Total suspected murder
count: 18: Boerstock murder, plus 5 with evidence, plus another 12 suspected.
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Proper Hungarian name: Rieger Pálné Fődi Viktória; commonly known as Pipás Pista (Pipe-smoking Peter) – born in Átokháza, 1886 – died Oct. 10, 1940 in prison). Sentenced to death in 1933, she received reprieve on Christmas 1933 from Governor Miklós Horthy.
In the past few years there has been a tremendous interest
in the case: two books published (2006; 2013), a play (“Pozsgai Zsolt: Pipás
Pista”; premier: Jan. 25, 2013), a rock song
(band: Virrasztók, 2013), a historical museum
exhibition (Mora Ferenc Museum, Feb. 22, 2013),
and an exhibition) of comic artists interpretations of Rieger (Somogyi Library of Szeged Comics Festival, Mar. 31, 2013).
An award-winning documentary film on Rieger, directed by Judit
Ember (“Pipás Pista és társai,” 1983), was aired
in September 1984 on MTV-2.
***
ILLUSTRATION CAPTIONS: The Procedure of the Murders Was Always the Same, the Hungarian Police Assert. The Wide and “Smoking Peter” would prepare the noose and Place Under it a Box.
“Come
out to the barn, I’ve some thing to show you,” the Wife Would Say to
the Husband. The Husband Would See the Rope and Ask, in Wonder, What It
Was for.
“That’s for you to hang yourself with,” She Would Answer.
And
then “Smoking Peter” Would Rise Up From Her Hiding Place, Strike Him
With Her Sandbag, and the Two Women Would Put the Husband’s Head in the
Noose, Kick the Box From Under Him, and the Coroner’s Verdict Was Always
“Suicide.”
The
Procedure of the Murders Was Always the Same, the Hungarian Police
Assert. The Wide and “Smoking Peter” would prepare the noose and Place
Under it a Box.
“Come
out to the barn, I’ve some thing to show you,” the Wife Would Say to
the Husband. The Husband Would See the Rope and Ask, in Wonder, What It
Was for.
“That’s for you to hang yourself with,” She Would Answer.
And
then “Smoking Peter” Would Rise Up From Her Hiding Place, Strike Him
With Her Sandbag, and the Two Women Would Put the Husband’s Head in the
Noose, Kick the Box From Under Him, and the Coroner’s Verdict Was Always
“Suicide.”
***
FULL
TEXT: BUDAPEST – When the guards started to give “Smoking Peter,” the
Hungarian cowboy “widow-maker” from Tisza Valley, his regulation first
bath in jail, they discovered that this strange crusader, who went about
relieving wives of husbands who were no longer wanted, was a woman. It
was this same Tisza Valley that not long ago startled the world by
laying bare a long series of poisonings by which wives had been making
themselves widows without any assistance.
The
authorities thought they had put a stop to these “graveyard divorces”
when they hanged five of the self-made widows and sent a score more into
life imprisonment.
They
suspected nothing when this was followed by an epidemic of suicides in
which husbands had apparently gone out to their barns at night and
hanged themselves. In most cases it was common knowledge that the widows
were not entirely inconsolable at their bereavement.
In
fact it was known that they had bedeviled their husbands and married
life as unhappy for them as they could. However, if a wife can make her
husband’s life so unhappy that he prefers to take it by his own hand that is perfectly legal and there is nothing to be done about it.
Had
the police suspected that these were not unassisted hangings, a brief
investigation would have shown one suspicious item connected with them
all. In each case a certain hard-riding, hard-drinking and above all
hard-smoking cowboy, known as “Smoking Peter,” because, he was never
seen without a pipe in his mouth, had been a close friend of the widow
for some time before the tragedy.
Neighbors,
especially women, had not failed to note this coincidence, but they
misunderstood its significance. Never having any reason to doubt that
“Smoking Peter” was a man, they figured the rest out by the accepted
rules of gossip. There must have been a love affair between “Smoking
Peter” and the wife which had stimulated her dislike for her husband and
aggravated her meanness toward him until finally, after some unusually
bitter quarrel, he had gone out and ended it all.
That
would leave the widow free to marry her supposed lover, “Smoking
Peter.” What puzzled and confused the gossips was that none of the
widows ever did marry him and, even more surprising, they showed no
jealousy at seeing him attach himself to another married woman. Such
unfeminine absence of jealousy could only be explained by abandoning the
idea that there had ever been any romance, and without thin they could
imagine no theory by which “Smoking Peter” could have had anything to do
with the hangings.
But
it takes a man to go the limit in misunderstanding a woman, and finally
one did so the other day with such completeness that in his blunderings
he revealed the secret to the police -- otherwise the epidemic, of
“suicides” might have gone on indefinitely. The gentleman who performed
this public service was John Vecsernyes, coming to the police full of
jealous fury to tell them that the widow of John Boercsock, a wealthy
cattle miser, had confessed to him that she had paid “Smoking Peter” to
hang her husband for her.
Looking
up their records, the police were skeptical, because those snowed that
the man had died by strangulation with no marks of a struggle or signs
that his arms and legs had been tied. How could he explain that?
Vecsernyes
related the method. First the scoundrel rigged the noose in the barn,
with the knot all tied at the proper height with a tall box under it.
Then, after supper when it was dark, the wife had gotten her husband to
come out to the barn on some pretext. Seeing the noose and box, he had
walked right up to it wondering out loud what they were for.
“For
you to hang yourself with, John,” his wife had replied. When the
astonished husband turned to see what his wife meant by such a remark,
“Smoking Peter” had stepped out of the darkness and hit him on the back
of the head with a sandbag. This is where Peter’s skill came in. He
claimed to know how to hit a person just hard enough to knock him
senseless for a few minutes without fracturing his skull or raising a
bump. But some skulls are thicker than others and it has since been
found that sometimes he hit too hard, as crusaders often do.
Anyway,
the instant the husband dropped from the blow, Peter and the wife,
climbing up onto the box, pulled up the unconscious form and placed the
noose around the neck, tipped over the box as if it had been done by the
“suicide” himself and left him to die by strangulation while still
insensible.
As
soon as death was certain, Peter received his pay and went home. The
wife, cheered by the knowledge that she was a widow, went to bed. In the
morning she went out to the barn, pretended to make the discovery and
ran screaming to the nearest neighbor.
The
police, still dubious, wanted to know how their informer had learned
all this and why he was informing them. Vecsernyes explained that after
Boercsock’s death he had been the widow’s lover and she had confessed to
him. He would never have told on her if she had not recently tired of
him and, looking around for the reason, he heard that she was seeing
“Smoking Peter” again, a thing that he had always feared because he
doubted that a man would commit a murder for any such small sum as this
woman would be likely to have in ready cash. Mad with jealousy, he saw
an easy way to be rid of the supposed rival. Therefore he was now doing
his somewhat belated duty and hoped they would not punish his beloved.
“Smoking
Peter,” the widow and her son were arrested but all stoutly denied
their guilt at first. Then the police tried the old trick of telling
each that the other had confessed and confronted the widow with the
supposed cowboy. They merely glowered at each other until n police
detective remarked :
“This man claims that you never paid him for ridding you of that mean old husband of yours.”
“That’s
a lie,” answered the woman hotly. “I paid him 3,000 good silver crowns
for the job, and that’s more than he got from anyone else.” Instantly
“Smoking Peter’s” fist made a powerful swing for the widow’s jaw. The
policeman who blocked it with his wrist stated that had it landed Mrs.
Boercsock might well have been silenced forever.
They pinioned “Peter’s” arms but let “him” curse the woman for an ungrateful liar.
“You
did it for charity, did you?” sneered the widow. “Perhaps you are
thinking of your dear little friend, the widow Dobak. I happen to know
for a positive fact that when you hanged Anton Dobak for her, all you
got was a lambkin and a little wine.”
“Idiot!” yelled “Peter” in despair, “you will hang us all.”
This
prophecy seemed likely to be fulfilled, because when they arrested Frau
Dobak she confessed and described almost the identical technique in
getting her husband out of the way. Faced with this second confession,
“Smoking Peter” admitted, so the police allege, both murders, but
curiously enough still denied that the Boercsock woman ever paid her the
3,000 crowns.
The
police thought they had enough evidence to convict “Peter” of five more
hangings and expected to connect her services with still another dozen,
at least, though the arrival of a lawyer put an end to any more
confessions.
When
her sex was revealed, “Peter” made no attempt to conceal her identity.
In the prison of Szeged, she said that her maiden name was Viktoria
Foedi, that she was the daughter of a wealthy peasant who had married
her off at the age of 18 to Paul Rieger, a rich old widower, 21 years
ago. According to her story, Rieger and his two grown daughters had
treated the girl bride as a servant, even after the birth of her
daughter. Two years of this was all she could stand and then one night
she had fled, taking her baby with her. The husband, seemingly glad to
be rid of them, made no attempt to get them back and after a while
divorced Viktoria.
Rieger
confirmed this except that he said the trouble had been caused by the
young woman’s mean disposition and ungovernable temper. He admitted that
she had been a beautiful creature when he married her 24 years ago.
Physicians who examined the prisoner found her suffering from a
glandular disorder which had developed after her running away and
transformed the young woman into a sturdy person with a deep voice and
muscular frame.
As
her grievance against her husband was preying on Viktoria’s mind at the
time, they believe that it gave her the fixed idea that all wives were
abused and therefore it would be a sort of noble crusade to go around
liberating as many wives as she could from the misfortune of having a
husband.
Dressing,
looking, talking and working like a man, she turned up as a farm hand
on a lonely farm north of Szeged, whore thousands of cattle, and horses
are bred by picturesquely-dressed equivalents of the American cowboy,
being a man-hater, she shunned the male sex which looked upon her as a
sort of Don Juan because she was seen going around only with married
women.
As
a woman who hates her husband usually makes no effort to hide her
feelings, Viktoria had no difficulty in finding those who yearned to be
rid of their husbands but could not do so by divorce.
Of
course murder is also forbidden by all churches but, unlike divorce, it
might be hidden. Viktoria’s ingenious scheme of covering murder with
pretended suicide was accepted, the Budapest police officials assert, by
discontented wives the more readily because it was what psychologists
call “wish fulfillment.” Every woman who hates her husband enough is
bound to wish that he would get off the earth in some way that would not
get her into prison. Aside from sickness or accident, suicide is the
only way this could be expected to happen. In their ignorance of anatomy
and medical matters this woman and her clients did not realize that
they would have been caught at the start except for the good luck of
careless medical examination in that sparsely settled country.
Old
Rieger, remembering the feminine young thing that had run away from
him, could not believe that Viktoria had palmed herself off for 22 years
as a man, especially after he saw the coarse, masculine features of the
prisoner when her pictures were printed in the papers. So he went to
Szeged Prison and asked to look at his former bride. As he stared
through the bars at the weather-beaten features and toil-worn hands of
this pipe-smoking person, he shook his head and told the jailers that
she must be a fake. Just then the prisoner snapped at him.
“You accursed old devil! You are the cause of all my hardships and even this. I was a fool not to begin on you.”
Rieger stopped shaking his 74-year-old head and began to nod it vigorously.
“You!” he cackled. “If she hadn’t said that, I wouldn’t have recognized her. I hope she is hanged.”
He
will get his wish. Smoking Peter has just been convicted of two of the
murders and sentenced to dangle at end of the same kind of noose she had
prescribed for Mmmes. Boersock’s and Dobak’s husbands. It appeared that
in the Dolak case, she received as a fee a year’s room and board at the
home of the widow, and tobacco. The two widows were sentenced to life
imprisonment, Vecsernyes, the apprehensive lover, was given 15 years at
hard labor and young Imre Boercsock two years for not reporting the
“suicide” as murder the moment they knew what it was.
Smoking
Peter was acquitted of active complicity in seven other cases, but it
doesn’t do any good. Anybody hanged for two murders is as dead as one
hanged for a hundred. About fifteen other cases are still being
investigated.
[“Wanted
to Be Widows So They Hanged Their Husbands – Epidemic of ‘Suicides’ in
the Same Hungarian Valley Where 100 Wives Were Recently Arrested for
Husband-Poisoning Reveals an Ingenious Murder Plot With a Strange
Man-Hating Woman as its Leader,” The American Weekly (San Antonio Light)
(Tx.), Mar. 12, 1933, p. 9]
NOTE: Female serial killer suspected of 24 murders
NOTE: Female serial killer suspected of 24 murders
SEE an article published following
this Viktoria Rieger post on The Unknown
History of Misandry: Joni E. Johnston, Psy.D., “Albert Knobbs with an Edge: The cross-dressing serial killer,” May 31, 2012 in
The Human Equation (column), Psychology Today
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For more than two dozen similar cases, dating from 1658 to 2011, see the summary list with links see: The Husband-Killing Syndicates
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For more than two dozen similar cases, dating from 1658 to 2011, see the summary list with links see: The Husband-Killing Syndicates
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[16,291-9/15/20]
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Pipás Pista should be made into films for the English and Spanish speaking audiences I believe it would do well for either or both
ReplyDeleteI wish you had bothered to tell Viktória Fődi's life story. It really does show the events that led her to a life of murder. There is a good Youtube video on the subject. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qsukli6vW7c
ReplyDeleteThis blog posts news articles of old crimes, it does not sleuth and write up biographies of the killer(s) or even victim(s). I find it better to read the articles UM has provided us and sleuth out more. It doesn't hurt to take the time to research yourself if you really are interested in the case, ya know? :-) But that said - yes, Oddities does a good job in providing information. :-)
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