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Joseph Vacher
Joseph Vacher
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Joseph Vacher (16 November 1869 – 31 December 1898) was a French serial killer, rapist, and necrophile who killed between 11 and 50 people, many of them adolescent farm workers, between 1894 and 1897.[1][2] He was contemporarily called "le tueur de bergers" ("the killer of shepherds"), but upon his capture became more commonly known as "The French Ripper"[1] or "L'éventreur du Sud-Est" ("The South-East Ripper"), owing to comparisons to the more famous Jack the Ripper murderer of London, England, in 1888. Vacher's scarred face and plain, white, handmade rabbit-fur hat composed his trademark appearance.

Key Information

Early life

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Family

[edit]

Vacher was born as the second youngest of 16 children to illiterate farmer Pierre Vacher (1810–1889), in Pierre's hometown of Beaufort, a commune 5 kilometers from Beaurepaire and 60 kilometers from Grenoble. Joseph's mother, Marie Rose "Rosalie" Ravit (1825–1882) from Lentiol, was Pierre's second wife after his first wife Virginie Didier, mother of four of Joseph's siblings, died in 1849, aged 30. Pierre and Rose became Joseph's parents at a relatively old age, being 59 and 44 years old respectively. Vacher had a twin brother, Eugène, who died in infancy on 15 July 1870, after choking to death on a loaf of bread that had been placed in the shared cradle by one of Vacher's older brothers.[3]

Childhood and adolescence

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As a child, Vacher was already noted for his temper, having once shot at a group of other boys with his father's rifle for heckling him. Another incident occurred while working on the family farm, when he attempted to strangle his younger brother Louis because Vacher thought he was slacking off while helping him push a wheelbarrow.[4]

In the summer of 1884, a ten-year-old boy named Joseph Amieux was raped and murdered inside a barn in a neighboring town. Although the crime is blamed on vagabonds, then-14-year-old Vacher would later be suspected as having been the true perpetrator. At age fifteen, Vacher was sent to his widowed half-sister in Saint-Genis-Laval, who, overwhelmed by the task of caring for the temperamental youth, sent him to a very strict Marist Brothers school, where he was taught to obey and to fear God. He was meant to be educated there until he was 18, but expelled after only two years, as monks at the school noted Vacher for torturing animals and masturbation. He found work as a restaurant worker and moved in with his sister and her husband in Marcollin. While living with them, Vacher contracted syphilis and had to have his left testicle surgically removed at Antiquaille Hospital six months following the diagnosis.

At age 18, he was reported for the attempted rape of a 12-year-old boy on a farm in Beaufort on 29 June 1888. The victim, Marcelin Bourdon, was pushed down while baling hay in a barn, but managed to punch Vacher and alert fellow workers to the scene. Vacher avoided a charge of pederasty as he fled town and his employers were unaware of his residence. He was evicted in 1889 by his brother-in-law due to his aggressive behaviour and went to Geneva to ask to live with his brother Auguste, to whom he admitted to the attempted rape in Beaufort and possibly referenced other violent crimes he committed. After he was rejected by his brother, he lived in Lyon. In 1891, Vacher was briefly confined to an asylum for voicing persecutory delusions.[5][6]

Military service

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Seeking escape from the intense poverty of his peasant background, he joined the army in 1890, serving in the 60th infantry regiment.[7] Early into his enlistment, Vacher was transferred from his initial living quarters because he kept stealing and hiding the clothes of fellow soldiers. Vacher was noted for his ill temper and aggressive behaviour towards his fellow soldiers. In his first year of service, Vacher made at least two murder attempts on superior officers. In the first instance, frustrated at slow promotion, infused with the grandiose belief that he was not receiving the attention he deserved, Vacher made threats against Barbier, a recently promoted corporal from his unit. When Barbier arrived in Vacher's barracks to calm him down, Vacher attacked him with a straight razor. After failing to injure Barbier, Vacher instead tried to kill himself by slicing his throat, in his first known suicide attempt. In another incident, Vacher tried to stab a sergeant fourrier with a pair of tailor's scissors. He was brought to the infirmary for overnights stays after both incidents, and following the second attack, he was heard screaming "Blood! I'll kill him! They don't know what I'm capable of!"[a] In another incident, Vacher lunged at the adjutant sergeant Tissot with a razor when the latter confiscated a bottle of brandy from him. Despite these incidents, Vacher was promoted to corporal the same year.[8]

After reaching the rank of sergeant on 28 December 1892, Vacher was known to punish soldiers for infractions by physically beating them, once nearly strangling a man to death. One soldier, a private named Mathieu, attested that Vacher kicked him in the abdomen for failing to keep a steady marching pace and threatened to court-martial Mathieu. On the way to the barracks, however, Vacher took Mathieu aside and admitted that he would not have a proper case against Mathieu, asking him to forget about the threat. Reportedly, Vacher was also known to steal from civilians, for which he was never charged since the items were of low value.[8]

Although he served for under three years, Vacher would later claim to have been a non-commissioned officer with the Zouaves, which, while unsubstantiated and unlikely, was widely repeated in contemporary English-language media. Related to this, Vacher stated he had evaded arrest in 1897 by repeating this claim to a gendarme who was about to book him for running from law enforcement; said gendarme was looking for the perpetrator in a nearby murder committed by Vacher.[9]

Attempted murder-suicide

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In the spring of 1893, while Vacher was stationed in Besançon, he fell in love with a young maidservant, Louise Barant.[1][6] After his attempted suicide led to a four-month dismissal from the military, he invited her to a meal and proposed to Barant during this first rendezvous. She declined because Vacher said he would "kill [her] if she betrayed [him]" in the same breath. Vacher nevertheless attempted to move in with Barant and her parents, and failing that, he stalked her while she was at work. Privately, Vacher grew paranoid that Barant had become involved with his best friend Louis Loyonnet, a fellow soldier who was a childhood friend from the Marist school. Barant eventually accepted an invitation to go to a dance with him, but ran off when Vacher attacked a man who spoke to Barant during the date.[1][8]

Barant moved back to her mother in Baume-les-Dames, so Vacher instead began sending her love letters, again trying to court her, and repeating his marriage proposal. On 24 June 1893, Vacher got into an argument with Barant as she refused to acknowledge his letters and gifts. When she told Vacher that she rejected the marriage offer, Vacher grabbed Barant from behind and took out a kitchen knife, shouting "As good as today as tomorrow!",[b] but fled without harming Barant when he heard someone approaching. The following day, on 25 June, Vacher purchased a swordstick, a revolver and ammunition, and entered Barant's residence in Besançon. Vacher told Barant to either accept his proposal or return the letters and gifts, but before she could answer, Vacher shot her three times in the head with the revolver.[1] Barant was badly injured from a shot through the mouth, which broke off two front teeth, and grazes by both temples, but survived the shooting. Vacher then attempted suicide by shooting himself twice in the head. Vacher survived these injuries, instead paralyzing one side of his face, deforming him severely. One of the bullets remained lodged in his ear for the remainder of his life, and the damage to his brain likely exacerbated his existing mental illness. He felt that the shooting damaged him more than physically: he later claimed, after his arrest, that the reactions of strangers to this self-inflicted deformity drove him to hatred of society at large. Barant received dentistry treatment and returned to work within two weeks of the shooting the following July.[1]

On 7 July 1893, Vacher was confined to Saint-Ylle Psychiatric Hospital in Dole, Jura, where he often attacked staff, destroyed furniture, and wrote letters to officials, claiming he suffered abuse there. On 2 August, Vacher was discharged from the army in relation to the attempted killing, but still received a certificate of good conduct.[3] He briefly escaped the facility on 25 August, but was caught a few weeks later, though once more fleeing by jumping out of a train window while he was being transported back to Dole. When he was found and brought back two days later, he tried to commit suicide by repeatedly bashing his head against a wall. On 21 December of the same year, a court found him not guilty of the attempted murder of Louise Barant by reason of insanity and he was transferred to the state-run Saint-Robert Psychiatric Hospital outside of Grenoble. He stayed there for three months until his doctors pronounced him "completely cured," and released on 1 April 1894. In total, Vacher spent less than ten months in treatment.[1][2] That same day, during a meeting with his former subordinate, Private Mathieu, Vacher stated that he had "tricked" staff into the release by claiming he had suffered only "temporary insanity".[1]

Murders

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Vacher began murdering his victims shortly after his release at the age of 25. During a three-year period beginning in 1894, Vacher murdered and mutilated at least 11 people (one woman, six teenage girls, and four teenage boys). Many of them were shepherds watching their flocks in isolated fields. The victims were stabbed repeatedly, often disemboweled, raped, and sodomized, the last two occasionally post-mortem. Vacher became a drifter, travelling from town to town, from Normandy to Provence, staying mainly in the southeast of France and surviving by begging or working on farms as a day labourer. Most murders occurred in what is now the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region. By most accounts, Vacher was unkempt and frightening, wandering from town to town as a vagrant in filthy clothes, begging in the streets and surviving on the scraps he received from anyone who would show him kindness. The few times he took temporary work such as shepherding from farmers, Vacher would often quit midway and still demand full payment. During this time, he was twice arrested for vagrancy, but never suspected of the killings. He reportedly attributed being undetected by police to God's grace and would regularly undertake pilgrimages to Lourdes to pray to the statue of the Virgin Mary.[6][10]

Authorities did not make a connection between any of the killings until the summer of 1897, when newly installed judge Émile Fourquet [fr], who had investigated the murder of Augustine Mortureux in 1895, had judicial offices in départements across Southern France collect records of unsolved murders, having concluded that a single individual was behind some of the gruesome murders reported to him due to their shared mutilation and/or victim group.[3]

Notable sightings and incidents

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On 2 September 1895, a man matching Vacher's exact description was reported in Belley, having squatted for a night at the local washhouse and become aggressive with locals, including a ten-year-old girl he tried to buy wine from with just ten centimes and farmers who had denied him work, but offered him alms.[3]

On 31 July 1896, while in Précy, Vacher went to the home of a ferryman named Abel Sandrin, with whom he had an unspecified dispute, and started a fistfight. Sandrin deflected each blow and retaliated with punches of his own, which left Vacher bloodied while Sandrin remained unharmed.[8]

On 17 October 1896, Vacher passed through the commune of Job, where he knocked on the house of a woman surnamed Gouttebel and asked her for cheese. Gouttebel turned to the kitchen to bring him some food when Vacher threw himself on her when she returned. Gouttebel tore away from his grip and ran outside to alert her neighbours. He was arrested for the assault, but eventually let go after a short stay in jail.

Through early-mid February, 1897, Vacher lodged in Couloubrac, a hamlet near Lacaune, first accompanied by another vagrant named Gautrais. He stayed with two families, the Farencs and the Moffres, who later identified him by photograph, wearing his old infantry fatigues. He often entertained the children of his lodgers by reading them books or showing off "souvenirs" from his past, including two large hiking sticks and a photo of a woman in miller's garb, whom he claimed was his "mistress" Maria Lourdes, a name that was also engraved on a knife and leather sheath he carried.[c] On 17 February, he knocked on the door of Suzanne Cabrol, who allowed him in to warm himself by the fireplace. Two talked amicably until Cabrol mentioned that she had received a 2500-franc inheritance from her sister in Castres. At this point, the previously tranquil Vacher stared at her "with bad air", at which point Cabrol shouted for her husband (who was actually away that night), causing Vacher to bolt out of the house. She was confirmed to be telling the truth as she independently noted the sergeant chevrons on Vacher's clothing. Most witnesses recalled that Vacher made frequent mention of the Virgin Mary, specifically in relation to the Lourdes apparitions. Also, on either 13 or 17 February, he passed through the hamlet of Carausse and rested at the house of 43-year-old Virginie Bousquet, who let him rest by the hearth for the night. She left Vacher at the house for a while to go for a walk because he made her uncomfortable with stories of "crude, strange things that happened at the convents" he was raised in. When Bousquet returned, she found her youngest daughter, 6-year-old Germaine, sitting on Vacher's knees. Bousquet was able to get her guest to get leave by threatening to call for her neighbours and barred the door afterwards to be safe. She asked Germaine if anything had happened and the girl revealed that Vacher had been clutching a knife behind her back in a hand hidden between his thighs.

He was sighted again on 22 February in Lagarrigue, when he stayed with family of Paul Valette, whose 11- or 12-year-old daughter he taught to write a sentence in "elegant English writing": "Among travelers there are often great minds and sometimes even great friends of God". Afterwards, he begged for food at the house of a miller, Mme Hue, who first gave him soup, but went back on her offer when he did not thank her. In the ensuing argument, he insulted Hue and ran off. Vacher went to the house of Mme Assimot to warm himself at the fireplace. While they talked, one of Vacher's canes fell to the ground, revealing a long blade inside and frightened by this, Assimot ordered Vacher to leave. Her account was substantiated due to the matching description of the swordstick, an item Vacher was known to own, having been catalogued during his arrest for the Barant affair.[8]

On 13 July, Vacher bought a small black-white dog from a cobbler named Joseph Passas in Colombier-le-Jeune, which he named Loulette. According to a family who let Vacher lodge with them for a few days in Dunières, they took him in on 14 July after seeing him beg outside of a pub, playing the accordion while Loulette pranced around with a tamed magpie perched on her back. Although Vacher had claimed to play the accordion to the families back in Couloubrac, onlooker Vital Vallonre said his tune was off-key and that he was unable to play la Marseillaise when asked. The family recalled that he was kind to the couple's four daughters and their friends, for whom he performed music and made funny faces. He had reportedly asked their neighbors if there were any open shepherd jobs. One of them, Mme Ranc in nearby Vernoux turned him away when she asked where he was from and he replied, with a glare, "from a mental asylum". On 2 August, Vacher was ousted from the area by locals following an incident at the farm of Régis Bac near Alboussière. Bac had given Vacher some stew, which Vacher then tried to share with his dog Loulette. When the animal did not eat, Vacher said "If you don't want to eat this, I will kill you" before grabbing Loulette and throwing her to the ground until the dog's head caved in, doing the same to his pet bird. Bac gave Vacher a shovel to bury the animals before telling him to leave.[6]

Final attacks and capture

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In the morning hours of 4 August 1897 Vacher tried to assault Marie Héraud gathering wood and pinecones in a field in Champis. She fought back and her screams soon alerted two of her children, as well as her husband, 31-year-old Séraphin Plantier, who came rushing to her aid. Although Plantier was of slight build and shorter than Vacher, he fought off the attacker and pelted him with two stones. The commotion was heard by four neighbours, also collecting cinder, who rushed to Plantier's aid and restrained Vacher. As the men escorted him to the residential area, Vacher told a different tramp as they passed, "Look, I wanted to have a quickie, they wouldn't let me".[d] They locked him in a shed at a nearby inn, with Dupré Charlon, the homeowner, and the four neighbours keeping watch as Plantier left with his wife to get police from the station in Saint-Péray, leaving the men to guard Vacher for the next six hours.[6][8]

Charlon would later recall that Vacher spouted all manner of obscenities at them and ranted about how he had "rights" and wanted to exercise them on "all women". When Charlon joked that Vacher should "pay for the personnel, get married", Vacher took the statement seriously, saying "No, I have as many rights as anyone over all women and I want to use them".[e] When Vacher noticed Charlon's wife and children were in the house, he exclaimed "La garce!" ("The bitch!") and continued to scream vulgar insults for the next hours, refusing to interact further with Charlon outside of spitting at him when he got close. Vacher would attempt twice to escape the shed, being prevented by Charlon, who would kick him back. At one point, Vacher asked for a drink. Charlon gave him a glass and while in the process of filling it with fresh water, a few drops landed on Vacher's shoe. This resulted in Vacher throwing the glass in Charlon's face, who reciprocated by hitting him with the metal water jug and kicking him to the ground. While Vacher proceeded to threaten Charlon and his family with death and torture once he got out of prison, Charlon asked why he didn't just hire prostitutes instead of attacking random women, to which Vacher replied "No, no, I respect myself more than you do. I don't want the ones you talk about. I need young girls, shepherdesses or cowgirls".[f] Charlon then asked why he attacked Héraud, a mother of three, if he wanted "young girls", with Vacher stating "Oh, I would have much preferred to have the other one, the young girl from Gravil [a nearby farm]. That's the one I had wanted".[g] When Plantier returned with two officers, Vacher was sitting near a tree, playing his accordion, and upon seeing the gendarmerie, he simply said, "If you were in my place, you would do like me, but you have women and I have none".[h]

Vacher was first charged with public indecency for attempted rape, receiving a three-month and one day prison sentence. Based on judge Fourquet's belief that the arrested tramp might be the killer he was looking for, Vacher was transported to Prison Saint-Paul by train via the Lyon-Saint-Paul to Montbrison Line [fr], where he briefly escaped at the exit of La Mulatière tunnel before he was recaptured at Perrache station. Fifteen residents of Bénonces, where a murder linked to Vacher had taken place, were called in and all identified Vacher as having been in town at the time of the murder. Despite their belief that they had apprehended the man responsible, the authorities had little physical evidence that Vacher was responsible for the series of murders, and Vacher adamantly denied involvement during questioning. However, on 7 October, with little apparent prompting, Vacher confessed to committing the some of murders brought against him, first only to eight, but later eleven, saying, "I have come to tell you the whole truth. Yes, I am the one who committed all the crimes you have accused me of... and that in a moment of rage".[i][1][2][11]

Insanity plea

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After his arrest, Vacher claimed he was insane and attempted to prove it in a variety of ways. He claimed that a rabid dog's bite had poisoned his blood, causing madness, but later blamed the quack cure he received for the bite. He also claimed he was sent by God, comparing himself to Joan of Arc. Despite his protestations, he was pronounced sane after lengthy investigations by a team of doctors that included the eminent professor Alexandre Lacassagne. Court documents say that investigators were able to confirm that Vacher kept close contact with sheep dogs as a child, but believed that Vacher's insistence on their responsibility for his condition actually ties back to their owner, the commune's garde champêtre, who may have raped Vacher when he was six years old.[3][4] He was tried and convicted by judge Émile Fourquet of the Cour d'Assises of Ain, the département where he had murdered two of his victims, and was sentenced to death for the murder of Victor Portalier on 28 October 1898. On 26 January 1898, Vacher broke out of his cell and seriously injured the on-duty guard by battering him with a chair before he was subdued by other staff.[12] Vacher was executed by guillotine at 7:03 a.m. on 31 December 1898, in front of a crowd of 3,500 people. He refused to walk to the scaffold under his own power and was dragged to the guillotine by the executioners.[13]

Victims

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Confirmed

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A list of Vacher's known victims.[6][14][8][15]

In some of the murders, false accusations were made by local residents and the press. Not long after the discovery of Eugénie Delhomme's body, farmer Louis François was arrested by police as a suspect. Eugène Grenier, a land owner in Daix who employed victim Augustine Mortureux and one of the men who found her, was detained for 45 days after being publicly accused by Le Bourguignon Salé and Le Bien Public, with the locals outside the jail calling for him to be lynched. Even after he was released due to lack of evidence, Grenier and his family were treated as outcasts, with suspicions still remaining after Vacher's confessions two years later.[3][18][19][20][21]

Additionally, Vacher is suspected to have committed serial rapes in the départements of Drôme, Puy-de-Dôme, and Isère. A rape against a female juvenile in Brioude during December 1896 was linked to Vacher.

Suspected

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During his trial, Vacher was also accused of the following murders:[2][8][22][23]

  • 18 July 1884 in Eclose: Joseph Amieux (10)
  • 26 June 1888 in Joux: Unidentified woman (c.35)
  • 1 July 1888 in Chambérat: Clémence Grangeon (14)
  • 30 June 1889 in Moirans: Augustine-Mélanie Perrin (23)
  • 29 September 1890 in Varacieux: Olympe Buisson (9)
  • 3 February 1892 in Rochegude: Élisabeth Laborel (53) (also robbed)
  • 22 October 1892 in La Comelle: Unidentified man, vagrant
  • 10 June 1893 in La Romieu: Léa-Catherine Marie Anne Gourrange (7)[o]
  • 24 February 1894 in Tencin: Jean-Baptiste Piraud[p]
  • 6–7 December 1894 in Châteaudouble: Jean Honorat (75) and Marianne Perrimond (71), husband and wife (possibly committed with an accomplice)
  • 17 February 1895 in the arrondissement of Autun: "Jobey" Corneau (74) (also robbed)
  • 22–23 July 1895 in Chambuet near Yenne: Mme Reynaud (64)
  • 7 September 1895 in Montmort: Francine Rouvray (30s)
  • 22 September 1895 in Four: Marguerite "Madeleine" Martelât (64)
  • 22 September 1895 in Hauterives: Mme Wassy
  • 22 December 1895 in La Baronnière, near Guéret: Unnamed elderly woman
  • May–June 1896 in Tain: Unidentified man, vagrant
  • 22 August 1896 in Reims: Maria Clement (17)
  • 6–7 September 1896 between Chambost and Sain-Bel: Antoine Bonnassieux (58), chicken farmer (also robbed)
  • 26 September 1896 between Chissey-en-Morvan and Moux-en-Morvan: Marguerite Charlot (née Renaud; 66)
  • 27 September 1896 in Allègre: Marie Monatte (60), washerwoman
  • 29 October 1896 in Parnans: Marie Ageron (65)
  • 11–12 November 1896 in Brive: Louradour, soldier
  • 23 November 1896 in Baume-d'Hostun: Mme Montfort
  • 22–23 February 1897 in Lacaune: Célestin Gautrais (39), vagrant from Bourberain
  • 18 March 1897 in Belfort: Adrienne Reuillard (9)[q]
  • 5 April 1897 between Vienne-le-Château and Binarville: Thérèse Ply (19), woodworker
  • 11 April 1897 in Les Haïes: Geneviève Heymein (née Cadet, 68)
  • 1 May 1897 between Chaumont-la-Ville and Vrécourt: Jeanne-Elise-Clémentine Henrion (14), seamstress
  • 18 May 1897 in Communay: François Castigliano (66), busker, originally from Alpette, Italy[r]
  • 16 June 1897 in Raimbeaucourt: Amélie Debreuille
  • 6 July 1897 in Volvent: Jean Marie Lagier (née Faure; 60)
  • 23–24 July 1897 in Coux: Mélanie Victoire Laville (née Vianet; 61), pub owner (possibly committed with an accomplice)

False arrests were made in at least two of the murders. A shop owner named Thalmann was briefly detained for the murder of Adrienne Reuillard and forced out of town by locals after he could not be tied to the scene. In the murder of Jeanne Henrion a man surnamed Munier was incriminated by witness Montchablon for returning a day after the killing with scratches on his face. It was found that Munier had, on the day following Henrion's death, attempted to rape a young Swiss girl, who "fell ill and died" after the act. The judicial error accusing him of the Henrion murder led to his exoneration on both charges, after which locals shunned him and his family.[8]

A public poster published titled "52 Crimes: Attributed to Vacher or confessed by him"[s] listed his tentative offenses as 46 murders, three attempted murders, two attempted rapes and connection to one disappearance, though with several misspelled names and other mistakes, such as placing the murder of Joseph Amieux, who was killed in 1884, in 1894.

In addition to Louise Barant, Vacher was alleged to have made the following murder attempts:[2]

  • 1 July 1888 in Saint-Pal-de-Chalençon: Unidentified woman, sherpherd (occurred after the Grangeon murder)
  • 17 May 1894 in Roches: Victorine Gay (née Gueyfier; 55), gardener (also attempted rape)
  • 18 May 1894 in Roches: Mme Eydan, gardener (also attempted rape)
  • 19 May 1894 in Roches: Mélanie Pallas (née Jay), gardener (also attempted rape)
  • 31 March 1895 in Saint-Fons: Antoinette-Augustine Marchand (28), saleswoman
  • 14 April 1895 in Lyon or Dijon: Unnamed woman, orange vendor (also attempted rape)
  • 15 or 20 August 1895 in Belley: Alexandre Léger (7), shepherd
  • 25 February 1896 in Nouans: Mlle de L. (38) (also attempted rape)
  • 1 March 1896 in Noyen: Alphonsine Derouet (11) (also attempted rape)
  • 30 September 1896 in Varenne-Saint-Honorat: Alphonse Rodier (13), shepherd
  • 17 October 1896 in Job: Mme Gouttebel
  • November 1896 in Riousset near Brugeron: Marie Dubreuil (née Roure) (robbed)
  • 12–15 February 1897 in Couloubrac near Lacaune: Blavy and Chalbert, domestic servants
  • 17 February 1897 in Couloubrac: Suzanne Cabrol (née Fabre; 65)
  • 26 April 1897 in Graffigny: Léonie Soyer (18), glovemaker
  • 1 May 1897 in Daillecourt and Vrécourt: Blanche Humbert (15), shepherd, and Mme Henriot (occurred before the Henrion murder)
  • 18 July 1897 in Rochemaure: Marguerite Siratat (née Epp; 61)
  • 21 July 1897 in Baix: Marie-Eugénie Malartre (née Durieu; 60s) and her son
  • 21 July 1897 in Darbres: Marie Vantalon (28), Henri Marnas (8) and Louis Delhomme (14), shepherds
  • 25 July 1897 in Valettes near Flaviac: Maria Pradal (18–20), silk factory worker
  • 4 August 1897 in Champis: Fanny Issartel (16), shepherd[t]
  • 4 August 1897 in Champis: Marie-Eugénie Héraud (28)

American newspapers would somewhat exaggerate Vacher's killings, reporting the high end estimation of 38 possible victims as fact.[25] The newspapers also named victims that are not mentioned in surviving French newspapers nor alleged by court or investigators.[u] One of the most widely shared, yet unconfirmed cases of this kind is the supposed murder of a French nobleman, named only as the "Marquis de Villeplaine", who had fallen victim to a fatal robbery during a park walk near the French-Spanish border. After his execution, it was widely reported by the same sources that Vacher was a self-admitted anarchist, after proclaiming during a prison transport that he was "the anarchist of God" and his murders related to his "oppos[ition] to society, no matter what form of government may be [sic]".[9][12][27]

Legacy

[edit]

Vacher's place in French social history is similar to Jack the Ripper's place in British social history.[1][2]

[edit]
  • In 1976 French filmmaker Bertrand Tavernier made a film called Le juge et l'assassin (The Judge and the Murderer) that was inspired by Vacher's story. The name of the murderer, played by Michel Galabru, is slightly changed into "Joseph Bouvier" (in French, the words bouvier and vacher describe the same profession, herdsman).
  • In the 1949 novel The Sheltering Sky by Paul Bowles, in a private dialogue with her husband Port, the character Kit Morseby says of the character Eric Lyle: "He looks like a young Vacher".
  • In the episode "Probable Cause" of the TV series Castle, serial killer 3XK uses Vacher's name as an alias.
  • In the film Psychopathia Sexualis Vacher is the first case study of a sexual mental illness presented.
  • In the video game Genshin Impact, the character "Vacher" (Marcel) during the Fontaine Archon Quest is inspired by the real-life Vacher.

See also

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Notes

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Citations

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Bouchardon, Pierre, Vacher l'éventreur, Albin Michel, 1939
  2. ^ a b c d e f Lacassagne, Alexandre, Vacher l'éventreur et les crimes sadiques, 1899 On-line (French)
  3. ^ a b c d e f Corneloup, Gérard (1 September 2003). "Sur les traces sanglantes de Joseph Vacher, l'éventreur de bergers". Bibliothèque numérique de Lyon.
  4. ^ a b "Crimes - Joseph Vacher, l'assassin des bergers". La Pays. 19 December 2016.
  5. ^ Thadeusz, Frank (21 January 2011). "The Original Sherlock Holmes: How a French Doctor Helped Create Forensic Science". Der Spiegel. ISSN 2195-1349.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g Starr, Douglas (November 2011). The Killer of Little Shepherds: A True Crime Story and the Birth of Forensic Science. Knopf Doubleday Publishing. ISBN 978-0307279088.
  7. ^ "VACHER, Joseph | Lyon (Rhône, France) - registres matricules | 1889 - 1889". Geneanet.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Fourquet, Émile (1931). "VACHER: le plus grand criminel de temps modernes" (PDF).
  9. ^ a b c "RIPPER PUT TO DEATH: Murdered and Mutilated More Than a Score of People". Williamsport Sunday Grit. 1 January 1899.
  10. ^ "Isten kegyeltjének tartotta magát a francia Hasfelmetsző Jack". 24.hu (in Hungarian). 16 September 2017.
  11. ^ "VACHER'S HORRIBLE MANIA: Monumental Crimes of the Frenchman Who Killed For the Sake of Killing Not Jack The Ripper". Marion Daily Star. 20 November 1897.
  12. ^ a b c "A JACK THE RIPPER'S CAREER ENDED". Sacramento Daily Union. 1 January 1899. p. 1.
  13. ^ Grillet, Clement (19 September 2022). "Sur les traces du Jack l'Éventreur du Sud-Est : l'affaire Joseph Vacher". Retrieved 19 September 2022 – via www.ledauphine.com.
  14. ^ Gibson, Dirk C. (14 February 2012). Legends, Monsters, Or Serial Murderers?: The Real Story Behind an Ancient Crime. Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN 978-0313397585.
  15. ^ Renneville, Marc (7 November 2019). Vacher l'éventreur: Archives d'un tueur en série (in French). Jérôme Millon. ISBN 978-2841373697.
  16. ^ Summers, Montague (15 May 1980) [1929]. The Vampire in Europe. Aquarian Press. ISBN 978-0850302219.
  17. ^ "AFFAIRES CRIMINELLES - JURA. Qui était Joseph Vacher, le tueur des bergères ?". Le Journal de Saône-et-Loire (in French). 18 November 2018.
  18. ^ Habib, Danis. "Crimes et incendies en France et Algérie (1891 - 1914): Rapports de gendarmerie et des procureurs généraux" (PDF).
  19. ^ "Vacher, premier tueur en série". Le Bien Public (in French). 12 December 2012.
  20. ^ Prétou, Pierre; Chauvaud, Frédéric (5 June 2019). L'arrestation: Interpellations, prises de corps et captures depuis le Moyen Âge (in French). ISBN 978-2-7535-6064-2.
  21. ^ "Der Lustmörder Vacher" (PDF) (in German). 21 October 1897.
  22. ^ "Les Vagabonds Criminels". Revue des Deux Mondes. 1899.
  23. ^ Duchamp, Loïc (30 April 2021). "Emission 12 - Sur les traces et l'histoire de Joseph VACHER". Duchamp GénéaServices (in French).
  24. ^ "Nouvelles". Le Journal de Vienne (in French). 28 August 1897.
  25. ^ "HE KILLED THIRTY EIGHT: A Peasant Jack the Ripper Did Murder For The Love Of It". Naugatuck Daily News. 28 January 1898.
  26. ^ "Image 26 of New York journal and advertiser (New York [N.Y.]), November 7, 1897, (AMERICAN MAGAZINE)". Library of Congress. 7 November 1897.
  27. ^ Stumer, Jean (7 June 2018). Joseph Vacher - Le Tueur en Série du Sud-Est: "L'anarchiste de Dieu" (in French). Fontaine de Siloé.

General bibliography

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from Grokipedia
Joseph Vacher (16 November 1869 – 31 December 1898) was a French and rapist who confessed to murdering and mutilating at least 11 adolescents, primarily young shepherds, across rural between May 1894 and August 1897, earning him the nickname "the French Ripper" due to the savage nature of his crimes. Born the fifteenth child of an illiterate farmer in Beaufort, Isère, Vacher grew up in poverty and attended a strict before enlisting in the French Army's regiment in 1892, from which he was discharged in 1894 following a self-inflicted wound during a prompted by . His typically involved luring or ambushing victims in isolated fields, strangling them, slashing their throats and abdomens, and sometimes engaging in necrophilic acts or mutilating genitals, with attacks spanning regions from to and possibly claiming up to 25 lives in total, though only 11 were definitively linked to him. Vacher's spree terrorized the French countryside, evading capture by wandering as a vagrant and occasionally stealing from victims to sustain himself, until his arrest on 4 August 1897 in Pouzin, , after a 15-year-old boy he assaulted fought back and alerted authorities. During his 1898 trial at the of in , Vacher pleaded , citing a from his military days and demonic influences, but forensic pathologist Alexandre Lacassagne's examination of the wounds on victims—demonstrating consistent bite marks and tool marks—provided crucial evidence linking him to the crimes and helped pioneer modern criminal profiling and in . Convicted in October 1898 despite debates over his mental state, Vacher was sentenced to death and executed by on 31 December 1898; an of his afterward sought to uncover physiological roots of his but yielded inconclusive results. His case, which drew international attention and comparisons to , underscored the era's tensions between emerging scientific and traditional views of criminality.

Early Life

Family Background

Joseph Vacher was born on November 16, 1869, in Beaufort, , in the region of , into a large farming family as the youngest of 15 children. His father was an illiterate who worked on a modest plot of land and was known for his harsh and authoritarian demeanor, enforcing strict discipline within the household. Vacher's mother managed the large family home, embodying a submissive and hardworking role amid the demands of rural life. The family's socioeconomic status was impoverished, centered on agrarian labor in a rural setting with limited resources, though they owned some vendable land and an inherited house in Beaufort. Living conditions in their modest reflected the hardships of 19th-century French peasant life, involving daily agricultural tasks such as herding . Vacher experienced tensions within the family dynamics, including reported favoritism among the children and his own growing resentment toward his parents, whom he accused of hindering his opportunities; this led to instances of him leaving home for days following reprimands. His siblings, including a twin brother who died in infancy and others like brother Auguste and sister Olympe, generally formed a close-knit group that later achieved relative stability through marriage and work as cultivators or domestics, though the family's size strained their modest means.

Childhood and Adolescence

Joseph Vacher was born on 16 November 1869 in Beaufort, in the department of southeastern , as the youngest of fifteen children in a poor farming family. His father was an illiterate farmer, and the family endured in a rural Alpine valley, which shaped Vacher's early opportunities and experiences. Due to these economic constraints, Vacher's formal education was limited; around age 15, he was sent to live with a widowed half-sister in Saint-Genis-Laval, where he attended a strict run by the , taught to obey authority and fear God, but family needs required him to begin working on the farm at a young age. From childhood, Vacher exhibited signs of cruelty and instability, including erratic fits of temper that alienated him from peers and contributed to . At around age eight, he claimed to have been bitten by a , an incident he later attributed to poisoning his blood and triggering lifelong and brutal tendencies. Reports from his youth describe him bullying other children and displaying a high self-opinion, further isolating him in his rural community. Vacher's was marked by failed attempts to establish , including brief stints as a farm laborer and unsuccessful efforts at apprenticeships, such as trying to learn , due to his volatile behavior. Emerging concerns, including auditory hallucinations and delusions, began to surface around this time, compounding his social withdrawal. At approximately age 19, Vacher suffered emotional distress from a romantic rejection by his , which deepened his sense of isolation without immediate violent repercussions.

Military Service

Enlistment and Early Service

Joseph Vacher was conscripted into the on 16 November 1890 at the age of 21, joining the 60th Infantry Regiment in as a means to escape the constraints of rural life and familial pressures in his native Beaufort, . During basic training and subsequent postings to various garrisons across , Vacher demonstrated a pattern of severe disciplinary problems, including attacking superior officers with a and tailor's scissors, physically punishing subordinates, theft from civilians, , and conflicts stemming from and difficulty integrating into the regiment's social structure. Nevertheless, Vacher's competence in military duties, including skills in , wrestling, and report-writing, led to his promotion to in 1890 and to on 28 December 1892, a recognition of his potential despite ongoing personal challenges.

Attempted Murder-Suicide

On 24 June 1893, while stationed near Baume-les-Dames, Joseph Vacher, then a in the , attempted to murder 19-year-old laundress Louise Barrand after she rejected his , shooting her in the face during a fit of rage. Immediately following the attack, Vacher turned the revolver on himself, firing twice into his ear in a ; he survived but suffered permanent partial facial , chronic headaches, and speech impairments that distorted his features and voice. Vacher's military superiors initiated a , which on 2 August 1893 resulted in his discharge from the army on grounds of psychological troubles, leading to his honorable discharge later that year along with a modest . A subsequent civilian inquiry declared him legally irresponsible under Article 64 of the French penal code, ordering a non-lieu (dismissal without ) on 16 1893, based on expert testimony from Dr. Guillemin attributing the act to mental instability. Following the incident, Vacher was institutionalized on 7 July 1893 at the Saint-Ylie asylum in Dole, where he was diagnosed with characterized by delusions of ; he escaped on 25 August 1893 but was recaptured on 4 September 1893, and later transferred to the Saint-Robert asylum on 21 December 1893. Despite persistent symptoms, including auditory hallucinations and erratic behavior, doctors certified him as fully recovered and released him on 1 April 1894, after approximately nine months of confinement. This early discharge overlooked ongoing signs of instability, such as his prior disciplinary issues during , including violent attacks on superiors and bouts of .

Criminal Activities

Modus Operandi

Joseph Vacher targeted isolated individuals in rural areas of southeast , primarily adolescent boys and girls aged 11 to 18 who worked as shepherds or laborers in remote fields and barns. These victims were often alone, making them vulnerable to sudden assaults without witnesses. Posing as a wandering unemployed worker, Vacher approached his targets through his nomadic , striking with surprise attacks using a or sharp tool to slash throats and inflict stab wounds. He would then mutilate the bodies, including and genital , sometimes engaging in post-mortem , before abandoning the remains in nearby fields, thickets, or wells to evade immediate detection. This pattern persisted across his crimes from 1894 to 1897, spanning departments such as Var, , and . Vacher's actions were driven by delusions of stemming from his post-military institutionalization, where he claimed his crimes were acts of retaliation against societal "enemies." He exhibited no , describing himself in delusional terms as a "God's anarchist," which aligned with his nomadic lifestyle that allowed him to move frequently and avoid linking the crimes.

Series of Murders

Joseph Vacher's series of murders commenced on 19 May 1894 in Beaurepaire, department, with the killing of 21-year-old millworker Eugénie Delhomme, before shifting primarily to young shepherds in rural areas. These early crimes marked the beginning of a three-year spree characterized by sudden in isolated settings, allowing Vacher to strike and depart without immediate detection, possibly claiming up to 25 victims in total though only 11 confirmed. By 1896, the frequency of Vacher's attacks escalated significantly, with multiple incidents occurring in quick succession across southeastern . The killings spread geographically to departments including the , , Var, , and , encompassing at least 11 confirmed murders over the period from 1894 to 1897. This mobility as a vagrant enabled him to traverse regions with limited police coordination, evading capture through fabricated alibis and rapid relocation between localities. As the series progressed, Vacher's brutality intensified, incorporating more severe mutilations. The crimes consistently followed a involving strangulation or stabbing followed by and disfigurement, though the methods grew more frenzied over time. The murders provoked widespread public panic in rural , as communities grappled with the terror of an unidentified predator roaming the countryside. By , sensational media coverage had dubbed the perpetrator "l'Ardèche Ripper," amplifying fears and pressuring authorities amid the escalating violence. Following his arrest in August , Vacher confessed to the 11 murders, providing detailed accounts that linked him directly to the series and confirmed the patterns observed in the crimes.

Capture and Arrest

On 4 August 1897, Joseph Vacher attempted to assault Marie Héraud, a woman gathering wood and pinecones in a field in Champis, near Pouzin in the region of . Héraud resisted fiercely, screaming for help, which alerted her husband and son nearby; they overpowered and captured Vacher on the spot, leading to his immediate arrest by local authorities. Upon arrival at the Privas , Vacher quickly confessed during initial to attacking Héraud and admitted responsibility for at least 11 murders over the prior three years, describing his crimes in chilling detail while insisting he acted under divine compulsion. Authorities transferred him to later that month for in-depth questioning under the supervision of forensic expert Alexandre Lacassagne, who sought to verify his claims against unsolved cases. Examination of Vacher's possessions revealed compelling , including bloodstained clothing consistent with recent violence and a pocket bearing traces of dried blood and tissue that matched patterns from shepherd victim autopsies in the region.

Trial and Execution

Insanity Defense

Vacher's defense strategy during his trial relied heavily on establishing mental irresponsibility under Article 64 of the , which provided that no crime or offense could be attributed to an individual in a state of at the time of the act. Led by Maître Charbonnier, a prominent lawyer from , the defense argued that Vacher suffered from and triggered by a severe in 1893, during an attempted murder-suicide that led to his initial asylum commitment. Charbonnier portrayed Vacher not as a deliberate criminal but as a "grand malade," citing his history of institutionalization and erratic behavior as evidence that he lacked and . Psychiatric evaluations formed the core of the insanity claim but yielded sharply conflicting results, underscoring tensions between medical and legal perspectives. In May 1898, a commission comprising forensic expert Alexandre Lacassagne, Dr. Pierret, and Dr. Rebatel examined Vacher and determined he was sane and fully accountable, describing his symptoms as simulated and his actions as those of a lucid sadist rather than an insane individual. Contrasting this, earlier assessments, including one by Dr. Bozonnet in September 1897, indicated partial mental disturbance that could diminish responsibility, building on the 1893 of alienation mentale as a baseline for the defense's assertions of enduring pathology. Vacher's behavior in the amplified the defense's of while simultaneously bolstering prosecution arguments of calculated malice. He alternated between boastful admissions of his crimes—claiming at least eleven murders driven by uncontrollable "rage"—and theatrical outbursts, such as shouting "Gloire à Jésus" and displaying violent agitation, which Charbonnier leveraged to depict him as tormented by delusions. These erratic displays, observed over the three-day proceedings starting October 26, 1898, at the Assize Court of the in , swayed public and judicial perceptions toward viewing Vacher as both martyr and monster. The occurred against a backdrop of evolving debates on criminal responsibility in late 19th-century , where Article 64's binary distinction between sanity and clashed with advancing psychiatric theories on partial and degeneration. Public outrage over Vacher's crimes fueled calls for stricter accountability, challenging the code's leniency toward mental conditions and highlighting forensic medicine's nascent role in resolving questions of versus in high-profile cases.

Verdict and Sentencing

On October 28, 1898, the jury at the de l'Ain in rejected Joseph Vacher's after a brief deliberation, convicting him of the murder of 15-year-old shepherd Victor Portalier in Bénonces (though he confessed to eleven murders during the trial) committed between 1894 and 1897. The court sentenced him to death by , emphasizing his full responsibility for the crime despite his claims of mental impairment stemming from a prior . Vacher immediately appealed the verdict to the , France's highest appellate court, but the appeal was denied in late December 1898, paving the way for his execution. During his final days in prison, Vacher alternated between defiance and remorse, providing additional confessions to authorities about his crimes while rejecting offers of religious consolation from a local priest, including the and . He reportedly prepared a final statement denouncing societal ills but showed little fear of his impending fate. At dawn on December 31, 1898, Vacher was guillotined outside the prison at in before a crowd of spectators, including journalists. He resisted the executioners, shouting insults and struggling as he was strapped to the machine, but the blade fell swiftly, severing his head. drew significant media attention across and internationally, with outlets like describing it as the end of the "French Ripper's" and noting public relief amid widespread fear of vagrant criminals during the era. A postmortem examination conducted at the Hôtel-Dieu hospital in revealed no abnormalities in Vacher's brain, supporting the prosecution's assertion of his sanity and undermining posthumously any lingering doubts about his . His head was preserved and sent to the in for further study, while his body was buried locally.

Victims

Confirmed Victims

Joseph Vacher confessed to eleven murders between 1894 and 1897, which were verified by investigators through his detailed descriptions aligning with findings, such as wound patterns, and corroborating accounts of sightings near the scenes. These undisputed victims were primarily adolescent shepherds and rural laborers, often encountered alone in fields or along remote paths in southeastern , underscoring Vacher's preference for vulnerable, isolated targets. The crimes consistently featured throat slashing or strangulation, post-mortem , and mutilations including bites and organ removal, as detailed in his admissions and forensic examinations.
  • Eugénie Delhomme, a 21-year-old woman, was killed on May 20, 1894, near Beaurepaire in the Isère department; she was strangled, her throat slit, and her body mutilated with various cuts including to the breast, with Vacher's confession matching the specific injuries and location.
  • Louise Marcel, a 13-year-old shepherdess, was murdered on November 20, 1894, in a wood near Vidauban (Var department); her throat was slit, and the body was discovered in a mutilated state, linked to Vacher by his precise recounting of the attack site and method.
  • Augustine Mortreux, a 17-year-old female, died on May 12, 1895, along a high road near Dijon (Côte-d'Or); her throat was cut, and Vacher's admission included details of the encounter and disposal that aligned with police records.
  • Widow Morand, aged 60, was assaulted and killed on August 24, 1895, in an isolated house at Saint-Ours (Savoy); despite her older age, the attack followed Vacher's pattern of violence, confirmed by his description of the premises and injuries.
  • Pierre Pellet, a 14-year-old boy, was murdered on September 29, 1895, in a lane at Saint-Étienne-de-Boulogne; his throat was slashed, with Vacher's confession corroborated by the body's position and mutilations observed at discovery.
  • Claudius Beaupied, a 14-year-old shepherd boy, was killed in late May 1896 near Tassin-la-Demi-Lune (Rhône); his body was thrown down a well and found months later in October 1897, tied to Vacher through matching details of the disposal method in his testimony.
  • Marie Moussier, a 19-year-old woman, was found murdered on September 10, 1896, in Busset (Allier department); the cause involved throat cutting and mutilation, confirmed by Vacher's account of the rural setting and victim profile.
  • Rosine Rodier, a 14-year-old girl, was killed in 1896 near Varenne-Saint-Honorat; she was throat-cut, disemboweled, and mutilated, with evidence linking Vacher via his description of the savage post-mortem acts.
  • Pierre Laurent, a 13-year-old boy, died on June 18, 1897, in a field near Courzieu (Rhône); his throat was cut and body hacked, directly matched to Vacher's confession through wound similarities and his claimed route.
The remaining two confirmed victims were Victor Portalier, a 14-year-old shepherd boy murdered on August 31, 1895, near Tournon (), and an additional young shepherd in the department, both attacked in similar isolated rural spots with throat wounds and mutilations, as substantiated by Vacher's verified admissions during interrogation.

Suspected Victims

Historians and criminologists have attributed up to 25 or 30 additional murders to Joseph Vacher based on in southeast during the that align with his known patterns of violence. These suspicions stem primarily from post-trial investigations following Vacher's confession to 11 killings, where authorities reviewed dozens of rural homicides involving young victims, often shepherds or farm workers isolated in fields. Matching characteristics included sudden attacks with stabbing or throat-slitting, post-mortem , and mutilations such as or bite marks, though no direct or eyewitness testimony connected Vacher definitively to these cases. Criteria for linking suspected victims to Vacher emphasize geographical proximity to his wandering path through departments like , , and , as well as the temporal overlap with his active period from to 1897. Unlike confirmed victims, these attributions lack Vacher's explicit acknowledgment or courtroom validation, relying instead on behavioral similarities derived from his admitted crimes, such as targeting vulnerable adolescents in remote areas to avoid detection. Post-execution analyses in the early debated Vacher's potential responsibility for a broader spree, with some French magistrates proposing connections to at least 15 unsolved murders that shared profiles and victim demographics. However, these claims faced skepticism due to Vacher's often vague and self-aggrandizing confessions, which boasted of dozens of killings without specifics, complicating verification amid the era's fragmented police records and absence of centralized databases. Contemporary criminological reviews estimate Vacher's total toll could exceed 25, factoring in his transient lifestyle as a beggar and the underreporting of rural crimes in late-19th-century , but emphasize that poor preservation of evidence and reliance on circumstantial pattern-matching preclude firm conclusions. Challenges persist from the period's limited forensic capabilities, including no standardized autopsies or victim identification protocols, which allowed similar crimes to go unattributed until Vacher's capture brought retrospective scrutiny.

Legacy

Criminological Impact

Joseph Vacher's case played a pivotal role in advancing in late 19th-century , particularly through the work of criminologist Alexandre Lacassagne. Lacassagne, a pioneer in , conducted detailed autopsies on Vacher's victims, employing wound analysis to identify consistent patterns such as throat-slitting from behind and subsequent mutilations, which linked the crimes to a single perpetrator. His application of criminal anthropology further innovated the field by examining Vacher's physical traits, behavioral history—including animal cruelty and lack of remorse—and psychopathological profile to establish culpability despite claims of insanity. These techniques, including the use of blood traces to reconstruct attack sequences, marked early strides in and profiling, influencing the integration of medical expertise into criminal investigations. The trial exposed significant flaws in the handling of insanity pleas under French law, contributing to subsequent legal debates on . Vacher's defense relied on alleged mental instability from a childhood , but Lacassagne's "punitive expertise" affirmed his psychic abnormality while upholding full criminal responsibility, allowing his execution. This approach highlighted tensions between psychiatric assessments and judicial outcomes, prompting reforms such as the Chaumié circular, which required psycho-social examinations to evaluate mental states and potentially mitigate penalties in cases of abnormality. The circular aimed to standardize responsibility determinations, bridging medical and legal perspectives, though its application remained inconsistent in capital cases. Media coverage of Vacher's crimes amplified public fear across rural , where his targeting of isolated shepherds and wanderers evoked widespread panic amid the rise of sensationalist . Reports of his brutal murders, often involving against children and adolescents, underscored vulnerabilities in remote areas, indirectly pressuring authorities to enhance of transients. As one of 's first documented serial killers, active shortly after the murders in England, Vacher's case bridged 19th-century to modern practices, emphasizing the need for coordinated national responses to nomadic offenders and laying groundwork for improved rural policing protocols. Joseph Vacher's crimes have inspired several works of literature, particularly those exploring the intersection of serial murder and the development of . Douglas Starr's 2010 book The Killer of Little Shepherds: A True Crime Story and the Birth of provides a detailed account of Vacher's murders while framing them as a pivotal case in the history of , highlighting how his capture advanced techniques like and profiling in late 19th-century . Vacher also appears in international anthologies, such as Michael Newton's The Encyclopedia of Serial Killers (2000 edition), where he is profiled alongside figures like due to similarities in their modus operandi and the era's media . French historical accounts, including works on 19th-century , often reference Vacher as a domestic counterpart to the Ripper, emphasizing his transient and mutilations. In film and television, Vacher has been portrayed both directly and indirectly. The 1976 French film The Judge and the Assassin, directed by , is loosely based on Vacher's life, depicting a vagrant named Joseph Bouvier who commits similar rural murders and raises questions about and ; the story draws from Vacher's and execution. In the American TV series Castle, the 2012 episode "Probable Cause" (Season 5, Episode 5) features the recurring villain Jerry Tyson adopting "Joseph Vacher" as an alias while framing the protagonist, nodding to the killer's historical notoriety as "the French Ripper." Documentaries and recent adaptations have brought renewed attention to Vacher's obscurity relative to his brutality. The 2013 French documentary episode "Joseph Vacher, le tueur de berger," directed by Pauline Verdu and aired on , examines his shepherd-targeted killings and the investigative breakthroughs that led to his arrest. The Java Films series Almost Perfect Crimes: The Joseph Vacher Affair (2013) dramatizes the case as one of France's most infamous until his confession, underscoring police shortcomings. In the 21st century, podcasts like the Dark Histories episode "Joseph Vacher: The French Ripper" (2020) and Historical True Crime's "The French Ripper: Joseph Vacher and the Birth of Forensic Science" (2025) have popularized the story for modern audiences, often comparing his evasion tactics to contemporary serial offenders while noting his relative anonymity outside .

References

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