Albert Pel | |
Birth Name: | Félix-Albert Pel |
Alias: | "The Watchmaker of Montreuil" |
Birth Date: | 1849 6, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Aigueblanche, Savoie Department, France |
Death Place: | New Caledonia Prison, New Caledonia |
Conviction: | Murder |
Sentence: | Penal labour |
Victims: | 1–4 |
Beginyear: | 1872 |
Endyear: | 1884 |
Country: | France |
Apprehended: | July 1884 |
Félix-Albert Pel (12 June 1849 – 9 June 1924) was a French serial killer. He was nicknamed The Watchmaker of Montreuil.
The serial killer Landru was compared to Pel at his own trial because of the many similarities between the two cases.
Born in Grand-Coeur, in the municipality of Aigueblanche, Albert Pel was the son of a watchmaker and a merchant; his parents separated shortly after his birth, apparently because of adulterous acts committed by his mother. In this regard, Pel said during his trial he suffered from "insecurities if he really was the child of the Savoie watchmaker". He remained with his father in Bourg-Saint-Maurice, and his mother moved to Paris. She was remembered for her modest trade of religious objects on Sainte-Croix-de-la-Bretonnerie street. Pel was raised by his father and later collected by one of his uncles.[1]
In 1859, an uncle who was interested in Albert Pel, Master Flandin, a lawyer at Moûtiers, proposed to send him to Paris to finish his education and make his apprenticeship. There, he resided mainly with his mother, who entrusted the boy first to the sisters of Saint Augustine, then to the brothers of Saint Nicolas, Vaugirard.
At the age of fifteen, he entered Messieurs Leriel and Maucolin, and in 1868, he went out to become a worker, in the Manceau watchmaking house at 17th Rue La Fayette, then in the Josse house at 13th Rue De Douai. During this time, Albert Pel still lived with his mother, on Rue Bleue. When business did not prosper, they moved to Rochechouart Street in the middle of 1869, where Pel opened a watch business. Miss Reichenbach, a neighbour of the Pels, testified during the trial of the lack of sympathy Pel had for his mother.
In the early days of August 1872, Ms. Pel was seized with severe colic. The doctor visited her only once, finding pain in the abdomen and stomach, and obstructions of the airways. On 26 August, she died without her son being badly affected. According to witnesses, he even exclaimed: "There she is!" The death certificate will note as cause of death "chronic bronchitis". Pel insisted that no one came to watch the body, nor to witness the burial. The neighbours supposed that the strange noises that they heard that day were the work of Pel, seeking to discover hidden valuables in the house.
In 1873, his father died in Bourg Saint-Maurice. Albert Pel, not having moved from Paris, again appeared unaffected by the death. He collected the inheritance, about 25,000 francs. The investigation noted that for the occasion, Pel wore a red ribbon at his buttonhole, which intrigued the people attending the funeral. When asked, he would answer:
Pel moved frequently. From 1872 to 1874, he lived in different neighbourhoods where he variably presented himself as a mathematics teacher at Lycée Saint-Louis, a professor of rhetoric, or an organist of the Sainte-Trinité, all of which were false. He would also tell a fellow student, Mr. Hubert, about the death of his mother, that she was struck down with an induction coil that he had in his possession.
In July 1874, he moved to Raynouard Street in Passy. His excellent behaviour, his seriousness, and his assiduousness of the pusher had won him public attention, when, in October 1877, an unfortunate event occurred. A creditor, Mr. Serin, apparently particularly discourteous, claimed the payment of a debt of 2,000 francs. Pel began by responding with threatening letters, then one day went to his opponent's home to shoot him. Disarmed and taken to the Police Commissioner, Pel was detained. Rambling, he was quickly taken to the infirmary, where he was examined, and recognized as delusional. He was placed at Sainte-Anne, where he remained for a month under observation. When he was released, the specialists declared him radically cured; he settled with the creditor.
Returning to Paris, he successively opened a pastry shop, and an advertising agency, then became a director and a sponsor of the Théâtre des Délassements-Comiques. In 1878, he moved to Doudeauville Street, where he used the name of Cuvillier, with the agreement of Mrs. Cuvillier, to protect himself from his creditors. In May 1879, he moved to Ternes, Doisy Street, in an apartment where he now dealt only with physics and chemistry; he then gave himself the title of physician.
With him lived two women: Marie Mahoin, his servant, and Eugénie Meyer, his mistress, a seamstress in her fifties, who used to mend costumes at the Odéon-Théâtre de l'Europe. Two months later, Meyer and Mahoin were both suddenly sick with vomiting and diarrhea; they complained, moreover, of an unquenchable thirst. Meyer had fallen ill first; the servant had treated her for some time; then, very suffering herself, between 19 July 1880 at Beaujon Hospital. Eight days were enough to restore her health, but in the meantime, Meyer went missing. Since the departure of his servant, Pel lived as a recluse in his home, passing his mail through a fanlight.
Miss Mahoin, wishes to resume her service for Pel. The now-odd-looking man refused to let her enter his home, and as she wanted to at least take away the trunk she had left when she left, he closed the door, asked for her to wait a few minutes, then gave to her the effects she had asked for. A first judicial inquiry was opened to investigate the disturbing disappearance of Eugenie. Pel was the main suspect of the investigation, but due to lack of serious evidence, he benefited from a non-suit order. Pel then came to live on Avenue Kléber where he began to practice the watchmaking profession.On 26 August 1880, Pel married Eugénie Buffereau, a young saleswoman employed by a merchant on the Avenue d'Eylau (now Avenue Victor-Hugo), who brought him a dowry of about 4,000 francs. A month later, the young woman suffered from constant vomiting and complained of a burning thirst.
On 21 October, Bufferau's mother visited her with a beautiful girl, following a note she received from her own daughter, saying: "Come quickly if you want to see me again alive!" Bufferau wanted to eat at the table, but could barely stand up, and vomited a lot. A doctor, Dr. Raoult, was called: he first believed that it was poisoning by fungi, then concluded it was acute gastroenteritis. She died on 24 October 1880, to the total indifference of her husband. Her family, outraged, considered taking legal action but decided not to, for fear of a scandal. In 1884, when the watchmaker was arrested, Bufferau's corpse was exhumed, and her remains were examined by the experts: there was a significant quantity of arsenic. Pel argued that his wife was taking Fowler's solution.
Pel ran away again in 1881 and remained on Dôme Street, Passy. He began courting Miss Angèle Dufaure Murat-Bellisle, whom he had employed for some time as an apprentice. The union materialized, but the family-in-law, wary, wanted to establish a marriage contract, to protect the dowry of about 5,000 francs. Pel, fiercely opposed, consented after the ceremony to establish a will under which, in case of death, he bequeathed his property to his widow, but only if his wife and his mother did the same for his benefit.
After the wedding, the couple, accompanied by the bride's mother, decided to settle in Nanterre. Pel went back to studying poisons while continuing his watchmaking profession. He developed an insecticide for Phylloxera Philloxericide of Dr. Pel, with the intent to revolutionize the regions of vineyards. In addition, he obtained authorization from the Paris Police Prefecture to sell poisonous substances and chemicals. Mrs Dufaure-Murat soon began suffering from violent colics. Frightened by the large amount of dangerous substances in the house to which she attributed her indisposition, she eventually moved to Paris, leaving the young couple alone. In April, Pel's wife, pregnant (she would give birth a few weeks before the trial), abandoned him for the nascent relationship he had with Élise Boehmer, a servant of forty years who repaired watches.
On 21 June 1884, Pel and Élise Boehmer moved to Montreuil-sous-Bois, 9th l'Église Street. On 2 July, Boehmer fell sick, suffering from colic and vomiting that caused her intolerable suffering. Two neighbours came to provide daily care until 12 July, when Pel moved to the bedside. Boehmer's pulse disappeared in the evening and never gave further signs of life. During the night, several witnesses reported that Pel had masked the windows with black fabrics and carpets; others complained of the terrible smell that came from the kitchen and attested to having seen the watchmaker light large fires in an oven, which only went out at sunrise.[2] The prosecutor's office, after a summary investigation, suspected him of cremating his girlfriend and ordered for his arrest. Pel defended himself: according to him, Élise Boehmer, feeling much better, left him on 13 July, with a coachman that he would have gone himself to look for more than five kilometres, Faubourg Saint-Antoine. After the police investigation, Albert Pel was accused of seven poisonings and was sent back to the cour d'assises.
Pel appeared on 11 June 1885 before the Assizes Court of Seine. The trial, chaired by Mr. Councilor Dubard, lasted three days. The indictment noted seven poisonings over ten years, but only two were pursued (those of Eugénie Buffereau and Élise Boehmer). Albert Pel denied all charges. He pleaded innocent and was defended by a young trainee lawyer who had been appointed ex officio, Mr. Joly.
Pel, aged 36 at the time of his conviction, was, according to the newspapers of the time of average height and puny appearance; his face, very peculiar, had as much marked the spirits of the time as the originality of his crimes.[3] Very intelligent, he had black hair, lying back; his face was thin and yellowish; had extraordinarily prominent cheekbones; his eyes were sheltered behind gold glasses; he had a long, pointed nose; his lips were thin and discolored, and he had a black mustache and goatee. During both trials, he appeared dressed in black and wearing a white headscarf. His nonchalance, often noted by the journalists, contrasted with the seriousness of the accusations against him. Until the end, he proclaimed his innocence.
Throughout the trial, the Crown, in the person of Advocate General Bernard, highlighted Pel's greed. All the victims had the same symptoms: epigastric pain, choking, nausea, burning sensation in the digestive system, bowel problems, diarrhea, rapid debilitation, spasms, slow agony: the various characters, very clearly marked, of the intoxication with arsenic. No less than fifty witnesses, including experts, explained how he could have dismembered and destroyed the remains of Élise Boehmer, according to them, in the back shop of Montreuil. In forty hours, the furnace transported to the morgue would have destroyed even the last vestige of a human body. With regard to the prosecution evidence, one retained ashes, found in quantity in Pel; a saw, stained with blood and greasy matter; a hatchet and a kitchen knife covered with suspicious stains; a cast iron stove suspected of being used to cremate the dead bodies; a book of chemicals, and another one dealing with poisons, as well as a staggering amount of chemicals of all kinds.
On 13 June 1885, after three quarters of an hour of deliberation, the jurors found Pel not guilty of the poisoning of Eugénie Buffereau, but guilty of the murder of Élise Boehmer. Albert Pel, 36, was sentenced to death. However, following a defect of form (one of the jurors was bankrupt and not rehabilitated) brought the cassation of the judgment and the return to the cour d'assises of Melun. The benefit of the acquittal for the poisoning of Ms. Buffereau remained with him, only the question of the death of Elise Boehmer remained to be debated. On 14 August, the jury of Seine-et-Marne found Pel guilty of having poisoned Boehmer, but granted him the benefit of extenuating circumstances; Pel was sentenced to penal labour in perpetuity and would serve his sentence at the prison of New Caledonia in Bourail.
He died there on 9 June 1924, three days before his seventy-fifth birthday, which made him the oldest convict in France.[4]