- Joined
- Apr 16, 2021
- Messages
- 4,348
- Reaction score
- 32,869
Marking ....
That’s something that I haven’t heard of before, that’s definitely worth looking intoThe motive seems to me today as maybe coupled with inheritence somehow. But of course it is only a feeling (which I never had before). MOO
The thing that surprised me most was that there are barely even any mentions of this case on the forum!Thank you for starting this thread! As notorious as the killings were, I'm surprised there wasn't already one going.
I second this comment. Its an excellent book. Authors are Bill James and Rachel McCarthy James. Its fact based and has a somewhat statistical bent, which makes sent if you know anything about Bill James. The speculative part is just near the end where the authors attempt to attribute crimes to certain people or else rule them out.In case anyone is interested, I know about Hinterkaifeck because it's detailed in a chapter of The Man from the Train, an unusual, speculative work of true crime, that touches on a series of similar style family killings that took place across the United States over more than a decade. I know that it's not to everyone's taste, but I enjoyed it for what it was - an investigative work looking for a pattern in what historical records remain, and showing that investigation in all its amorphous, ephemeral nature. The authors propose that at least some of the killings were the work of a serial predator using the railways to arrive and leave the locations of the killings. Hinterkaifeck is mentioned towards the end because despite being half a world away, it bears uncanny similarities in many respects to a number of those killings that took place in the US a decade or so earlier.
MOO
Thanks so much; I just knew it existed but couldn't bring it up myself. Bravo!Existing thread here:
Hi there
I decided to open a threat for a hideous and mysterious crime which was committed 85 years ago. Unfortunately there is no coverage of this case written in English available on the World Wide Web. (Except for a short article at wikipedia).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hinterkaifeck
But I thought you might enjoy this as a reading on a dark and cold winters eve.
- Mischa
- Replies: 84
- Forum: Cold Cases
Existing thread here:
Hi there
I decided to open a threat for a hideous and mysterious crime which was committed 85 years ago. Unfortunately there is no coverage of this case written in English available on the World Wide Web. (Except for a short article at wikipedia).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hinterkaifeck
But I thought you might enjoy this as a reading on a dark and cold winters eve.
- Mischa
- Replies: 84
- Forum: Cold Cases
The author meticulously checked all known evidence and came to the quite convincing conclusion that it was Andreas
This makes a lot of sense, although I would like to know, which "freak accident" could have killed AG. I remember, there was someone, who fed the cattle for days after the murders. Seems logical, if it was him.Very interesting analysis in German: Der Täter
The author meticulously checked all known evidence and came to the quite convincing conclusion that it was Andreas Gruber himself who killed his family, lived several days unnoticed hiding in the attic and finally died in a freak accident. He was known for severe domestic violence and being sexually abusive (he served one year in jail for incest with his daughter and he had already murdered another daughter). His daughter Viktoria allegedly wanted to remarry and leave the farm, he couldnt cope with that (and also planned on abusing his granddaughter who was also his daughter) and killed everyone in rage with a hatchet he had custom built in order to slaughter swine and that supposedly only he was able to effectively use.
I hope you like it! I know from reading other reviews that not everyone enjoyed the writing style, but I really did. If you're someone who needs to know all the facts, you might find it frustrating. It's more like a work of archaeology or academia. It's a theory using ephemera, news sources of the age that may not be accurate or comprehensive. I found it compelling. This specific case is only mentioned at the very end, though, so don't go into it expecting a large portion of the text devoted to it.This case fascinates me. Last night I ordered “Man on a Train”, the book that @jillolantern and @iamshadow21 mentioned.