Sneha Girap (Editor)

Koos Hertogs

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Name
  
Koos Hertogs

Country
  

Span of killings
  
1979–1980

Victims
  
3

Date apprehended
  
October 3, 1980

Koos Hertogs Beruchte seriemoordenaar Koos Hertogs 65 overleden ADnl

Born
  
December 16, 1949 (
1949-12-16
)


Criminal penalty
  

Died
  
19 July 2015 (aged 65) Vught, Netherlands

Jacobus Dirk (Koos) Hertogs (The Hague 16 December 1949 – 19 July 2015) was a convicted Dutch serial killer. He was convicted for a total of three murders.

Contents

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Victims


  • Tialda Visser, 12 years old, was reported missing on 11 May 1979, after she didn't return home after ballet classes at the Royal Conservatory of The Hague. Four days later, on 15 May, her lifeless body was found near the Leeghwaterbrug in The Hague. The cause of death could not be determined.
  • Emy den Boer, 18 years old, disappeared on 3 April 1980. She left her home in Schiedam to go to the Academie voor Lichamelijke Opvoeding in The Hague, however she never got there. Two days later, on 5 April, her body was found by a hiker in the forest near Nistelrode. She was shot in the stomach and head.
  • Edith Post, 11 years old, disappeared while at school on 29 September 1980. She left her class to get some materials from a closet in the hallway but didn't return. On 2 October her body was found in the dunes of Wassenaar. She was beaten to death, probably with a branch that was found next to her body.
  • Arrest

    Koos Hertogs Koos Hertogs Photos Murderpedia the encyclopedia of

    After the murder on Edith Post, the police received an anonymous call with the information that Edith had bitten her murderer, and a bouncer of nightclub "De Nachtegaal" (The Nightingale) had a severe bite wound in his little finger. The bouncer was arrested and turned out to be Koos Hertogs. Police investigated his house and found blood traces of Tialda Visser and Emy den Boer. On the attic police found an isolated room. It is believed that Hertogs hid and raped his victims here for a period of time, before killing them. Koos Hertogs got sentenced to life imprisonment. Until 1989 Hertogs denied killing the girls. However after consultation with his lawyer he confessed so he could be placed on a lighter regime.

    Sting operation

    For a long time there were rumours that Hertogs had protection from higher hand. In the book Zuidwal, that tells the story of the serial killer, it is claimed that Hertogs got protected by Cornelis Stolk, an important judge and vice president of the court. However both men denied the claims. In 2009 crime reporter Peter R. de Vries started a sting operation, trying to reveal if Hertogs murdered more people or if the claims made in the book were true. While being filmed with hidden cameras Hertogs, talking with a 'dear' friend, who turned out to be an infiltrator working for De Vries, made some notable claims.

  • He admitted he kidnapped and murdered the three girls.
  • With the murder on Edith Post he had an accomplice.
  • Three times he had plans to murder someone, however the plans weren't carried out or failed.
  • A man he had an argument with fled inside a pool hall before Hertogs could kill him.
  • The director of a juvenile prison, however the man already died before Hertogs could carry out his plan.
  • A fellow inmate was lured into a trap, however a guard got suspicious and locked him up.
  • Confessed knowing who murdered the two Swedish women, Gun-Ingeborg Johannesson (18) and Ann Jönsson (19), in a forest near La Roche-en-Ardenne.
  • Confessed he had a special bond with judge Cornelis Stolk. Stolk paid for the driver's license of Hertogs and after an earlier conviction Stolk placed him under the care of a 'befriended' psychiatrist, who later turned out to be the ex-wife of Stolk. In the end of the television show it was revealed that Hertogs, in return, offered sexual services (oral sex) and child pornography to Cornelis Stolk. Mr. Cornelis Stolk died on 10 June 2004, aged 87.
  • Book "De zaak Koos H."

    In August 2012 writer and psychologist Patrick Oomens published the book "De zaak Koos H.", in which he questions Koos H. being a serial killer and concludes that he doesn't fit the profile. According to Oomens, that would shed another light on the case and the writer conjectures that the whole case of Koos H. has more characteristics of a cover-up with connections to Operation Gladio. With respect to the 'befriended' psychiatrist, the writer claims to have discovered that the ex-wife of Stolk wasn't a psychiatrist at all, but in reality the first female pilot in the Netherlands who transported the Dutch Royal family in the early '50s.

    References

    Koos Hertogs Wikipedia