[edit] Disappearances
Pándy met his first wife, Ilona Sőrés, in 1957. In the wake of the communist
era, they fled from Hungary to Belgium. A year later, daughter Ágnes was born;
sons Dániel and Zoltán were born in 1961 and 1966, respectively. A year later,
the couple divorced when Pándy accused Ilona of infidelity. She moved away from
the house, taking her sons, but leaving her daughter behind, who soon became the
victim of an incestuous relationship with her father.
At the beginning of the 1970s, Pándy began courting other women through dating
services, often giving them a false name and job description, using the motto
"European Honeymoon" in the ads. By the end of the decade, he visited Hungary
again, meeting his future second wife,
Edit Fintor,
a married woman with three children,
Tünde,
Tímea
and Andrea. He seduced the woman, who, according to her then-husband, was
effectively eloped by Pándy to Belgium.
Disappearances began in 1986: first, wife Edit, then her 13-year-old daughter
Andrea - Pándy claimed to Edit's lover they moved to Germany. In 1988, his
ex-wife Ilona and her sons disappeared - Pándy first claimed they moved to
France, later claimed South America. Finally in 1990, after sending Ágnes to a
vacation with his children, Tünde disappeared - Pándy later claimed that he
threw her out of the house.
[edit] Ágnes's confession
Ágnes bottomed out in November 1997: after reporting her father in 1992 for
sexual abuse, she turned herself in to the police, confessing the murders of the
disappeared relatives. According to her, she was solely responsible for the
murder of her mother Ilona, and took part in the murder of Dániel, Zoltán and
Andrea. (She refused to mention Tünde's case.) The modus operandi presented by
her was, in two cases, murder by a handgun, and head trauma caused by a heavy
blunt object. The corpses were then dismembered, partly dissolved in acid in the
basement, and partly taken to a local abattoir.
[edit] Tímea's escape
In 1984, Pándy began another incestuous relationship with his step-daughter
Tímea. Ágnes, in a fit of jealousy, tried to bludgeon Tímea to death like the
others, but was startled. Tímea fled the house, and soon immigrated to Canada.
[edit] Arrest, trial and conviction
Pándy was arrested October 16, 1997 - a date coinciding with a demonstration for
the victims of another Belgian serial killer, Marc Dutroux. The case got
worldwide media coverage, especially after Pándy's deadpan reaction to his
surroundings. Pándy was sentenced to life in prison. When Pándy turned 80,
prison authorities began looking to put him in a retirement home. [2]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andr%C3%A1s_P%C3%A1ndy
The digger grabbed the
fingers of his mud-encrusted black rubber gloves with his teeth and gave them a
sudden tug. For just an instant he thought he might swoon from the
overpowering stench of diesel fuel and raw sewage that seemed to seep from every
crevice in the dank cellar.
He choked back his own bile as he stuffed the glove into the breast pocket of
his police issued Vulcanized rubber waders. The moment that the foul air touched
his bare skin, a chill ran down the digger’s spine and he suddenly felt somehow
unclean. He picked up the galvanized metal sieve filled with mud and gave it a
shake. Thick black slime oozed from the bottom of the pan, leaving behind, what?
A pebble, a tiny shard of glass, a tattered piece of cloth…and…what was that?
That small white fragment there in the mud?
His imagination was getting the best of him, the digger told himself.
He needed to focus. This was a crime scene. Nothing more. He was a professional
and his job was to collect evidence, however small, bag it, tag it, and send it
upstairs. He wasn’t there to make judgments.
It was up to the detectives, the elites upstairs from the Belgian Ministry of
Justice, to put it all together and decide what it all meant. They would decide
whether the evidence showed that this was the house of an innocent man of God or
whether Andras Pandy,
the rumpled little clergyman with the odd Hungarian accent, really was
the monster he was accused of being.
It was up to them to determine whether Pandy’s daughter had been telling the
truth when she accused her father of seducing her and then conspiring with her
to murder six members of their family. They would decide whether it was true
that together father and daughter had
hacked up their family -- Pandy’s
first wife, his daughter’s mother, his own son and young daughter -- and
dissolved the pieces of their bodies in an acrid bath of acid. All the digger
had to do was pick up the pieces.
He reached into the filth at the bottom of his sieve and tentatively probed the
tiny white fragment with his finger. It was exactly what he had thought it was.
It was a human tooth. There beside it was a splinter of bone, a piece of a
kneecap, a small bit of human flesh and beside that, a chunk of human skull.
Case Closed and Forgotten
It was two years earlier, in 1997 and an army of Belgians – 350,000 out of a
nation of 10 million – had marched in silence through the streets of Brussels.
It was much more than simply a candlelight vigil, the kind of spontaneous
demonstration of grief and outrage that have become common in the aftermath of
brutal crimes. This demonstration – which became known as the White March - a
massive protest against the government’s bungled investigation into a series of
kidnappings and murders in Belgium.
Some in the crowd had even accused the government of participating in a cover up
of the crimes of a killer named Marc Dutroux. In fact, a parliamentary inquiry
into the cases had found that police and prosecutors had so thoroughly botched
the Dutroux affair that their actions “put at risk the state of law.” It seemed
as if all the institutions of Belgium had been tainted, the police, the courts,
the government itself. Shaken Belgians wonder aloud whether there was any
institution in the nation that could be trusted.
So deep was the outrage over the killings and the government’s handling of them,
that some thought the upheaval might threaten to destroy the Maryland-sized
country, to rip it apart along ethnic lines, dividing French speakers from
Flemish speakers.
“Corruption and spinelessness are eternal,” Hugo Claus, the nation’s most
revered Flemish writer said in a newspaper interview at the time. “Stupidity and
mediocrity accompany our existence and in Belgium, this is amplified.”
For the authorities in Belgium, the Dutroux case – and the explosion of public
anger that had followed it -- had been their Waterloo. In its wake,
investigators and prosecutors were facing intense scrutiny. They were under
immense pressure to prove that they were not bumbling misfits and that the
public could have faith in them.
That was why investigators began combing through old records, going back a
decade or more, reviewing almost every case they had closed, looking for
oversights and errors.
It didn’t take long to find one. At first, the case didn’t look like much, a
fairly routine complaint, five years earlier by a young woman named Agnes Pandy,
the mousy then 38-year-old daughter of a protestant minister, a quiet but
diligent woman who spent her days working in the map department of the Albert
First Royal Library.
Her whole demeanor made her easy to ignore. A lackluster young woman, blank
unblinking eyes behind nondescript spectacles, she seemed to be the kind of
person who wandered around the fringes of life, always overlooked. Perhaps she
had issues with her father. Women like that often do, authorities thought. She
certainly had seemed a little odd when she first walked into police headquarters
claiming that her father had turned her into his sex slave.
But she also seemed sincere when she told police that she was worried.
She said that four years earlier her father had sent her and her older brother
on holiday to the Belgian coast for several days. When they returned, she told
police at the time, her stepmother, Edith Pandy and her sister, Andrea, had
vanished.
“Don’t look for them,” she recalled her father telling her on her return.
“They’re not coming back.”
But in the end, her complaints went nowhere. Investigators had looked into the
case back then – without much enthusiasm - and had come up empty. There was no
evidence to support her claim that she had been sexually assaulted. Nor was
there any evidence that her father’s parsonage was, as the newspapers would
later call it “A House of Horrors.” Investigators had spoken briefly with the
minister and he had offered a perfectly plausible explanation for his wife and
daughter’s absence. “They have returned
to Hungary” he told authorities. He had even offered them proof that the
missing family members were alive and well in Eastern Europe. He had a stack of
letters purportedly written by them and postcards mailed from places like
Israel, Miami and Brazil.
His explanation certainly seemed satisfactory. The investigators thanked the
disheveled parson for his time and moved on, closing the case, confident that
the whole thing was just a bizarre tale spun by a frustrated spinster, filled
with resentment for her respectable father.
Certainly, Andras Pandy might have seemed a little eccentric, but he was a
minister, a respected part of an institution in Belgium, and in the early
1990’s, at least, institutions in Belgium were still to be trusted and
respected.
Of course, that was back in the days before L’Affaire Dutroux had shaken the
foundation of all the institutions in Belgium. Times had changed, authorities
thought. Maybe it was time to revisit the Pandy case one more time.
A Walk in the Courtyard
Francois Monsiuer was starting to get frustrated. Then a senior prosecutor in
Brussels Judicial Police criminal unit, Monsiuer had been listening almost
sympathetically to Agnes Pandy’s rambling statements for hours but it seemed to
the veteran prosecutor that something was missing. The newspapers were already
reporting her bizarre allegations against her father. “I
am ashamed that my father might turn out to be one of the worst serial killers
in history,” she told a Belgian newspaper. But there were great gaps in
her halting tale.
Monsiuer gently suggested to her that, perhaps, a walk through the courtyard of
the Brussels Judicial Police building might clear her head.
And so she strolled, her heels clicking on the blocks in the courtyard, while a
few paces behind her, police kept close watch on her. The ornate and terribly
civilized facades, the carefully tended plantings, the sculptures that adorned
this corner of Brussels all seemed so calming and orderly, a far cry from the
squalid industrial neighborhood where Pandy had lived with her father, a place
that reeked of sewage and slaughterhouses. If she had to summon the ghosts of
slaughtered family members, though, perhaps this was a good place to rally them.
A half an hour later, she returned, leaned forward and softly said to Monsiuer,
“I am going to tell you how we killed five people.”
Her tale was one of imaginable horror, a
grand guignol
of murder and rape and depravity at the house on Quai
de l’Industrie in the
rundown quarter of Brussels known as Molenbeek. She talked of how her father, a
bookish churchman, had seduced her when she was just 13, raped her is perhaps a
more accurate phrase, and how she felt she had no way of escaping him. “I had no
way out,” she would later tell authorities. Her will had been totally subjected
to his. As her defense attorney would later tell a jury, “she had been under the
overwhelming irresistible spell” of her father.
By the time she was finished talking, Agnes Pandy had implicated her father –
and herself – in five homicides, all members of their family.
The body parts that would later be
pulled from the mud in Pandy’s
murky basement, the slabs of unidentified “meat” pulled from his freezer, would
offer an even more chilling glimpse into the horror.
DNA tests conducted on them would reveal
that the bones and teeth and fragments of flesh were indeed human, but did not
match any of the missing members of the Pandy
family. That, authorities said, meant that there were in all probability other
victims.
Perhaps, they would later speculate that as many as 13 people fell victim in
Brussels to Pandy’s
blood lust. Some of them, they speculated might have been innocent women lured
from Pandy’s
native Hungary through newspaper ads he had placed there searching for a bride.
She spelled out in graphic detail how she and her father, described by a fellow
churchman as “unfathomable and mysterious,” with a constant smirk, “a little
smile, like Buddha,” had killed their victims. Some were shot.
Others bludgeoned to death with a
sledgehammer. Then they hacked their victims to pieces and stuffed their remains
in plastic bags, dumping some at a nearby
abattoir, dipping
others into a vat brimming with 21 liters of Cleanest, an acid cleanser that ate
all the meat from the bones and then dissolved the bones themselves.
The full scope of the horror was beyond comprehension, Monsiuer thought. Much of
it, as Monsiuer would soon learn, would be beyond the powers of the Belgian
authorities to prove. But there was certainly enough evidence, what with the
viscera that had been collected at Pandy’s house and with the damning statement
of his daughter, to prove that Andras Pandy was a deranged killer in a cleric’s
frock.
Killer in a Cleric's Frock
The newspapers in Brussels would later call him “The Diabolical Pastor,” but
there was nothing in Andras Pandy’s calm and quiet demeanor that would indicate
the depth of his potential for depravity, authorities said.
Short and disheveled, with a bit of a paunch and a mane of unkempt gray hair, he
was articulate but reserved when dealing with strangers. A refugee, he had fled
his native Hungary after the bloody uprising against Soviet authority there in
1956. He ultimately drifted to Belgium where he managed to find work, first as a
pastor at a church for fellow Hungarians who had also fled the community regime,
and then later teaching religion in Flemish schools.
At about the same time that he fled Hungary, Pandy
married his first wife. Her name was Illona
Sores, and she bore the pastor four children, the eldest was Agnes.
By all appearances, the family was the picture of propriety.
Pandy
was a clever businessman, authorities would say, who traded on his public
image as a man of God for profit. He founded an organization -- Ydnap, his own
name spelled backwards – providing foster care for children orphaned during the
revolution in Romania that ousted dictator Nicolas Ceausescu, the Hungarian
newspaper Nepszava reported. Authorities believe he used that foundation to
raise enough money to buy two houses in Brussels, authorities said.
But behind the closed doors of one of those houses, a 19th Century manse where
the Pandys lived, the picture was quite different. The family was a study in
dysfunction.
As investigators would later learn, the slightly effeminate preacher was a
brutal martinet in his own home. He was, as a report in a European newspaper
would later put it, “an authoritarian bully…a sexually voracious predator who
advertised for partners in the Hungarian press, and an abuser of his own
children.”
In 1967, after 11 years of marriage,
Sores and Pandy
divorced. Sores mysteriously vanished. For his part, Pandy
explained that she had simply returned to Hungary.
Authorities would later discover that Sores had been one of the victims of the
killer cleric and his sex slave daughter.
In the meantime, Agnes, it now appears, had become at least one of the objects
of Pandy’s rapacious sexual appetite. She would later tell authorities, she was
just 13 years old when her father began sexually abusing her. She would describe
herself as his sex slave, according to published reports.
The sexual abuse, authorities would later say, continued even after 1979 when
Pandy met and married his second wife, a single mother of three children named
Edith Fintor, whom he had found through an advertisement he placed in a
lonely-hearts column in a Hungarian newspaper. She would later bear the Priappan
preacher two more children.
Fintor’s young daughter Timea appealed to Pandy’s sordid sexuality as well,
authorities said. He began a lengthy sexual relationship with the young girl. He
was, authorities say, as secretive about
his liaisons with his daughter and stepdaughter as any predatory pedophile might
be. But when at last it seemed as if his secret might be revealed, Pandy,
authorities charged, was ready to go to unthinkable lengths to protect himself.
That became clear in 1986, Agnes Pandy told authorities, when
Timea
became pregnant with her stepfather’s child. Authorities now believe that
Timea’s pregnancy may have been the catalyst for Pandy’s killing spree. Timea’s
stepfather wanted her dead. Her stepsister, Agnes tried to oblige him.
Agnes later admitted that she tried to
bludgeon her sister, but her sister managed to escape and fled with her infant
son, first to Canada and then back to Hungary. Somehow, she managed to
remain out of Pandy’s reach.
Other members of Pandy’s family were not so lucky.
"It Felt Cold"
For years, Agnes had been silent. Silent about her own abuse, silent about the
unnatural series of killings on which she and her father had embarked. Of
course, she had tried to tell the story, or at least part of it, before. But no
one had been listening. So she simply remained silent.
They were listening now. For two days in October of 1997, she talked. Her
confession took several hours, authorities would later say.
It was, she told authorities, at her
father’s behest that she killed her own mother. Together, between 1986 and 1992,
they killed her stepmother and three of her siblings. They disposed of the
bodies in the most gruesome way.
When the case finally made it to court earlier this year, jurors would get a
taste of just how awful that disposal had been.
Forensic scientists, working for the prosecution, took body parts harvested from
a man who had died of natural causes, and as a video camera recorded the
experiment, they dumped the viscera into a vat of Cleanest. The household
cleanser has since, for reasons unrelated to the Pandy case, been pulled from
the market.
The acid bath worked just as Agnes had claimed. The remains of the man who had
donated his body to science simply vanished into the frothy pool of chemicals.
When the tape was played in court, Pandy was unmoved. But Agnes averted her
eyes.
Agnes, Andras & Tunde Pandy (Reuters/Landrov©)
The gruesome image on the screen seemed, observers would later say, to bring all
the horror back to Agnes. Illen Sores,
Edit Fintor,
her daughters, Andrea and Tunde.
Agnes own brothers, Zoltan and Daniel. Their deaths were brutal. Their
dismemberment was even more savage. Seeing it stunned her back into silence.
But as she sat in Monsiuer’s office on that October afternoon in 1997, she was
anything but silent. She told the police how she and her father chopped up the
corpses using kitchen knives and axes before dissolving the remains.
She told them how she had eviscerated
one of her own stepsisters with her own hands. "It was my task to take out the
organs while Pandy
was cutting up the remains," she said. "I just used a kitchen knife . . . you
have to exercise strength. It's not that easy."
The only real sensation she could recall, she would later testify was this: “It
felt cold.”
A Clever Liar
How was it possible, the newspaper pundits wondered, that such a brutal and
prolonged killing spree could go undetected? Surely, it had to be the
incompetence of the judicial system, the police, the prosecutors. Surely, they
had failed, the critics opined.
And perhaps, to some degree they did. Perhaps they could have been more
aggressive when word first leaked out that something unsavory might be going on
at the house in Molenbeek.
But perhaps there was another reason that the diabolical pastor managed to
escape detection for so long. Perhaps it was that Pandy himself took great pains
to cover his tracks, authorities said. He was, prosecutors would later say, a
very “clever liar,” and a talented actor.
Take, for example, the dramatic portrayal of a jilted husband that Pandy has
said to have given in 1986 at the front desk of a Brussels police station not
long after – as authorities would later learn – he murdered his second wife.
Appearing agitated and distraught, the parson stormed into headquarters to
report that his second wife – a woman, he claimed, he had rescued from the evils
of a communist country, simply up and left him. “She had gone to live in
Germany,” he told police. His performance was convincing, authorities would
later say.
But that is hardly the most elaborate performance the theatrical preacher gave,
authorities said.
Not long after Pandy’s arrest, police in Hungary discovered what may have been
his most elaborate ruse. Claiming that he was writing a screenplay about his
life, he hired two young actors to impersonate two of his missing children
during his occasional forays back to his native Hungary. Pandy had purchased a
tiny green cottage in his old hometown. He called it a refuge from his life in
Brussels. “He took the children on family visits,” then asked his friends and
family to “write letters saying they had seen the children,” police said at the
time. A widow, who would later be wooed by Pandy and later became dangerously
close to him, remembered that Pandy brought two young women to her house one day
about a year before his arrest. “They were about 22 or 24, and their names were
Andrea and Tunde,” Margrit Magyar told a reporter. “But I later learned that
these were the names of two of the girls that were supposed to have
disappeared.”
The young women told police they played their parts several times between 1992
and 1996, and never suspected a thing. They believed that the ruse was
“rehearsal for a part on a movie about Pandy’s life,” authorities said.
A Vague Suspicion
Not everyone was swayed by Pandy’s performances.
Istvan Stweszek, a retired minister in the Hungarian Protestant Church in
Belgium and a former colleague of Pandy’s, told the Irish Times in a 1997
interview that he had long had a disquieting feeling about his fellow pastor
even before Fintor’s disappearance.
“We often had the impression that his wife was not only his wife, but also his
servant and slave,” Steszek told the newspaper.
In fact, as early as 1989, a pastor in the nearby Netherlands who knew both
Pandy and his second wife well enough to be concerned about Fintor’s sudden
disappearance, wrote to police and to Queen Fabiola, urging the government to
investigate.
The letters were examined, authorities said, and a missing persons report was
filed. But when police spoke to Pandy, he put on yet another grand performance,
telling them that he had heard from his estranged spouse and that the news was
all grim. She remained in Germany, he told them, and had fallen gravely ill. As
a matter of fact, he said, she seemed to be near death.
Ironically, at about the same time,
workers rebuilding a canal alongside Pandy’s
house unearthed a handful of human bones. No attempt was ever made to link those
remains to Pandy’s
missing family members.
It was in 1992 when a friend of a high-ranking police official suggested that
someone might want to talk to Agnes Pandy, the pastor’s daughter.
They did. They met with her. They listened to her. For seven hours, they
listened. And then they turned to Pandy.
Angrily, he denied his daughter’s allegations of incest and worse. He accused
her of being pathologically jealous, and suggested that she was secretly a
member of a strange sect.
Besides, he told them, it was he who had first reported his wife missing, and
with his emotional state at the time, certainly that was proof enough that he
had borne his wife no ill will.
Besides, he said, brandishing a stack of letters, he had evidence – in black and
white – that his children were alive.
In August of that year, the incest case was closed. A few months later, the
police notes, the records of the phone calls, the transcripts of
their interviews were all shuffled into
a file marked “no further action,” and buried in the deepest recess of a
Brussels police station.
But five years later, as the nation reeled from the shock of the Dutroux
scandal, the Pandy file would be exhumed. Soon thereafter,
police diggers in vulcanized rubber boots would slowly descend the basement
stairs in Pandy’s
home, easing their way along the blood stained wall, to begin sifting through
the muck, searching for fragments of unthinkable horror.
J'Accuse
It was February of 2002. The “Pastor Diabolique,” as he had been dubbed by the
Belgian press, seemed vaguely amused as officers led him past the throng of
reporters and photographers into the courtroom in the vast marbled hall of
justice. That smile, that ever-present smile; that Buddha-like smile, as his
former colleague had described it, never seemed to fade from his face, observers
would later note.
Throughout his two-week long trial, as he sat next to his co-defendant, who was
also his chief accuser, his former sex partner and his daughter, Pandy seemed
hardly to be moved by the proceedings.
But the people of Belgium were deeply
disturbed. For them, the case, as horrible as it was, was also an indictment
against the police, the prosecutors and the courts.
For them, it dredged up again the revulsion they had felt when word of Dutroux’s
atrocities against young girls – and the government’s impotence in the face of
his crimes. It reminded them of the government’s botched investigation a decade
earlier into the Killers of Brabant, who
between 1982 and 1985 shot dead 28 shoppers in gun attacks on supermarket car
parks around Brussels. In that case, hooded murderers, always driving the same
Volkswagen Golf GTi
would open fire at random with pump-action shotguns, and then escape, evading
police roadblocks and even crack military units as they fled, leaving hundreds
of wounded people behind them. No one has ever been charged.
Pandy, the smiling, bespectacled pastor accused of a horrific string of murders
was just one more example of how the authorities had failed to fulfill the most
basic responsibility of any government – to protect its citizens.
To make matters worse, this was to be a
trial with no bodies. The bone fragments plucked from the mud in Pandy’s
basement had been studied and tested, but authorities were never able to
determine whose remains they were. They were the remains of men and women, all
of them over the age of 35, but their identities remained a mystery.
As a result, the indictment against Pandy and his daughter named only the five
victims who had been bound to him by blood or marriage -- his two former wives
and his three children. Of them, not a trace remained. What’s more, his
stepdaughter Timea, who had carried his child and survived his alleged attempt
against her life, refused to testify against him in court. She told authorities
that even after nearly twenty years, she still feared the man.
In court, Pandy seemed to relish the fact that even now – nearly 20 years after
his killing spree ended, police still had no hard physical evidence with which
to confront him.
At one point, he challenged the prosecutors to prove that his family members
were dead, claiming that they were “alive and well” and in the care of some
unspecified “international society.”
“It is up to justice to prove that they are dead,” he said. “When I’m free
again, they will come and visit me.”
Later, he appeared to almost taunt the prosecution, claiming that he was “in
contact,” with his missing children, then added, “through the angels.”
The Verdict
But the prosecutors were relentless, observers would later say. In hindsight, it
may have been their decision to show the grisly videotape of body parts being
dissolved in the same acidic cleanser that Pandy allegedly used on his family,
which made the difference.
Perhaps it was the Prosecutor General Alain Winant’s chilling
depiction of Pandy as a pastor who felt that he could act “as a God in every
sense of the word,” a man who “has reached such a level of virtuosity when it
comes to lying that one can really speak of a form of art in his case.”
Perhaps it was Pandy’s own rambling denunciation of the case against him as a
“witch trial” during a closing statement that observers said confirmed what
court appointed psychologists had found when they described him as “paranoid,
hostile and anti-social.
“Here in the capital of Europe I have been subjected to a trial for sorcery,” he
told the jurors in a statement peppered with obscure references from the Bible,
about the fall of the Roman Empire and the trial of Socrates. “At every turn,
the proceedings have been very black, full of tragedy, full of Satanism.”
After twelve hours of deliberation, on March 8, a jury convicted Pandy of six
counts of murder. He was also convicted of raping his daughters.
Agnes Pandy was convicted of five counts of murder, and of the attempted murder
of her stepsister Timea. Agnes Pandy was sentenced to 21 years in prison.
Her father was sentenced to life.
http://www.trutv.com/library/crime/serial_killers/weird/andras_pandy/1.html
Agnes Pandy
confessed to police that she and her father either shot or sledgehammered
to death five relatives -- her mother, two brothers, a stepmother and her
daughter. Then they chopped up the bodies and used a powerful drain cleaner to
dissolve the corpses and flush them down the drain. Agnes told authorities
that her preacher dad had been raping her since age 13. He also regularly
raped his stepdaughters. Things got ugly when 20-year-old Timea,
one of the stepdaughter, became pregnant. Pandy
tried to kill her and her son, but she managed to escape to Canada and then
Hungary.
Authorities have also linked Agnes to the
disappearance in 1993 of a 12-year-old
girl whose Hungarian mother had a relationship with Pastor Pandy. Belgian newspapers
reported that five years ago Agnes notified police that several members of her
family were missing. At the time, she also denounced her father for sexually
abusing her and her step-sisters. In true Belgian fashion, nothing came of it
and charges were eventually dropped.
The Hungarian Nepszava
newspaper reported that Pandy
fostered an undetermined number of orphaned or homeless Romanian children in
his home in Brussels. The children -- who became orphaned or homeless in
Romania's 1989 revolution which toppled communist dictator Nicolae
Ceausescu -- were taken in by a charity club named YDNAP
(PANDY
backwards) founded by the lethal pastor. They stayed under his care for
varying periods of time, "and nobody knows what happened to them or if they
returned home." In Brussels, press reports speculated that bones found
under a concrete slab in one of Pandy's homes were those of a Hungarian woman
who arrived in Belgium with her daughter after replying to a personal add
placed by the pastor in search of a wife.
On April 24 tests by Norwegian
forensic scientists showed that the new set of teeth discovered were from
seven women, aged between 35 and 55, and a man, who was between 18 and 23. It
is suspected that the unidentified victims were lured from Hungary to Belgium
with promises of marriage. Police had previously thought that the
teeth, bones and other remains found at Pandy's house might have come from
five people unrelated to him.
On March 6, 2002, a Belgian court convicted of Pandy of killing six family
members and dissolving their bodies in chemical drain cleaner. He was
sentenced to life in prison. His daughter 44-year-old Agnes Pandy, received a
21-year sentence for being an accomplice in five murders and one attempted
murder. Pandy,
who is Hungarian but moved to Belgium to escape Communism, was found guilty of
murdering two wives and four children, one of which, a daughter, he also was
convicted of raping. Not the cornerstone in family values, he was
convicted of raping Agnes and another daughter.
Prosecutors had requested a 29-year sentence for Agnes, but her lawyers pushed
for leniency, saying Agnes had been under the "overwhelming irresistible
spell" of a father who was raping her as he coerced her into collaborating in
the killings of her mother and siblings. "I had no way out. I was completely
in his grip," Agnes said in her closing statement.
In court, Pandy dismissed the proceedings as a "witch trial" against him. He
told the jury that the allegedly dead were still alive and he is "in contact
with them through angels." When asked why the missing family members could not
be traced in four years of searching, Pandy replied: "It is up to justice to
prove they are dead. When I'm free again, they will come and visit me."
His prison
An elderly Hungarian émigré dubbed "the diabolical pastor" by the
Belgian media was sentenced to life imprisonment yesterday after being
found guilty of murdering his first two
wives and four of his eight children.
In an unusually brutal case which has transfixed Belgium and shocked
investigators, a Brussels court found Andras Pandy, 74, guilty of six counts of
premeditated murder and concluded that he had also raped three of his daughters.
His eldest daughter, Agnes, 44, had been sexually molested by Pandy since the
age of 13. But she was found guilty of aiding her father in five of the six
killings, albeit under duress. She was jailed for 21 years, eight less than
prosecutors had demanded, in recognition of her claims that she was an unwilling
accomplice.
The case has been compared in its scope and horror to that of the British serial
killers Fred and Rosemary West.
Belgians have been shocked at the brutal
method of the killings - with hammers and pistols - and the gruesome disposal of
the bodies - in acidic drain cleaner.
The court found that Pandy
had killed his first wife, Ilona
Sores, his second wife, Edit
Fintor, his step-daughters Andrea
and Tunde
and his sons Zoltan
and Daniel with unbridled savagery.
Although no bodies were found, police uncovered evidence which, in the words of
one magazine, "made prosecutors shudder". Teeth, bones, flesh, bloodstains,
ripped clothing, hair and ashes were found in houses owned by
Pandy
in Brussels.
Firearms were also discovered behind a false ceiling along with 21 litres of an
ultra-powerful acidic drain cleaner called Cleanest, which has since been
removed from the market because of its strength.
Agnes, who confessed and reported her father in the first place, helped
prosecutors fill in the gory details. She explained how they would
chop up the corpses using axes and
kitchen knives, then dissolve the remains in Cleanest or bag up the bones and
organs and dump them at abattoirs or butchers' shops.
"It was my task to take out the organs while Pandy was cutting up the remains,"
she said. "I just used a kitchen knife... you have to exercise strength. It's
not that easy."
The presiding judge,
Karel
Demyttenaere,
said yesterday that the duo had "very dangerous antisocial personalities".
Like about 10,000 of his compatriots, Pandy came to Belgium after the Hungarian
uprising was crushed by the Soviet Union in 1956. He set up home in Brussels
with his first wife, Ilona Sores, who gave birth to three children. After
divorcing her in 1967 he married his second wife Edit Fintor, who already had
three children of her own and gave birth to two more by Pandy.
Nobody noticed anything suspicious about the brooding
Pandy
until 1992 when he retired from teaching, by which time he had already
murdered both wives, his step-daughters and his sons.
Pandy threw investigators off the scent by claiming that his wives and children
had gone abroad indefinitely.
In an extraordinary attempt to conceal his crimes, he employed actors to
impersonate his victims back in Hungary, telling the recruits that they were in
a film about his life. Investigators were told by unsuspecting friends of the
family back in Hungary that they were alive and well.
The Belgian authorities abandoned the case until 1996, the year in which Belgium
was rocked by the paedophile murder case of Marc Dutroux. Shamed into action,
police reopened the Pandy files and arrested him in 1997.
Defiant to the very end, Pandy told the court minutes before it retired to
consider his sentence that the trial had seen the triumph of "fallacy" over
"authenticity".
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http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2002/mar/07/andrewosborn