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Thierry Paulin
Thierry Paulin
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Thierry[1] Paulin (28 November 1963 – 16 April 1989), known as The Monster of Montmartre (French: Le monstre de Montmartre), was a French serial killer active in the 1980s who murdered 21 elderly women. He died from complications related to AIDS before his trial.

Key Information

Childhood and teenage years

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Paulin was born in Fort-de-France, Martinique.[2] His father flew to metropolitan France just after his birth, leaving his teenaged mother to fend for herself and the baby. Paulin was raised in Martinique by his paternal grandmother, who owned a restaurant and allegedly paid little attention to her grandson. When he was ten, Paulin started to live with his now-married mother, trying to blend in with his stepbrothers and sisters. His behaviour started to become erratic and violent towards the other children, and eventually, his mother asked his father to take their son to metropolitan France. His father accepted in order to avoid paying alimony.

As a mixed-race student among white peers, Paulin had few friends. He performed poorly at school, failing his exams. At the age of 17, he decided to enter military service early, joining a logistics branch of the airborne forces.

On 14 November 1982, he robbed an old woman in her grocery, menacing her with a knife; the grocer knew him as a customer, however, and he was soon arrested. In June 1983, he was sentenced to two years in prison, but the sentence was suspended.

From Toulouse to Paris

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In 1984, after leaving the army, Paulin learned that his mother and her family now lived in Nanterre, a western suburb of Paris. He went there to live with them, but his relationship was hostile.

Paulin became a waiter at the Paradis Latin, a nightclub renowned for its drag shows. There, he started a career as an artist, dressed in drag and singing tunes by his favourite singer, Eartha Kitt. His mother was once invited to watch her son's performance, but she left the club a few seconds after the beginning of the act.

The most important event that happened to Paulin at the Paradis Latin was meeting Jean-Thierry Mathurin. The 19-year-old Mathurin was born in French Guiana, and was a drug addict. Paulin fell in love with him and they soon became lovers. Paulin was also addicted, but less severely, and sold drugs as well.

On 5 October 1984, two elderly women were assaulted in Paris. Germaine Petitot, 91, survived but was too traumatized to give a detailed description of the criminals. Anna Barbier-Ponthus, 83, died after being beaten and asphyxiated beneath a pillow. Her murderer robbed her of 300 francs (about $50).

In October–November 1984, eight other old women were murdered, mainly in the 18th arrondissement of Paris, but in neighbouring areas too. The violence of the crimes was notable; some of the victims had their heads stuck into plastic bags, some were beaten to death, and one of them was forced to drink drain cleaner. In all cases, the motive appeared to be robbery. Some reports allege that Paulin singled out women who seemed unpleasant or unfriendly when he engaged them in conversation,[1] while Paulin himself told police that "I only tackled the weakest of them."[3]

At the same time, Paulin and Mathurin were leading an extravagant lifestyle, spending their nights dancing, drinking champagne, and snorting cocaine. In late November, they decided to go to Toulouse to stay for a few months at the home of Paulin's father. But the elder Paulin was unable to accept his son's lover, and violent fights ensued, ending when Paulin and Mathurin broke up. Mathurin returned to Paris, while Paulin tried to start his own firm of transvestite artists, a plan which failed in the autumn of 1985.

The second wave of murders

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From 20 December 1985 to 14 June 1986, eight more elderly women were murdered. The police were unable to identify the killer, though the investigators had a few clues. Police determined through fingerprint evidence that the perpetrator was the same individual who committed the 1984 murders. However, in the new murders, the killer appeared to favour quicker, less cruel methods.

In the autumn of 1986, Paulin attacked one of his cocaine dealers with a baseball bat. The dealer went to the police, and Paulin was arrested. Paulin was sentenced to 16 months imprisonment for the assault. However, after he was diagnosed as HIV positive, this increased the number of killings in what seemed like a race against time to kill as many as possible, as he knew he was in his last years.

The final killings

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Knowing that he was in effect under a death sentence from AIDS, Paulin organized lavish parties, spending a lot of money and sparing no expense. Paulin paid for these parties with stolen credit cards and cheques, and with the proceeds from his murders.

On 25 November 1987, Paulin murdered Rachel Cohen, age 79. On the same day, he attacked an 87-year-old woman, Berthe Finalteri, whom he suffocated and left for dead. Two days later, he strangled Geneviève Germont, who would be his last victim.

As Paulin celebrated his 24th birthday, Finalteri unexpectedly recovered, and was able to give an accurate description of her attacker, stating that he was "un métis d'une vingtaine d'années coiffé à la Carl Lewis, avec une boucle d'oreille à l'oreille gauche" (literally "a mix-race man in his twenties, with hair like Carl Lewis and an earring in his left ear"). On 1 December, Paulin was arrested while walking down the street when a local police inspector, Francis Jacob, recognized him from Finalteri's description.[4][5] After two days in custody, Paulin admitted everything, including his involvement with Mathurin. Accused of committing 18 murders (though he claimed responsibility for 21), he was sent to jail awaiting trial.

In early 1988, Paulin fell ill, as his body began to succumb to the effects of AIDS.[6][7] Within a year he was hospitalized in a state of near-paralysis, suffering from both tuberculosis and meningitis. He died during the night of 16 April 1989 in the hospital wing of Fresnes Prison.

Only Mathurin was tried for the first nine attacks and murders, receiving a life sentence, plus 18 years without parole, but was released in January 2009.[8]

Film references

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Bibliography

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See also

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References

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from Grokipedia
Thierry Paulin (1963–1989) was a French active in during the mid-1980s, notorious for murdering at least 21 elderly women in their homes through strangulation or beatings, primarily to rob them of money to fund his and lavish nightlife. Born in , , Paulin moved to mainland as a young man and settled in , where he occasionally worked as a entertainer while descending into drug dependency. His crimes, which targeted isolated women in neighborhoods like and earned him the moniker "Monster of Montmartre," began in 1984, paused briefly in 1985, and intensified through 1986 and 1987, yielding an average of 2,000 francs per victim that he spent on parties and socializing in trendy venues. Paulin often operated with an accomplice, Jean-Thierry Mathurin, a 22-year-old from who participated in at least seven of the killings and was later convicted of murder and sentenced to in 1991. The killings sowed widespread fear among Paris's elderly population, complicating police investigations due to limited forensic databases at the time, until Paulin was identified and arrested on December 1, 1987, near after a recognized him from a composite sketch. During interrogation, he confessed to the 21 murders, providing precise details of each attack, but he never faced trial, dying of AIDS-related complications on April 16, 1989, while incarcerated at . Described by those who knew him as a charismatic yet ruthless figure with deep emotional voids, Paulin's case highlighted vulnerabilities in urban policing and the societal impacts of drug addiction in 1980s .

Early Life

Childhood in Martinique and Early Years in France

Thierry Paulin was born on November 28, 1963, in , , to 17-year-old Rose-Hélène Larcher and Gaby Paulin. The father acknowledged paternity but departed two days after the birth, leaving the mother unable to care for the infant alone. At 18 months old, Paulin was placed with his maternal grandmother in Anse-à-l’Ane, , where she managed a small known as "Maman Jojo." His early years were characterized by isolation and emotional , as the grandmother's work demands left little room for nurturing or discipline, amid the backdrop of prevalent in the region. In 1973, at the age of 10, Paulin joined his mother in mainland after she had established a new family. The initial reunion brought a brief period of familial warmth, particularly through interactions with his half-sisters, but this soon deteriorated due to family conflicts. Paulin then moved to to live with his biological father, Gaby Paulin, a and mason, where integration into the family proved challenging. The unstable home life continued, exacerbating the challenges of adapting to a new cultural and social environment far from his roots. Paulin's early education in local Martinique schools revealed promising academic potential initially, but he quickly displayed disinterest and behavioral problems, including truancy and defiance of authority. At around age 12, he exhibited violent tendencies by threatening a teacher with a knife and intercepting school correspondence to forge his mother's signature, signaling emerging patterns of rebellion and deceit. In , he attended college and passed the BEPC exam at age 16, but enrolled in vocational training programs for hairdressing and mechanics/electricity without completing them. These incidents occurred against a dynamic marked by frequent absences and economic hardship, contributing to his formative experiences up to age 15.

Adolescence and Initial Criminal Involvement

During his teenage years in , Thierry Paulin struggled with educational failures and behavioral issues, leading him to leave school around 1978. This prompted involvement in petty theft and fights with local friends. He briefly sold paintings door-to-door and refused to work with his father. At age 17, he joined the as a parachutist, where he faced due to his race and , leaving in 1984. Around age 16, Paulin developed addictions to and , which fueled his descent into petty . To finance his habits, he engaged in thefts and burglaries, resulting in his first on , 1982, for robbing a at knifepoint in . He was jailed for a week and later convicted on June 7, 1983, receiving a two-year for with violence. These early criminal activities marked the beginning of a pattern of escalating lawlessness, driven by and a lack of stable support. Paulin was homosexual and navigated experiences of discrimination amid his mixed-race background and unstable environment during his youth.

Relocation and Lifestyle in Paris

Move from Toulouse to Paris

Thierry Paulin first moved to Toulouse in 1973 at the age of 10 to join his father after arriving from Martinique. In November 1982, during leave from his military service, he visited Toulouse, where he briefly pursued training in coiffure and mechanics earlier in his teens but had dropped out by age 16, finding only short-lived work while engaging in petty theft, including a burglary of a local grocery store that netted him 1,400 francs and resulted in a two-year suspended sentence in June 1983. Following his in the early , Paulin relocated to the area, initially living with his mother in the suburb before becoming independent by April 1984, drawn by job prospects in the capital's service industry and its vibrant nightlife. He settled in the 18th , specifically the neighborhood, sharing modest apartments with acquaintances amid financial difficulties. These struggles intensified his reliance on burglaries targeting unoccupied residences to make ends meet, escalating from the petty crimes of his youth. In , Paulin began integrating into the city's community through social circles that offered a sense of belonging absent in his prior experiences.

Cabaret Career and Personal Life

Upon arriving in the Paris area in the early 1980s and establishing independence in , Thierry Paulin immersed himself in the city's vibrant nightlife, working occasionally as a server and drag performer at the Paradis Latin and other clubs in the Pigalle district, where he entertained audiences with flamboyant shows that highlighted his charisma and presence. These performances provided a semblance of stability amid his transient lifestyle, allowing him to immerse himself in the underground scene of 1980s Paris. Paulin's personal life was marked by escalating drug use, particularly , which contributed to his addictive tendencies. He engaged in promiscuous relationships within Paris's gay community, a scene increasingly shadowed by growing awareness of the AIDS epidemic during the mid-1980s. This dual existence of performative glamour and hedonistic excess was funded largely through petty theft, as Paulin relied on stolen goods to sustain his extravagant habits, including purchasing elaborate clothing for his drag routines and frequenting fashionable venues. His sociable demeanor made him a regular at various hotels, where he paid nightly rates without raising suspicion. Around 1984, Paulin met Jean-Thierry Mathurin, a 22-year-old from with a background in minor ; their relationship began as romantic, with the pair living together and sharing involvement in occasional work until a split in 1985. Mathurin, like Paulin, struggled with drug addiction, intertwining their lives in Paris's nocturnal underworld.

Criminal Activities and Murders

First Series of Killings (1984–1985)

Thierry Paulin's first series of killings commenced on October 4, 1984, in the , targeting an elderly woman in her home. Over the following month, from October 5 to November 9, 1984, he murdered eight elderly women, primarily in the same district, establishing a pattern of opportunistic home invasions against isolated seniors. The victims were typically bound or ligatured before being killed, often by strangulation, suffocation with plastic bags over their heads, or in some cases, stabbing with knives; one instance involved forcing a victim to ingest caustic soda. Paulin acted alone or with accomplice Jean-Thierry Mathurin during this phase, selecting targets based on their vulnerability and robbing them of cash and modest valuables such as jewelry, leaving scenes marked by violent that suggested sadistic enjoyment alongside practical gain. Following the intense activity of late 1984, Paulin halted his murders until late 1985 amid heightened police vigilance in the affected areas.

Second Wave of Murders (1986–1987)

After a period of relative inactivity, Thierry Paulin resumed his in December 1985, continuing through June 1986 with approximately eight murders of elderly women. These attacks were carried out primarily in apartments across various arrondissements, including the 14th, 5th, 10th, 11th, and 12th, where victims' bodies were often left in degrading positions. The intensified brutality and frequency of these crimes stemmed from Paulin's escalating drug dependency, which fueled desperate financial needs to support his lavish lifestyle, combined with his increasing confidence that allowed him to act with less caution regarding forensic evidence. By late 1986, the mounting killings garnered significant media coverage, earning Paulin the moniker "Monster of " and instilling widespread fear among the elderly population, as seniors in the area altered their routines to avoid isolation and .

Final Killings and Accomplice Involvement (1987–1988)

In late 1987, following his release from on September 1 after serving time from April 16, 1987, for prior offenses including and drug-related crimes, Thierry Paulin resumed his series of brutal murders, committing six killings of elderly women between October 20 and November 27 in Paris's 10th and 12th arrondissements. These final crimes were executed solo, targeting vulnerable women as they returned home from markets or post offices, with Paulin following them to gain entry under . The attacks involved strangulation, beating, or suffocation—often using ligatures or plastic bags over the victims' heads—and were accompanied by s averaging 2,000 francs to fund Paulin's drug addiction and extravagant . Paulin's methods in this period showed continuity with earlier patterns but included elements like binding victims' hands and feet to prevent resistance, as well as leaving bodies in apartments with doors locked from the inside to delay discovery by neighbors or authorities. One representative example was the of 73-year-old Geneviève Germond on November 27, 1987, in her apartment on Rue Cail in the 10th ; Paulin strangled her after she returned from for and , stealing cash to finance his birthday celebration the following day. These acts reflected an evolution toward more calculated disposals, though driven by the same mix of financial desperation, thrill-seeking, and dominance over defenseless targets. Throughout his criminal career, Paulin's key accomplice was his lover, Jean-Thierry Mathurin, whom he met in at the Paradis Latin cabaret where both worked in the nightlife scene; their partnership formed amid shared drug use and , leading to joint participation in seven during the initial 1984 spree in the 18th arrondissement. Mathurin served as a lookout and active participant in some attacks but was not involved in later killings. In total, Paulin confessed to 21 murders spanning to 1987, while Mathurin was convicted in 1991 of complicity in seven, receiving a life sentence for his role in the earlier phase of the crimes. The motivations behind their joint efforts combined greed for quick cash, the excitement of violence, and a sense of power over elderly victims, exacerbating the terror in Paris's elderly communities.

Police Investigation and Breakthroughs

The police investigation into the murders of elderly women in commenced following the discovery of the first victim, 83-year-old Anna Barbier-Ponthus, on October 5, 1984, in the 18th arrondissement. The Brigade Criminelle took charge, and as additional similar killings emerged—characterized by strangulation, gagging, and theft of cash and jewelry—investigators linked the crimes by mid-1985, forming a dedicated involving the Brigade de Recherche et d'Intervention (BRB) and Brigade des Stupéfiants et du Proxénétisme (BSP) to address the serial pattern. Forensic examinations of crime scenes consistently revealed a involving forced entry via doors or windows, binding of victims, and selective removal of valuables like rings and watches, which helped establish connections across the cases. The inquiry faced substantial obstacles amid Paris's 1980s crime surge, with over 30 similar unsolved murders of elderly victims by late 1987 contributing to widespread public anxiety and media scrutiny in neighborhoods like . Investigators grappled with the perpetrator's preference for untraceable cash thefts, leaving minimal physical evidence, and uncertainty over whether a single individual, a team, or drug-fueled actors were responsible. Routine methods included combing criminal records for patterns, buildings for entry clues such as manipulated locks or codes, interrogating neighbors and merchants with victims' possessions to trace stolen goods, and tapping informants in nightlife venues and operations. Early criminal profiling efforts speculated on a "gerontophile" offender driven by both financial gain and aversion to the elderly, though such techniques were rudimentary in at the time. Key breakthroughs emerged in 1987 after fingerprints from three 1984 crime scenes, previously unmatched, were cross-referenced following a minor arrest of a suspect in August 1986 for unrelated offenses, where prints were recorded but not initially connected. Witness accounts intensified the leads: generic portrait-robots from earlier sightings gave way to more detailed descriptions from children of a young, mixed-race man spotted near recent scenes in the 18th arrondissement. These elements, combined with intensified surveillance in high-risk areas, narrowed the focus to potential young perpetrators familiar with the city's underbelly, culminating in the identification of primary suspect Thierry Paulin through recognition by an officer familiar with local figures.

Arrest, Confession, and Trial Preparations

On December 1, 1987, Thierry Paulin was arrested near in by Commissioner Francis Jacob's team, following a composite sketch based on a survivor's description of a recent attack. The following day, December 2, his accomplice Jean-Thierry Mathurin was apprehended after Paulin implicated him during initial questioning. During extended interrogations starting December 2, Paulin confessed to 21 murders of elderly women in between October 1984 and October 1987, providing detailed accounts of the crimes, including locations and methods such as strangulation, suffocation, and . He specifically admitted Mathurin's involvement in seven of the killings, primarily in the 18th near , and assisted investigators by reconstructing crime scenes through verbal descriptions and guidance to sites. Mathurin, under interrogation, confessed to participating in several of these murders, corroborating Paulin's statements on the joint crimes. Investigators compiled including Paulin's fingerprints matched to seven victims' apartments, survivor identifications from attacks, and of stolen from the robberies that preceded the killings. A search of Paulin's yielded items linking him to the thefts, such as small amounts of consistent with the modest sums taken from victims who were targeted for their perceived vulnerability rather than wealth. Paulin and Mathurin were charged on December 4, 1987, with multiple counts of murder and aggravated robbery by investigating magistrate Philippe Jeannin in . Paulin's trial was prepared for early 1989 but was ultimately halted by his death from AIDS-related complications on April 16, 1989, in , preventing any courtroom proceedings against him. Mathurin faced trial separately before the in December 1991, where he was convicted of seven murders and one , receiving a life sentence with an 18-year minimum term.

Imprisonment and Death

Life in Prison

Following his and indictment in December 1987, Thierry Paulin was incarcerated at in , where he remained in custody awaiting trial. As a known user, Paulin showed no immediate signs of withdrawal during initial custody, though his likely contributed to ongoing challenges in the prison environment. Paulin was diagnosed as HIV-positive while in shortly after his , and by 1988, he developed full-blown AIDS, experiencing a rapid health decline marked by emerging symptoms in an era when antiretroviral treatments were not yet widely available or effective. His condition worsened with recurrent infections and significant , leading to his transfer to the prison's hospital wing in early 1989.

Death from AIDS Complications

In early March 1989, Thierry Paulin was hospitalized at in due to a severe AIDS-related infection, specifically , which had progressed rapidly during his imprisonment. He was subsequently transferred to the of the prison hospital at Fresnes, where his condition deteriorated despite medical intervention. Paulin died on April 16, 1989, at the age of 25, in the hospital from complications of AIDS, including the that had overwhelmed his . Medical examinations confirmed AIDS as the underlying cause, likely contracted through high-risk sexual activities and intravenous drug use in Paris's vibrant but dangerous nightlife scene during the mid-1980s. With Paulin's death, French authorities closed the criminal case against him without proceeding to , as his detailed during in 1987 had already established his responsibility for 21 . This outcome left many victims' families without a formal reckoning, fueling public discourse in French media about serial offenders escaping full accountability through . His accomplice, Jean-Thierry Mathurin, would later stand alone and receive a life sentence in 1991.

Legacy and Cultural Impact

Media and Film Representations

Thierry Paulin's crimes have been dramatized in several films and television productions, most notably in Claire Denis's 1994 J'ai pas sommeil (I Can't Sleep), which loosely draws on his life and as a black, drag performer targeting elderly women in . The film portrays a fictionalized version of Paulin through the character Théo, emphasizing themes of alienation, nightlife, and urban isolation in , while avoiding direct of the killings. This cinematic interpretation received critical attention for its stylistic approach, blending documentary-like elements with narrative fiction to explore immigrant experiences in 1980s . Television representations include the 2017 episode "Thierry Paulin" from the British series World's Most Evil Killers, which recounts his attacks on 21 elderly victims, highlighting the brutality and his funding of a lavish lifestyle through robberies. Archival footage and journalistic accounts of the case, preserved by the (INA), have also been used in French media retrospectives, providing raw interviews and news reports from the that capture the public panic in . French press coverage during the 1980s, particularly in , extensively documented Paulin's arrest and confessions, framing him as "le tueur de vieilles dames" and detailing the wave of fear among the elderly in the 18th arrondissement. Biographies and books, such as VK Y's Thierry Paulin: Une Tragédie Noire (2022), reconstruct his confessions and background, drawing on court records and witness accounts to narrate the progression of his crimes from 1984 to 1987. Critiques of media portrayals often highlight in emphasizing Paulin's youth, drag persona, and , which amplified racial and sexual during the AIDS era, as seen in press headlines and early filmic depictions that exoticized his identity over the victims' stories. For instance, Denis's film counters this by dedramatizing the violence, focusing instead on everyday opacity and masquerade in immigrant communities. In the 2020s, Paulin's story has seen renewed interest through international podcasts on platforms like , including episodes from True Crime Cam (2021) and Devils in the Dark (2022), which adapt his case for audio formats by interweaving survivor testimonies with timelines of the murders. These adaptations often reference his drag performances in cabarets to contextualize his double life, while recent discussions position him within broader histories of French serial killers, sparking proposals for streaming series akin to true crime documentaries. This interest continued with the Evidence Locker Podcast's episode 225 in January 2025, which explores Paulin's crimes and their impact on .

Societal and Psychological Reflections

Paulin's crimes exposed the profound vulnerability of elderly residents in urban , particularly in neighborhoods like , where isolated women living alone became easy targets for opportunistic violence. Between 1984 and 1987, his attacks on over 20 such victims—often for meager sums of money—instilled widespread fear, amplifying societal anxieties about urban isolation and inadequate safeguards for the aging population. This wave of murders highlighted how economic pressures and social neglect left seniors prey not only to criminals but also to profound loneliness, with many victims lacking family nearby to notice their absence promptly. The underreported trauma extended to the 21 affected families, many of whom remained detached or absent during related legal proceedings, underscoring the ripple effects of grief and disconnection in a rapidly modernizing city. Posthumous psychological analyses of Paulin reveal a profile marked by severe affective deficiencies, blending elements of , perversion, and unresolved trauma, which manifested in his indifferent brutality toward victims. Experts describe him as a dual figure—charismatic and flamboyant in social settings, yet ruthless in his acts—stemming from a childhood of parental abandonment and mistreatment that fostered a deep sense of rejection and self-perceived worthlessness as societal "rebut." This early annulment, coupled with escalating drug addiction in his youth, contributed to narcissistic traits and a compulsion to exert power over the vulnerable, transforming personal shame into acts of dominance and repetition of past humiliations. Forensic psychiatric frameworks, such as the tripole model, position his behavior within a spectrum where overrides , with no genuine evident in confessions or records. Paulin's death from AIDS complications in , before his , intersected tragically with the era's rampant stigma against the disease, which was heavily associated with and fueled across French society. In the , AIDS diagnoses carried a near-fatal and social ostracism, particularly for individuals like Paulin, whose identity amplified public prejudices amid a backdrop of panic and over the epidemic's spread. His case, alongside comparisons to contemporaries like —France's other prominent Black —underscores broader lessons on racial and psychological marginalization in post-colonial French , where Eurocentric biases often overlooked trauma from migration and exclusion in favor of labeling such offenders as innate "monsters." While no direct legislative reforms for elder protection emerged immediately post-, the murders contributed to heightened national discourse on urban safety for seniors, influencing subsequent awareness campaigns against isolation and vulnerability.

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