Cannibal ate man with friends to seal ‘pact of silence’
Polish man given 25 years in prison after ordering accomplices to cut up and roast unidentified victim
A POLISH man was jailed for 25 years yesterday for murdering and eating parts of a victim whose identity has never been established and body has never been found, in a case dating from nearly two decades ago.
The convicted man, known only as Robert M because of reporting restrictions, ordered four accomplices to cut up portions of the victim’s flesh to be roasted and eaten to seal a pact of silence, a court in the north-eastern city of Szczecin heard.
The case only came to light in 2017 when police got an anonymous tip-off saying that one man involved, Zbigniew B, had made a deathbed confession.
In the subsequent investigation, the police learnt that the remaining four had apparently spoken about the murder privately.
The prosecution’s case, however, rested mainly on the testimony of Rafal O, another of the men who had eaten the victim, who had, according to the court, on a number of occasions gave a clear and consistent account of the night of the murder.
According to his testimony, Robert M had an altercation with the victim after a drinking session in 2002 in the village of Lugi. Having got into a fight, Robert and his friends took the man to the edge of a nearby lake, according to the testimony. Robert had allegedly then told Zbigniew: “You know what to do.”
Summing up the case, Judge Tomasz Banas said: “Zbigniew B sat down on the man and cut his throat, then cut off his head, took off his clothes, gutted his body and cut off five pieces of his soft tissue from the rest of his body.”
The flesh was then put on skewers and cooked over an open fire. When one of the men protested, Robert said he would suffer the same fate, the court heard. The remains of the body were then dumped in a lake but in one twist that has puzzled investigators for decades, who the victim was and where he came from remains unknown. He fits no missing persons records, no one has come forward to provide a name and no remains were ever found in the lake.
Another factor is that Rafal O has a long history of alcohol abuse and is said to suffer from a mental illness – a point that was not lost on Robert M’s defence team.
Monika Widacka, his defence lawyer, said they would appeal, saying the conviction was based upon the “testimony of one person who testified many years later, had alcohol problems and has been diagnosed with a mental illness”.
On hearing the verdict, Robert M, who has always denied having any role in the murder, said: “I certainly did not expect this. I’m surprised.” Charges of desecration of the body have expired under the statute of limitations, leading to only the main instigator, Robert M, being sentenced.
Grzegorz Kasicki, one of the trial judges, also cast doubt over the conviction. Although he stood by the court’s verdict, he questioned the reliability of a testimony given years after the event by a man “who was drunk”.
But Judge Banas pointed out that Rafal O had recounted the events of the night of the murder as many as six times in “such a way that it is impossible to consider the possibility that he invented the story”.
‘Zbigniew B cut his throat, then cut off his head, took off his clothes, gutted his body and cut off five pieces’