souscrivit, en 1924, une
assurance sur la vie? L'enquête qui va suivre ne manquera certainement pas de s’attacher
à cette question.
[“On arrête
à Aulnay-sous-Bois la veuve de M. Brucy qui mourut il y a un mois; Pour se débarrasser
de son mari, cette femme avait imaginé, de son propre aveu, la mise en scène
d'une intoxication par le gaz dont elle-mime aurait failli être la victim.” Le
Petit Parisien (Paris, France), Nov. 19, 1927, p. 1]
***
FULL
TEXT: Vor kurzem ist man in dem Städtchen Aunay sous Bois einer furchtbaren
Kette von Verbrechen auf die Spur gekommen.
Die
Hausgehilfin des Ehepaares Bruch war morgens in das Schlafzinmer ihrer
Dienstgeber gekommen, Durchdrmgender Leuchtgasgeruch erfüllte den Naum. Herr
Bruch kauerte leblos auf dem Boden, seine Frau Juliette lag im Bette.
Das
Mädchen schlug Lärm. Bald war Hilfe zur Stelle und man bemühte sich um die Bewusztlosen.
Frau Juliette erholte sich rasch von ihrer Ohnmacht, aber der Mann war nicht wehr
zu retten. Das schien rätselhaft. Der Gashahn war die ganze Nacht offen gewesen
und das Gift hatte den starken Mann getötet. Wie war das möglich, daß es der
zarten Frau so wenig anzuhaben vermochte?
Die
Frau wurde ins Verhör genommen. Schlieszlich gestand sie, den Mann mit Leuchtgas
vergiftet zu hagben. Sie selbst hatte sich die Nacht über im Keller verborgen
und war erst knapp vor der Entdeckung in das Zimmer gekommen.
Als
die Untat bekannt wurde, da erinnerten sich die Leute, das so manches in dem
Leben der schönen Frau Juliette, die jetzt neununddreitzig Jahre alt ist, nicht
stimmen dürste. Die Polizei besah sich ein wenig die Vergangenheit der Verdächtigen,
und je tiefer sie bohrte, aus so merkwürdigere Dinge kam sie. Viermal war Frau
Juliette verheiratet.
~ Die
erste Ehe. ~
Den
ersten Mann hatte sie im Jahre 1912 geehelicht. Der Gatte war ein reicher Witwer,
um achtzehn Jahre älter als Juliette, und er brachte fünf minderjährige Kinder
in die Ehe mit. Die Verbindung erwies sich als recht unglücklich, die junge
Frau kümmerte sich um die Kinder überhaupt nicht.
Im
Jahre 1920 reichten die Ehelente die ScheidungskIage ein. Noch im Verlauf des
Prozesses starb der Gatte plötzlich und die Frau wäre Universalerbin geworden —
wenn die fünf Kinder nicht gewesen wären. Da brach plötzlich eine rätselhafte
Epidemie im Hause Bruch aus; im Verlauf von einem halben Jahre starben alle
fünf Kinder. Nun erhielt Julliette das gesamte Vermögen ihres Mannes.
~ Der
rätselhaste Selbstmord. ~
Kurz
hernach ging Juliette eine neue Ehe ein. Sie heiratete einen wohlhabenden Kaufmann.
Nach ganz kurzer Ehe fand man eines morgens den Ehemann, der bisher niemals Selbstinordabsichten
geäußert hatte, im Schlafzimmer erhängt auf. Juliette erklärte, sie habe die
ganze Nacht fest geschlafen und erst am Morgen zu ihrem Schrecken den Mann am
Fensterkreuz baumeln gesehen. Auch dieser zweite Mann hinterließ ein großes Vermögen.
~ Der
dritte Mann wird irrsinnig. ~
Im
Jahre 1924 heiratete Juliette zum drittenmal. Zwischen den Ehe leuten gab es
bald nach der Tranung Streit und Zank. Der Mann beklagte sich seinen Freunden
gegenüber, daß seine Frau seine Gesundheit untergrabe. Mehr als diese Andeutnng
aber war von ihm nicht heraus zukekommen. Nach halbjähriger Ehe stellten sich
bei ihm Anzeichen von Wahnsinn ein. Er wurde auf Verlangen seiner Frau in eins
Nervenheilanstalt gebracht, wo er sich noch setzt befindet.
Frau
Juliette leugnet, an dem Verhängnis, das ihre ersten drei Männer traf,
irgendeine Schuld zu haben. Aber da sie der Ermordung ihres vierten Mannes
überwiesen ist, scheint es kaum glaubhaft, daß sie nur das Opfer einer Reihe
von tragischen Zufällen sein sollte.
[“Ein
weiblicher Blaubart. Vier Männer und fünf Kinder ermordet.” Die Kleine Blatt
(Vienna, Austria), Nov. 25, 1927, p. 6]
***
FULL TEXT:
Paris, 24. – In Aünay-fons-Bois, einem kleinen Städtchen im Departement Seine,
wurde vor einigen Tagen die 39jährige Frau Juliette Claire Bruzi verhaftet, und
zwar unter dem Verdachte, ihren kürzlich verstorbenen Mann vergiftet zu haben.
Im Laufe der Untersuchung stellte sich heraus, daß Frau Bruzi viermal
verheiratet war und ihre Manner unter geheimnis vollen Umständen gestorben
sind. Einen Mord hatsie bereits eingestanden. Nach den vorliegenden
Verdachtsgründen steht es außer Zweifel, daß auch ihre früheren. Gatten durch
ihre Hand aus dem Leben geschieden sind. Außerdem besteht ein mehr begründeter
Verdacht, daß sie auch die fünf Kinder ihrer ersten Ehe durch Giftmordaus dem
Leben schasste, insgesamt somit neun Menschen leben auf dem Gewissen hat.
[“Vier
Gatten und die fünf Kinder vergiftet.” Neues Grazer Tagblatt (Graz, Austria),
25. Nov. 1927, p. 2]
***
~
Madame Brusy, die Gatten-und Kindes-mörderin. ~
Die
39jährige Gutsbesitzerin Claire Brusy heiratete im Jahre1912 einen reichen
Witwer, der fünf Kinder mit in die Ehe brachte. Acht Jahre später brachte.
Madame Brusy die Scheidungsklage gegen ihren Galten ein, ganz seltsamerweise
waren zu dieser Zeit alle fünf Kinder schon gestorben und dazu kam, gaß ganz
kurze Zeit nach dem Prozeß der Mann unter geheimniwollen Umständen tot
aufgefunden wurde. Die Frau verehelichte sich abermals, aber die Trauung war
noch nicht lange vorüber, als der zweite Gatte eines Tages erhängt aufgefunden
wurde.
Die
Polizei verhörte Madame Brusy. Die Frau gab an, daß sie mit dem zweiten Mann
wiederholt Streit gehabt habe und so auch einen heftigen Auftritt am Tage der
Auffindung der Leiche. Erregt will sie weggelaufen sein und bei ihrer Rückkehr
war ihr Gatte angeblich schon tot. Die Behörd ekonnte nichts gegen die Frau
unternehmen.
Madame
Brusy heiratete ein drittes Mal und vor wenigen Tagen fand man den dritten Mann
tot in der mit Leuchtgas erfüllten Wohnung auf. Nun wurde die Frau verhaftet;
sie gab zuerst an, verreist gewesen zu sein. Bei stundenlangen Verhören
verwickelte sie sich in Widersprüche undgestand endlich, ihren dritten Mann, während er schlief, durch
das ansströmende Leuchtgas vergiftet zu haben. Die Pariser Behörden arbeiten jetzt
daran, der verhafteten Madame Claire Brusy auch die Morde an ihren ersten zwei
Gatten und an den fünf Kindern nachzuweisen, die sie zweifellos begangen haben
dürfte, da ihr jeder der Gatten ein stattliches Vermögen hinterlassen hatte.
[“Zwei
Frauen als Möderinnen ihrer Gatten. Zwei sensationelle Kriminalaffären imn
Paris und Athen. – Weibliche Landrus. – Aus Gewinnsucht und aus religiösem
Wahnsinn gemordet.” Illustrierte Kronen-Zeitung (Vienna, Austria), 25. November
1927. p. 6]
***
CHRONOLOGY
1888
(ca.) – Juliette Thoreau born at Loiret.
1912 –
She had married her first husband in 1912. The husband was a rich widower,
eighteen years older than Juliette, and he had five minor children.
1920 –
the couple filed for divorce. While the trial was still in progress, the
husband suddenly died
1920-21
– all five children died in the course of half a year.
1924 –
Juliette buys life insurance on Maurice Brucy.
Oct.
18, 1927 – Maurice Brucy murdered; gas.
Oct.
21, 1927 – investigation reported.
Nov.
19, 1927 – arrested.
Nov.
29, 1928 – condemned to death.
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For links to other cases of woman who murdered 2 or more husbands (or paramours), see Black Widow Serial Killers.
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[224-1/13/21; 329-12/22/21;1445-2/27/22; 3442-11/13/22]
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