Marc Dutroux

Marc Dutroux, who stands accused of child killings in Belgium,
has a criminal record going back 25 years. In 1979, Mr Dutroux
received the first of a series of convictions for theft, violent muggings,
drug-dealing and trading in stolen cars.
Sexual crimes came later - in 1986, Mr Dutroux and his then-wife Michelle Martin
were arrested for the abductions and rape of five girls, for which they were
both imprisoned.
His own mother wrote to the prison director to warn about her son.
She complained that Mr Dutroux was using supervised visits to his grandmother's
house to write up an inventory of the elderly woman's possessions, leaving her
anxious and distressed.
"What I do not know, and what all the
people who know him fear, it's what he has in mind for the future. I have known
for a long time and with good cause my eldest's temperament. What I do not know,
and what all the people who know him fear, it's what he has in mind for the
future."
According to the French newspaper Liberation, the letters went unanswered.

Wife Michelle Martin
Unhappy Family
Mr Dutroux was born on 6 November 1956 in Brussels, the eldest of five children.
His parents, Victor and Jeanine, were teachers who, he says, frequently beat
him.
Certainly, his relationship with his parents was strained, and soon after they
separated in 1971, he left home.
The age of the victims did not seem to arouse in him any given effect or to play
a particular role, beyond allowing him to kidnap them, to manipulate them, to
confine them
Psychiatric report
He became a drifter, and according to press reports, a homosexual prostitute.
By the time he was 20, Mr Dutroux was married to his first wife.
They had two sons, now in their early 20s, but she says he beat her and had
affairs, and they separated in the early 1980s.
One of his mistresses was Ms Martin, who went on to become his second wife and
who is standing trial alongside Mr Dutroux and two other alleged accomplices, on
lesser charges.
The couple are now separated.

One of The Ones That Got Away - Laetitia Delhez
Wealth
Crimes ranging from violent mugging to drug-dealing turned into a lucrative
activity said to have helped him amass at least seven houses, according to the
Associated Press.
He was sentenced to 13 years in 1989, but was released on parole in after just
three years in 1992, under a government scheme that was supposed to keep a close
eye on sexual offenders in the community.
A panel of psychiatrists who analysed him after his arrest in 1996 found that Mr
Dutroux did not fit the classic profile of a paedophile, according to the
Associated Press.
"The age of the victims did not seem to arouse in him any given effect or to
play a particular role, beyond allowing him to kidnap them, to manipulate them,
to confine them," they said.

Dangerous Behavior
There were, however, warnings of his continued potentially dangerous behaviors.
It was some time soon after his release from prison, the former electrician, now
receiving state benefits, started to build his basement "dungeon".
Later he would admit to kidnapping six girls between 1995 and 1996. Only
two of his victims, 12-year-old Sabine Dardenne and 14-year-old Laetitia Delhez,
were found alive.

SERIAL KILLERS LIVE HERE
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