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The Murder Network (2022) is a gripping crime thriller that dives deep into the dark world of organized murder conspiracies, hidden connections, and a deadly web of secrets where nothing is as it seems.

The story follows a chilling investigation into a series of connected killings that reveal a powerful underground network operating in the shadows. As law enforcement closes in, the case turns into a high-stakes race against time, uncovering betrayal, corruption, and a sinister system built on silence and fear. Every clue leads deeper into a dangerous conspiracy where trust becomes a liability and survival depends on uncovering the truth before becoming the next target.

Packed with suspense, psychological tension, intense crime investigation elements, and unexpected twists, The Murder Network (2022) delivers a modern thriller experience for fans of dark mystery storytelling and crime drama cinema.

Movie Information

🎬 Title: The Murder Network (2022)
🎭 Starring: (Cast details vary / ensemble crime thriller cast)
πŸŽ₯ Director: Unknown / Not widely credited
🎞 Genre: Crime, Thriller, Mystery, Drama, Psychological Thriller
🌍 Country: International Production
πŸ“… Release Year: 2022

Why Watch The Murder Network (2022)?

βœ” Dark and intense crime thriller storyline
βœ” Investigative mystery with suspenseful twists
βœ” Focus on serial crime network conspiracy
βœ” Psychological tension and gripping storytelling
βœ” Perfect for fans of modern crime dramas
βœ” Fast-paced narrative with shocking revelations

If you enjoy crime investigation movies, serial killer thrillers, dark mystery films, psychological crime dramas, and suspense-filled storytelling, The Murder Network (2022) is a must-watch.

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Transcript
00:00:15At the dawn of the 1940s, Paris is a city of glamour, style and culture.
00:00:21Yet as war breaks out across Europe, Nazi forces overpower the French defences,
00:00:25and Parisians soon find their city overrun by the enemy.
00:00:29When the Germans invade France and defeat the French army so quickly,
00:00:34they've got all of France at their feet.
00:00:36A lot of people were very worried when the Germans arrived.
00:00:41People were scared. People didn't know exactly what was going to happen.
00:00:45And while the occupants of Paris struggle to adapt to this hostile environment,
00:00:49a serial killer uses the chaos to his own advantage.
00:00:53Posing as an undercover ally, he preys on those most desperate to flee persecution under the Nazi regime.
00:01:00It was a very cleverly, cunningly put together plan.
00:01:05He shamelessly, ruthlessly took advantage of the situation for his own gain.
00:01:12People disappeared. And their relatives never heard from them again.
00:01:18And they wouldn't go to the police. Because going to the police is going to the Germans.
00:01:28This was a splendid opportunity. To murder these people, nobody would look for them.
00:01:35This film uncovers the shocking crimes of Dr. Marcel Petiot, the psychopath who believes he has devised the perfect murder,
00:01:44and the race against time to bring him to justice.
00:02:00France, 1940.
00:02:02Only 20 years since it had been the central battleground of the First World War,
00:02:06the nation is under threat once again.
00:02:09Following Germany's invasion of Poland, Hitler's Nazi forces have stormed through Denmark, Norway and Belgium,
00:02:16and now begin their offensive against France itself.
00:02:20And although the nation has bolstered its military and strengthened its defences since the last conflict,
00:02:26the ferocity of the Nazi's assault on the country's northern border is relentless.
00:02:32It came as a huge surprise. Within five weeks, the French army was completely obliterated.
00:02:38France was in a state of panic and chaos.
00:02:43You had 10 million people fleeing from the north to the south.
00:02:48This was the largest number of people moving in one go since the Bible.
00:02:52There was no communication. You couldn't phone anybody. You couldn't send letters.
00:02:56So France was really, really on its knees.
00:03:00With whole towns and villages devastated by the onslaught, the nation's government quickly falls apart.
00:03:06And this chaos provides an opportunity for an aging icon of France's past, Marshal Philippe PΓ©tain.
00:03:14The Prime Minister resigned and was replaced by Marshal PΓ©tain,
00:03:17who was this huge war leader from the First World War, a total hero of France.
00:03:24And PΓ©tain and the people around him were all in favor of an armistice with Germany.
00:03:30They wanted the fighting to end.
00:03:32The military elites, the leading generals in 1940,
00:03:37they're very much supporters of French right-wing politics.
00:03:40For people like Marshal PΓ©tain, the great hero of World War I, who is going to step up as the
00:03:46new premier
00:03:47and then cut this deal with the Germans, they see this as being possibly a positive development.
00:03:54That the Germans are importing this very disciplined Nazi system,
00:03:59and France will adopt its own version of the Nazi system, join its place in what Hitler is calling the
00:04:05New Order,
00:04:06and then France will be rebuilt under German tutelage.
00:04:10And PΓ©tain sees this as a positive thing.
00:04:12And although this feeling is not widely shared among the French people themselves,
00:04:17on June 22nd, PΓ©tain and France's military leaders meet with Hitler and formally surrender.
00:04:22As the Nazi occupation begins, the nation is immediately divided in two,
00:04:28with the German military controlling the north of the country
00:04:30and a free zone established in the south, known as Vichy, France, left under the command of Marshal PΓ©tain.
00:04:38Here, he instantly falls into step with Hitler's master plan
00:04:42and establishes the French state, an authoritarian regime operating out of the small spa town of Vichy.
00:04:50The country's capital, Paris, however, is under the Nazi's command,
00:04:54and within days of the invasion, its landscape is radically transformed.
00:04:59The Tricolor, the French national flag, was banned and replaced by the swastika.
00:05:04Paris was moved on to German time.
00:05:07You had Germans everywhere, German soldiers, but also auxiliary staff,
00:05:12particularly in the centre and particularly around tourist sites.
00:05:15You had black and white signposts to help the Germans find their way around Paris.
00:05:22The Germans were everywhere. It was utter humiliation to the French.
00:05:26The French were very proud people, and to suddenly have your country taken over
00:05:29and be powerless in your own land and have despots revelling in the joys of your city
00:05:36was absolutely, you know, horrifying to the French people.
00:05:40And Parisians are quickly cast into an uncertain, paranoid world,
00:05:45no longer able to distinguish between allies and enemies.
00:05:48French society is just utterly divided.
00:05:52There's no freedom of the press. There's no freedom of speech.
00:05:54Everything's very heavily censored. People have to be very careful what they say.
00:05:58Because remember, not only are the Germans there in control,
00:06:01but they enlist this huge apparatus of collaborationists, as distinct from collaborators.
00:06:07Collaborators were just people that said, I'm going to go along to get along.
00:06:11The collaborationists were people who said, I'm going to make my future with the Germans.
00:06:15I'm going to hitch my wagon to the Nazi wagon.
00:06:18So you're not only just dodging Germans, you're dodging a lot of French bureaucrats
00:06:23and policemen employed by the Germans who are as keen as the Germans to get you.
00:06:28But some remain defiant.
00:06:31Despite the risks, French patriots form the Resistance,
00:06:35an underground army that fights from the shadows to subvert German rule
00:06:40and aid the Allied war effort.
00:06:42Resistance is small at first, and people are uncertain what resistance is going to be.
00:06:47So lots of early resistors don't necessarily regard violence as part of what they're going to do.
00:06:52There is a resistance in Paris, and there are lots of different kinds of resistance.
00:06:58So you have a resistance revolving around intelligence,
00:07:01a resistance revolving around escape networks,
00:07:03a resistance revolving around provision of information and publication.
00:07:07Resistance was something few people gravitated towards early on.
00:07:12But of course, as the occupation went on,
00:07:15as people were able to see the kind of conditions that were affecting everyday life,
00:07:19more and more people decided to take a stand.
00:07:24As the resistance expands, the Nazis and the French state tighten their grip on the nation,
00:07:30imprisoning or executing anyone with links to this underground army.
00:07:34And while this further intensifies the climate of fear and distrust,
00:07:39in Paris, the hostile environment creates the perfect hunting ground for a ruthless serial killer.
00:07:46And his presence goes undetected by the authorities until 1944,
00:07:50when a shocking discovery is made at the home of Dr. Marcel Petiot.
00:07:56In early March 1944, dirty, foul-smelling, greasy smoke was coming out of the chimney of a house
00:08:03on the Rue Le Seuers and the 16th arrondissement in Paris.
00:08:07And it continued for a couple of days, and on March 11th,
00:08:10the weather conditions were such that the smoke was bottled into the street
00:08:14and was really annoying all of the neighbors.
00:08:16After five days, this one couple couldn't take the stink anymore.
00:08:21She was vomiting, they were ill, so he called the police.
00:08:32They found a note on the house's door about forwarding mail to Osser,
00:08:38giving their address in Osser.
00:08:41They asked next door, and another neighbor said,
00:08:45oh, well, the property was owned by Dr. Marcel Petiot, who lived two miles away in Paris.
00:08:50They called Petiot's number.
00:08:53He answered and he said, have you gone in yet?
00:08:55And they said, no.
00:08:55And he said, well, wait right there, I'll be there in 15 minutes.
00:08:58They waited about a half an hour, and when nobody had arrived,
00:09:01they climbed up to a second floor window, broke in,
00:09:04and traced the source of the smoke to the basement.
00:09:11They let their noses lead them to the basement,
00:09:16where they found bodies burning in the furnace of a water boiler.
00:09:23From the furnace stuck an arm, a human arm, with the fingers still on the arm.
00:09:31Inside the boiler, they could see a human head.
00:09:37On the floor surrounding the furnace are assorted rib cages, jaw bones,
00:09:42and large chunks of charred flesh from at least ten victims.
00:09:47As the police inspect the building further, they discover a pit of quicklime,
00:09:52and within it, the remains of yet more bodies.
00:09:55Initially, they believe they have stumbled upon a secret Gestapo base.
00:09:59The corpses murdered resistance operatives.
00:10:02Yet, as they cordon off the crime scene, a mysterious stranger appears.
00:10:08A man on a green bicycle rode up and identified himself as the brother of the owner of the house.
00:10:14The police escorted him inside, took him down to the basement,
00:10:16and he said, my god, my head might be at stake.
00:10:19And they weren't at all surprised by that.
00:10:21But he identified himself as a member of the resistance.
00:10:23He said, I'm sure that you've notified the German authorities of this discovery,
00:10:27and I have hundreds of resistance files back at my house
00:10:31that I have to destroy before the Germans can get their hands on it.
00:10:34There was a Gestapo office not far away,
00:10:37and the first thought that the police had was that these were dead Germans and collaborators,
00:10:43and that this mysterious person on the green bicycle was, in fact, a resistant.
00:10:48So they let him go.
00:10:50For these French police officers on duty that night,
00:10:54it probably would have made a lot of sense for them, given the situation in Paris at that time,
00:11:00to encourage him to abscond.
00:11:03Their loyalty lay with the French, with the French police.
00:11:07They didn't want to be dealing with the Germans.
00:11:09But as the police continue to search the house,
00:11:12they discover photos of the building's owner,
00:11:14and realize that the mysterious stranger was, in fact, Dr. Marcel Petiot himself.
00:11:20As they prepare a warrant for his arrest,
00:11:22Commissaire Georges Massou arrives at the crime scene to lead the investigation.
00:11:28Commissaire Massou was a 37-year veteran of the police judiciaire.
00:11:32He had well over 3,000 arrests to his name. He was very prominent.
00:11:36He was one of the models for Georges Simenon's character, Inspector Maigret.
00:11:41He was a senior-most investigator and immediately took charge of the patio investigation.
00:11:47As Massou investigates the large urban mansion, he is struck by its state of total disrepair.
00:11:54Room after room is filled with discarded furniture,
00:11:57while ornate valuables and expensive artworks are left neglected, strewn about the floor.
00:12:03As he makes his way down to study the carnage in the basement,
00:12:07an officer arrives with a simple message from the Gestapo.
00:12:11Arrest Petiot, dangerous lunatic.
00:12:14But Massou considers this further evidence that the doctor may well be a member of the resistance,
00:12:19and he ignores the Germans' order.
00:12:22There was always a very, very uneasy relationship between the French police and the Gestapo.
00:12:27When the Germans invaded France, the French police had the option of leaving their posts,
00:12:31but they were fearful of doing that because the German military police would have taken over.
00:12:35So they wanted to still administer justice,
00:12:38and certainly there were still crimes that needed to be punished by the police,
00:12:40but they were always in the very awkward position that they might inadvertently arrest resistance,
00:12:46or they might be accused of collaboration.
00:12:48But it was a very, very difficult thing.
00:12:50The French police did their best to subvert any of the investigations that they thought were involved in resistance operations,
00:12:57but they had to do so very cautiously.
00:12:59Although cautious of colluding with the Gestapo's operation,
00:13:03that night Massoud does issue an arrest warrant for Marcel Petiot.
00:13:07But when police arrive at the doctor's other Paris property,
00:13:10they find that both Petiot and his wife have already packed and fled.
00:13:14As a manhunt begins to find the pair, the human remains from the basement are taken to the police laboratory
00:13:20for analysis.
00:13:21Upon inspection, however, they offer very little in the way of evidence.
00:13:25With both the fingertips and faces expertly removed from the corpses,
00:13:29and with hundreds of bones to sift through, the forensic experts have their work cut out.
00:13:35There was a very well-known and flamboyant medical examiner, Dr. Albert Paul,
00:13:39who loved the press, and the press loved him because he made outrageous statements.
00:13:43He said that in the quick line they had found three garbage cans full of small bones.
00:13:49But there was no way to determine how any of the people had died.
00:13:51They were too badly decomposed or consumed by the Lyme.
00:13:55One thing that did concern him was that the thighs of some of the legs had stab wounds in them,
00:14:00and they were very similar to some bodies that had been found floating in the Seine a year or so
00:14:05earlier,
00:14:06which also had stab wounds in the thighs.
00:14:08And the thing that particularly concerned Dr. Paul about that was, as a coroner,
00:14:12he said, sometime when you're doing an autopsy, when you're picking up another instrument,
00:14:16you don't put your scalpel down, you use the thigh as a pincushion.
00:14:20Dr. Paul's discovery suggests that the killer had medical training,
00:14:24further indicating Dr. Petiot's involvement in the murders.
00:14:27And Massou immediately turns his attention to the bodies found in the River Seine between 1942 and 1943,
00:14:35suspecting that they may be victims of the same killer.
00:14:38He finds that the dissected limbs of nine torsos had washed up on the shore, including those of an eight
00:14:44-year-old boy.
00:14:46As a full investigation begins in earnest, the papers across Paris and Auxerre report the macabre details of the Rue
00:14:53Le Sueur discovery,
00:14:54and the manhunt for both Marcel Petiot and his wife, Georgette.
00:14:58For the citizens of occupied France, this horrific affair proves an engrossing distraction.
00:15:05People were intrigued. It was so gruesome. The press were able to sensationalize that.
00:15:13It raised a lot of questions. It raised questions about, who did this? Was this really Petiot or was it
00:15:20somebody else? Why did he do this?
00:15:23I think the fact that he was a doctor was an important factor in that period.
00:15:28The doctor has a very high status. Pillar of society, a man you can trust.
00:15:34And the very notion of a doctor is somebody who looks after us, who looks after people, cares for people,
00:15:40makes them well.
00:15:41And so this is a complete negation of what we traditionally think of as a doctor.
00:15:50And just as Massoud's investigation has unearthed a link between Petiot and the River Seine bodies,
00:15:56a telegram from the Gestapo arrives that complicates matters.
00:16:00It reveals that the Nazis had arrested and interrogated Petiot a year earlier,
00:16:05suspecting him of being a prominent member of the French Resistance.
00:16:09This again suggests that the doctor is an underground operative.
00:16:13Yet a witness soon emerges to paint a far more disturbing picture of Petiot's resistance activities.
00:16:21A couple of days after the discovery of the bodies on the Rue Le Sueur,
00:16:24the business partner of a Jewish furrier named Jochum Gushnov came to Commissaire Massoud
00:16:30and told him about the disappearance of Gushnov.
00:16:33Back in 1941, when the Germans were beginning to crack down more on Jews in Paris,
00:16:39Gushnov, who was treated by Petiot as a physician, decided that he needed to escape from the country.
00:16:45So Petiot told him that he could help him with that.
00:16:48He had an escape network. He was involved in the resistance organization.
00:16:52Petiot told Gushnov that he would have to be vaccinated.
00:16:57He would do the vaccination.
00:17:00And then he would be taken across France to the Spanish border into Spain, which was neutral.
00:17:09And then to a port in Africa to sail to Argentina.
00:17:17So Gushnov took one and a half million dollars worth of cash and silver and gold and diamonds
00:17:23and went with Petiot and was never seen again.
00:17:29So the business partner, when he had heard about the discovery of the Rue Le Sueur,
00:17:33went to Commissaire Massoud and told him this story.
00:17:35And all of a sudden it began to seem that, in fact, the bodies might be something even more sinister
00:17:41than they had originally expected and that there might have been this escape network
00:17:45that, in fact, did not go to South America but ended at the Rue Le Sueur.
00:17:50Checking the facts of this testimony, Massoud discovers that the secret rendezvous
00:17:55where Petiot met Gushnov was on the Rue Pergoles, a street that intersects the Rue Le Sueur.
00:18:01In the coming days, the investigation uncovers more and more details about Petiot's escape network.
00:18:07And it becomes apparent that Gushnov was not the only desperate Parisian to look to the doctor
00:18:13for safe passage out of occupied France.
00:18:17People came, they phoned, they said,
00:18:19so-and-so had left a friend of mine.
00:18:23She was going to go to a doctor to help her escape.
00:18:27I think it could be Dr. Petiot.
00:18:30So they had a list of people who they knew had been in contact with Petiot and who had disappeared.
00:18:39As the investigation identifies countless potential victims, Massoud realises that he is dealing with a devious, ruthless serial killer.
00:18:48And his hunt for Marcel Petiot now intensifies.
00:18:53Using the forwarding address found at the Rue Le Sueur house as a guide, Massoud sends his men to Auxerre,
00:19:00a town a hundred miles south of Paris, where Petiot grew up.
00:19:04Speaking with the locals, the officers pieced together a disturbing picture of the doctor's early life.
00:19:11His parents were postal workers, whose busy schedule forced them to send the young Marcel to live with his elderly
00:19:17aunt and her maid periodically from the age of two.
00:19:21With his father often absent from his life, and with few friends as he grew up, Petiot was a lonely,
00:19:27unstable child.
00:19:28I think we can certainly see signs of a troubled mind from very early on.
00:19:35He shows signs of being very clever, but also signs of all the origins that one might expect in someone
00:19:47who is going to become a full-blown psychopath in later life.
00:19:54A psychopath is somebody who doesn't have the same emotional responses to situations that most of us would.
00:20:00A psychopath is often described as lacking remorse, lacking empathy, and usually this fits with something that we call an
00:20:08instrumental use of other people.
00:20:10So a psychopath is willing to use other people to get what they want, and not show any guilt, remorse
00:20:15or empathy with the people that they're using.
00:20:17People for them become a means to an end.
00:20:19And we know that those kind of traits, usually exhibited in terms of cruelty to other people, cruelty to animals,
00:20:27delinquent behaviour, bullying, can be seen in kids as young as seven or nine years old.
00:20:32He impaled birds and insects on knitting needles.
00:20:38He stuck pins into the eyes of the little birds.
00:20:42He locked them into boxes, shoe boxes, and he didn't feed them.
00:20:48So he could sit watching them die of hunger.
00:20:51As he is enrolled into the school system, despite being a brilliant pupil, Petiot's behaviour becomes increasingly disruptive and dangerous.
00:21:01He behaved very badly in class.
00:21:04One day he went into the classroom with a gun, which he had taken from his father, and he fired
00:21:10bullets into the ceiling.
00:21:13His father thought it was rather funny, and he told his father that he did so because he wanted to
00:21:21brighten up a dull lesson.
00:21:24Marcel Petiot is certainly a psychopath.
00:21:27He fulfils probably the majority of the criteria on the psychopathy checklist.
00:21:31When we think about why people become psychopaths, usually we think of it as an interaction between people's genetic heritage,
00:21:38the sort of traits and the genotype that they've grown up with, and also the kind of environment that they
00:21:43exhibit those in.
00:21:44So I think in Petiot's case, he has quite an invalidating early environment.
00:21:49His parents palm him off with two local spinsters when he's quite young.
00:21:54He seems to struggle to engage with his father.
00:21:57However, I think because there's evidence of cruelty to animals at quite a young age, because of the bullying, the
00:22:02difficulties in school,
00:22:03I think it's probably fair to say that there's a mix of both genetic and environmental inferences in the mix,
00:22:09that somebody else going through those same experiences that Petiot did wouldn't necessarily have developed into a psychopath in the
00:22:16same way
00:22:17and become what is, I think by most modern definitions, quite a sort of high-level psychopath in Petiot's case.
00:22:25But outside of his disciplinary record, Petiot is a highly gifted pupil, and he develops a genuine interest in medicine.
00:22:34Within a year of his graduation, the First World War erupts, with France its central battleground, he enlists in the
00:22:41hope of becoming a medic.
00:22:44His stay on the front line is short-lived, however, transferred to a psychiatric unit following a nervous breakdown.
00:22:51Here, doctors decide that he should be kept under constant observation.
00:22:56Military psychiatrists examined him, and they found him insane.
00:23:02I have absolutely no confidence that that wasn't a full-blown act, so that he could get back from the
00:23:10front and be nannied and nursed.
00:23:13Psychopaths can be so very, very convincing, and know exactly what to say and do to obtain their objectives.
00:23:22For somebody like Petiot, with quite psychopathic tendencies, this chance to see other people suffering and to understand a little
00:23:30bit about what suffering was, where it came from, and how to mimic it, is really critical to our understanding
00:23:35of, I think, the rest of his development.
00:23:38Because psychopaths don't necessarily understand or appreciate or respond to human emotions in the same way.
00:23:45So what they do instead is something that we call pseudo-mentalising.
00:23:49They think that they understand what emotions are and how other people experience them, and they learn to sort of
00:23:54do a kind of copycat of that.
00:23:57He was discharged as 40%, mentally disabled, and he was put on a pension.
00:24:05And he received that disability pension until the day he died.
00:24:11This diagnosis doesn't put an end to Petiot's ambitions.
00:24:16Still determined to pursue a career in medicine, upon leaving the army, he takes advantage of a new government initiative
00:24:22and enrolls at the University of Paris to become a doctor.
00:24:27At the end of the First World War, there was a program in France to accelerate the medical education of
00:24:31former soldiers, where you could take eight months of classes and do two years of an internship.
00:24:36And after the First World War, with all the people who had been killed, they really needed to replenish the
00:24:41supply of physicians.
00:24:42So this accelerated program tried to get new doctors helping patients as quickly as possible.
00:24:47It was never established that he really was a doctor, that he really had a medical diploma.
00:24:54He was intelligent. He had spent many years in mental asylums.
00:24:59He learned a lot about illnesses, about diagnoses, and that's what it was. He was not a doctor.
00:25:11In 1922, following his rapid graduation, the newly qualified doctor Marcel Petiot travels to the small rural town of Villeneuve
00:25:21-sur-Yonne and establishes a medical practice.
00:25:24And apparently overcoming both his troubled childhood and his mental health issues, here he seems to turn a corner and
00:25:31emerges a new man.
00:25:33He was a charming person. He was devoted to his patients. He worked long hours. He treated poor people for
00:25:40free.
00:25:41He would stay open nights and open on Sundays if people couldn't come at any other time.
00:25:45He listened patiently to people. Some people said that they discovered after they left that they had spent more time
00:25:51talking about their lives with him listening attentively than they had spent talking about their complaints.
00:25:56His patients absolutely adored him.
00:25:57Of course a psychopath would be drawn to that sort of profession, simply because it gives him unique access to
00:26:06power.
00:26:07He was revered by many of his patients as the man who would go the extra mile, the man who
00:26:14would open surgeries on Saturdays and Sundays and all that.
00:26:19Pure superficial charm to gain access and to see what he could manipulate for his own gain.
00:26:27And his popularity enables Petiot to quickly become a prominent figure in the local community.
00:26:34Ambitious, intelligent and committed, the young doctor is the talk of the town.
00:26:39And in 1926, he falls in love for the first time with a mysterious woman of far lower social standing.
00:26:47Her name was Louise, but the townspeople called her Louisette.
00:26:52One evening, he went to have dinner. Louise was the maid. She was 26. She didn't have a boyfriend. Nobody
00:27:02knew where she came from.
00:27:04Very soon, she was his lover. She went to live with him. But a doctor could not have a mistress
00:27:15who was a domestic.
00:27:17So they pretended she was his maid. All the people knew that she was not his maid.
00:27:26Yet this relationship soon exposes Marcel Petiot's darkest instincts.
00:27:32Within months of moving in with him, Louisette confesses to her friends that she is pregnant.
00:27:38And then, overnight, she vanishes without a trace.
00:27:43Petiot complains that his young lover has walked out on him.
00:27:46But days later, a discovery in the Yon River suggests a far more disturbing version of events.
00:27:53One Sunday, a bad smell rose from the river.
00:27:57The townspeople went to see what it was and they found a trunk caught in bushes beside the river.
00:28:05And they opened it and they looked inside and they found the headless body of a young woman.
00:28:14People immediately said it was Louisette.
00:28:17It's important to understand what this act means.
00:28:20Again, if we understand that Petiot is a psychopath.
00:28:23Psychopath relationships with other people are characterized by what we call multiple marital type relationships.
00:28:28So these are relationships where the psychopath will go into a relationship.
00:28:31They will probably seek to get what they can out of it.
00:28:35That could be sex. It could be money. It could be some sort of sense of intimacy.
00:28:39And I think in Petiot's case, intimacy has been something that he's been largely denied.
00:28:43But then a point will come where something becomes stuck.
00:28:47And I think in this case, Louisette becomes pregnant.
00:28:50Petiot is unable to reconcile this with his visions for himself.
00:28:53Perhaps he doesn't want to be a father.
00:28:55Perhaps he just panics.
00:28:56Realizes he needs to get out of the relationship.
00:28:59And I think calculates that the best way to do that is simply to kill Louisette de Laveau.
00:29:04Despite some locals raising concerns over Petiot's role in the murder,
00:29:09due to its mutilated state, the body in the river cannot be identified and the case runs cold.
00:29:15The doctor, meanwhile, has ambitious designs on an even more prominent role within the town.
00:29:21And only weeks after the discovery of the corpse, begins a campaign to become mayor of Villeneuve-sur-Yonne.
00:29:29His election was a little bit funny.
00:29:30It occurred soon after the disappearance of Louisette de Laveau.
00:29:34And one dramatic moment was he dragged himself painfully up to the stage and said,
00:29:38I must confess that I am guilty of a very serious crime.
00:29:42And everybody gasped.
00:29:44And after a dramatic pause, he said, I stand accused of loving the people too much.
00:29:50He was elected with a landslide of 80%.
00:29:55He promised the people he would reform the town.
00:30:01Because after the Great War, France was almost destroyed.
00:30:06He said he will rebuild the town.
00:30:09And the people loved that.
00:30:11That's what the people wanted to hear.
00:30:15Having now risen to the very top of the local community, in 1927, Petiot meets a new partner,
00:30:21Georgette, the daughter of a wealthy and influential landowner, and the couple marry soon after.
00:30:27Yet in his new role as mayor, Petiot quickly begins to abuse his power, and over time his kindly reputation
00:30:35unravels.
00:30:36There were still people in the town who supported him, who still thought he was wonderful, but not from the
00:30:45people who worked with him.
00:30:47He was dictatorial, and they suspected that he was stealing from the coffers.
00:30:54They called in an auditor.
00:30:58The auditor found that he had signed contracts with contractors who nobody had ever heard of.
00:31:07He paid a huge amount of the town hall's money over to them for work which had never been done,
00:31:14for equipment the town hall had never received.
00:31:18In 1930, however, a far more serious crime is discovered on a cold winter evening, when firemen are called to
00:31:28the local dairy.
00:31:29Smoke was pouring from the dairy complex.
00:31:33They found the dairy owner's house was on fire.
00:31:39On the kitchen floor lay the dairy owner's wife.
00:31:44Her head was bashed in.
00:31:48She had obviously been murdered.
00:31:52Upon investigation, the police discover that the property has been burgled, and rumours quickly circulate that the new mayor has
00:31:59been having an affair with Henriette de Beauve, the murdered woman.
00:32:03And Petiot had, in fact, been present on the night of the discovery.
00:32:07When the firemen were putting out the fire, Dr. and Mrs. Petiot drove by in their car, they slowed down
00:32:13and looked, and then continued on to go to a movie.
00:32:16A lot of the people in the town thought that it was really the place of not only the mayor
00:32:19of the town, but also of a physician to be at the site of this disaster, rather than going to
00:32:25a movie theater.
00:32:26There was one townsman, a Monsieur Fisco, I believe, who said that he thought he had seen Petiot near the
00:32:32dairy at the time of the crime.
00:32:34Unfortunately, Mr. Fisco had rheumatism, and he went to his doctor, Dr. Petiot, who said that he had a wonderful
00:32:40new treatment for rheumatism and gave him an injection.
00:32:44Three hours later, Mr. Fisco was dead.
00:32:47With no other witnesses to tie him to the murder, Petiot once again avoids arrest.
00:32:53Yet when, soon after, he is found guilty of fraud and embezzlement, he is thrown out of office, his reputation
00:33:00in ruins.
00:33:02His career in Villeneuve-sur-Yonne had just come to an end. He had lost his position as mayor, he
00:33:06had been dismissed as a councillor, public opinion was turning against him.
00:33:10He was a suspect despite the lack of evidence in the murder, in two murders. So it was a good
00:33:16time to get out of town.
00:33:17And I think also he just had larger ambitions than a small town in the provinces. So the obvious thing
00:33:22was to move to Paris.
00:33:28In Paris, joined by his wife and infant son, Petiot sets himself up with a small urban medical practice and
00:33:35looks to quickly revive his career and attract new clients.
00:33:39In Paris, he had a leaflet printed which he delivered himself and he left it with pharmacists, in nightclubs, in
00:33:50bars and in brothels.
00:33:52He claimed he could cure gonorrhea, he claimed he had a method of painless childbirth and he claimed he could
00:34:02cure cancer.
00:34:03So the patients poured in.
00:34:07Despite his outlandish claims, over the next seven years, Petiot remains on his best behaviour, determined to make an impression
00:34:14in Parisian society.
00:34:16But in May 1940, everything changes. Hitler's war machine storms into France and overwhelms the Allied forces and the French
00:34:25government quickly flees Paris.
00:34:26A mass exodus follows, the residents of the city desperate to avoid the enemy and their gates.
00:34:33When Nazi battalions march down the streets of Paris in June, they enter a ghost town, its inhabitants scattered across
00:34:40the countryside.
00:34:42Yet, ever defiant, Petiot himself remains in his apartment with his wife and their young son.
00:34:48The Parisians fled Paris.
00:34:52Petiot stood at his window and he was appalled at their behaviour.
00:34:59And he told his family, they will not flee.
00:35:02And he also said they will not suffer because of the war. He will provide for them.
00:35:12As the doctor begins formulating plans to prosper in this new, uncertain world, the German authorities themselves look to contain
00:35:20the chaos in the city.
00:35:21The German military had a very clear view of what they wanted. They didn't want any trouble.
00:35:27They worked very hard to give the impression that nothing had really changed.
00:35:32And that's to reassure the Parisians who were there and to encourage people to return.
00:35:40And over time, a sense of normality is restored, with returning Parisians slowly growing accustomed to life under Nazi occupation.
00:35:49Yet the joint authoritarian rule of the Germans in the north and the Vichy government in the south soon makes
00:35:56life unbearable for one group in particular, France's Jewish community.
00:36:01Even before the occupation, there was a deep-rooted anti-Semitism within certain quarters of the nation's population,
00:36:08fuelled by figures on the French far right.
00:36:10Now many of these figures have assumed power in Vichy, and emboldened by their alignment with the Nazis, the persecution
00:36:18begins.
00:36:19There were a lot of people on the far right in 1930s France who wanted to reduce the role of
00:36:26Jews and the role that Jews were playing in France.
00:36:29And Vichy offered them an opportunity to put some of these anti-Semitic ideas into practice.
00:36:36There was a great deal of anti-Semitism, a feeling that Jews ran the media, Jews ran the department stores
00:36:43that put smaller shops and artisans out of business.
00:36:47And so they are happy to begin kind of sidetracking Jews, kicking them out of government jobs, removing them from
00:36:54the police, removing them from the military.
00:36:56The Germans ordered all Jews in Paris to register at police stations.
00:37:04Peyton, for his part, issued a directive that Jews could no longer be in the higher echelons of the civil
00:37:11service, the army, and that all Jewish teachers, university and school teachers, had to resign by the end of the
00:37:18year.
00:37:19And then as the occupation progresses, the measures against the Jews increase.
00:37:26Many in Paris's Jewish community begin to look for ways out of the country.
00:37:30But this is strictly outlawed by both the German and French authorities.
00:37:35And to successfully escape, those fleeing would first have to cross over from the occupied zone into Vichy France itself.
00:37:43Their only hope lies with the resistance, the underground network of patriots operating in the shadows.
00:37:49These two zones on the French territory were split by what was called a demarcation line, a heavily guarded border
00:37:57which divided the, physically divided the French territory, cut it down the middle, and was extremely difficult to cross.
00:38:05In France, what came about was the creation of so-called escape networks.
00:38:09These were originally set up by people working with the Allies.
00:38:14It was very important to get servicemen or airmen who might have been shot down in Nazi-occupied France.
00:38:21These people needed to find their way back to the UK, back to London, via a neutral country, and Spain
00:38:29and Switzerland would have been the obvious choices.
00:38:32The escape routes were part of the resistance activities from the very start.
00:38:37There was an escape route which ran through Brittany and across the Channel.
00:38:41Others down to points on the Pyrenees, getting people into Spain, and then if necessary down to Gibraltar or to
00:38:48Lisbon.
00:38:50And to get across the demarcation line you needed the help of someone called a passeur.
00:38:55It was someone who helped you pass through, get over the demarcation line.
00:38:59And it wasn't always easy and they weren't always reliable.
00:39:03And this increasingly hostile environment provides Dr Marcel Petiot with an opportunity to exploit those most in fear for their
00:39:11lives.
00:39:12Following the invasion, the Nazis have plundered France of its resources and manpower.
00:39:17And with produce scarce, many Parisians have fallen on hard times.
00:39:22Yet since the start of the occupation, the doctor has thrived, enhancing his earnings by offering illegal abortions and selling
00:39:30narcotics to drug addicts.
00:39:32Enriched by these criminal activities, he is soon able to buy an enormous second home at 21 Rue Le Sueur.
00:39:40And this property offers him the chance to devise a more brutal, cold-blooded scheme.
00:39:46In late 1941, he visits local barber Raoul Fourier, a man with connections in the Parisian underworld.
00:39:54Here, Petiot concocts an elaborate story and puts his new plan into action.
00:39:59Petiot told Fourier that he's a resistance.
00:40:05He is the head of a resistance cell named Flytox.
00:40:11And Flytox had an escape network.
00:40:14So if they knew of anybody who wanted to flee from France and the Nazis, especially Jews, Flytox could help
00:40:24them.
00:40:26He said his undercover name was Dr Eugène.
00:40:31Taken in by this tall tale, Fourier doesn't notice Petiot's simple methods in concocting the story.
00:40:38Flytox is the name of a popular insecticide and Eugène, a French brand of hair product, both of which sit
00:40:45directly in the doctor's eye line on the shelves of the barber shop itself.
00:40:49Instead, Fourier is fascinated by the deal Petiot is offering.
00:40:53For a minimum of 25,000 francs, he will provide false papers and vaccinations and take the escapees to a
00:41:00safe house where they will be met by a people smuggler.
00:41:03This individual will then take them into Spain and from here they will travel to Sanctuary in Argentina.
00:41:10He also told Fourier that their potential escapees should bring their most valuable possessions along.
00:41:20Watches, jewelry, cash, gold bullion.
00:41:26Petiot offers Fourier a share of Flytox's fee if he can spread the word and help identify potential escapees.
00:41:34Fourier agrees and enlists his friend Edmund Pantard, a stage actor with similarly shady underworld connections, to aid in the
00:41:42search for customers.
00:41:44Within weeks, the pair provide Petiot with his first set of exiles, a gang of French criminals who have fallen
00:41:51foul of the Nazis.
00:41:53These include thief and pimp, Jo Le Boxeur, his mistress Claudia Chamoux, prostitute Josephine Grippe, and hardened criminal Adrian Le
00:42:02Basque.
00:42:03Between the end of 1941 and the beginning of 1942, eight of this criminal gang are met by Petiot and
00:42:11taken to his house on the Rue Le Sueur.
00:42:13Here they receive their vaccinations and afterwards none of them are ever seen alive again.
00:42:20It was possible for him to really invite his victims to package themselves perfectly as victims.
00:42:26You had people who were desperate to escape. You asked them to take everything they owned and convert it into
00:42:31gold, jewels, and liquid cash.
00:42:34To bring few possessions because you're going to be traveling light.
00:42:37Not tell anybody where you're going. Don't bring any identification papers. Remove all the marking from your clothes.
00:42:42They made themselves into perfect untraceable victims for him.
00:42:46In an occupied city in which the Nazis were already imprisoning and executing Jews, criminals and partisans,
00:42:53those apparently departing to Argentina through Petiot are never reported missing.
00:42:59Through his elaborate scheme, the doctor believes he has devised the perfect crime, one that will be endlessly repeatable.
00:43:06He's a very successful, charismatic con man and he convinces a lot of people.
00:43:12And he tells people what they want to hear, which is always what a good con man will do.
00:43:16He'll find out what you want to hear and then tell you.
00:43:18And they're not just anybody that he's fooling. I mean, some of the people who he's fooling were tough gangsters.
00:43:24Joe the Boxer, Adrian the Bass. And if you're fooling people like that, that's pretty skilful.
00:43:29One of the things that people maybe misunderstand a bit about psychopaths is how easily grifting comes to them,
00:43:35how easily they can find scams that people will be taken in by.
00:43:39If you really don't care in your heart of hearts what other people think of you,
00:43:44if you don't care about the possibility of being caught out of the line or being found out for saying
00:43:48something that you're not,
00:43:49then what's the incentive for you to tell the truth at any point to anyone?
00:43:54So psychopaths are excellent grifters because their stories can seem very, very complete, well fleshed out.
00:44:00The scam in Petio's case, you know, there's clear, there's need for what he's providing.
00:44:05He's identified the victims very carefully. He's identified a cover.
00:44:10He's got accomplices who can help provide the victims to him.
00:44:13People who come to a psychopathic doctor seeking something that only he can provide
00:44:18and they're desperate and emotional and grateful, that probably marks them out as quite weak in his eyes
00:44:24and therefore makes the ease of him to justify disposing of them in such a sort of callous and horrific
00:44:30way.
00:44:32And just as Petio's murder network is set in motion, the Nazis' own war crimes intensify on a far larger
00:44:39scale.
00:44:40At the Vonsi conference in January 1942, the final solution is formally announced.
00:44:47A programme to systematically exterminate Europe's Jewish population.
00:44:52As the Germans begin the construction of death camps in the east,
00:44:55they look to the Vichy government for help in deporting Jews out of France.
00:44:59On the condition that their power in the southern zone remains absolute,
00:45:05PΓ©tain's government agrees to arrest and detain foreign Jews,
00:45:08transfer them to a Paris concentration camp, Trancy, and then send them to their deaths in Auschwitz.
00:45:15The first major round-up takes place in Paris on June 16th, 1942,
00:45:21in which thousands of Jews are detained at the winter velodrome.
00:45:26These men, women, and children are captured not by Nazi soldiers, but by the French police.
00:45:32The Vichyites are enlisted in removing the Jews of France,
00:45:37and to this day it's a source of great controversy.
00:45:40The relative ease with which the Vichyites surrendered the Jews of France to the gas chambers.
00:45:46Times had changed for Jews in France, for foreign Jews,
00:45:50people who had fled from their old countries, from Germany, from Poland, from wherever,
00:45:56thinking that France, the land of the Enlightenment, would protect them.
00:46:01And suddenly they're seeing that it wasn't going to protect them.
00:46:0613,152 Jewish people were taken in one fell swoop.
00:46:14So it didn't take long, therefore, given how many thousands of policemen were in Paris on the 16th of July,
00:46:22knocking on doors. The fact that there was so much chaos,
00:46:25the fact that busloads of Jewish families were being transported to the Veldiv stadium.
00:46:30Parisians knew what was going on, they saw, they heard.
00:46:33The concierges knew what had happened to the families in their building.
00:46:39Any Jew who hadn't been taken at that point was terrified that they would be next.
00:46:47And this leads many Jews, with the necessary contacts and financial means,
00:46:51to frantically attempt to evacuate Paris.
00:46:54And one family who do have the money to flee are the Knellers,
00:46:58a German couple with a young son.
00:47:01Kurt and Margaret Kneller were German Jews who had left Germany in 1933 when Hitler came to power.
00:47:07On the first day of the roundup at the Velodrome d'Iver,
00:47:11the Gestapo came to the Knellers' apartment.
00:47:13Fortunately, they weren't at home at the time.
00:47:16Unfortunately, they decided to escape using Dr. Paccio's escape network.
00:47:21The Knellers were German Jews, Kurt, Greta, and little RenΓ©.
00:47:26On that day of the roundup, they went to a friend who was not Jewish.
00:47:33They went to hide with her.
00:47:35They then told her that a very kind doctor, a saint of a man, is going to help them to
00:47:43escape France.
00:47:46They were never seen again. However, a couple of weeks later, parts of bodies were found floating in the Seine,
00:47:53which included a man's head, parts of a woman's body, and the vertically sectioned body of an eight-year-old
00:47:58boy.
00:48:00The Knellers' bodies are the first of nine dissected cadavers the police discover in the River Seine over the coming
00:48:06months.
00:48:07Throughout 1942, more and more desperate Jews come to the doctor for help through his unwitting accomplices,
00:48:14the barber Raoul Fourier and the actor Edmund Pantar.
00:48:18And they all meet a similar end.
00:48:20These include Lena Wolf, her husband Maurice and sister-in-law Rachel,
00:48:25Dr. Paul Braunberger, and Gilbert Bash and five members of his extended family.
00:48:31As Petiot murders, dissects and dispatches victim after victim,
00:48:35the press will later claim that this killing spree is motivated by a vicious bloodlust.
00:48:40For the doctor, however, these horrific murders are simply a means to an end.
00:48:47There is a common misconception that psychopaths are necessarily sadists as well, but it's not the case at all.
00:48:53However, there does, I think with anyone who commits violent acts,
00:48:57there always has to be something driving that.
00:48:59It could be survival, it could be sadism, it could be a paraphilia, for example.
00:49:04And I think it's actually quite hard for us to conceive of somebody who simply kills
00:49:10because it's an efficient way of getting money or because it's carrying out the end of a scam.
00:49:14And I think Petiot then becomes a sort of slightly odd character because the killings are very, very efficient.
00:49:19They're painless, they use cyanide, which I think is probably one of the more expensive and potent ways of killing
00:49:24people at that point.
00:49:26He knows how he's going to dispose of the bodies.
00:49:28Because it's almost, it's funny, it has sort of echoes of Nazi Germany and the way in which this sort
00:49:33of very psychopathic organisation
00:49:34simply destroys human life in order to advance a particular ideal.
00:49:40Petiot has maybe a sort of slightly earthier human drive that he seems to want money, although it's not clear
00:49:45what he ever does with that.
00:49:46So I don't think there's any evidence that Petiot is a sadist at all.
00:49:50In fact, the clinical nature of his killing is quite striking and maybe one of the more disturbing aspects of
00:49:57the case, actually.
00:49:59But in April 1943, just as Petiot is lining up more victims to invite to his slaughterhouse, convinced that his
00:50:06scheme is undetectable,
00:50:08the escape network is discovered by the authorities.
00:50:12Yet not by the French police officers investigating the body parts washing up on the banks of the Seine, but
00:50:18by the Gestapo.
00:50:20And the Nazis are not hunting a murderer, but instead take Petiot's cover story at face value.
00:50:26An informant told the Germans that there was an escape organisation out of the barbershop,
00:50:31and there was a mysterious doctor who they hadn't been able to identify who was really responsible for it.
00:50:36So the Gestapo went to the barbershop, they arrested Fourier and Pantard.
00:50:40They tortured these two.
00:50:42They very quickly gave Dr. Eugene's real name, his address, and even his telephone number.
00:50:51And like that, the murder network is shut down.
00:50:55Petiot is dragged into Freyne prison and subjected to a brutal interrogation by Gestapo commissaire Robert Jotkem.
00:51:02Yet rather than come clean and explain his criminal scheme, in which he had been murdering the same people the
00:51:08Nazis themselves were hunting,
00:51:09the doctor sticks to his cover story, and suffers for months at the hands of his captors.
00:51:15They tortured him for eight months, they beat him, they filed his teeth, they compressed his head in iron bands,
00:51:21trying to find out more about the escape network.
00:51:24Genuine resistance who were in prison with him said that he was the bravest person they had ever seen,
00:51:29that he taunted the Germans, he ridiculed them, he laughed at them.
00:51:32They were in awe of his courage and dedication and they believed that he was genuinely a resistant and fearless.
00:51:40It's interesting why when he's captured by the Gestapo that Petiot holds to the line that he's a resistance fighter
00:51:46and that he has a network that he's pursuing.
00:51:49Even when doing so would likely have saved him from torture by the Gestapo.
00:51:53You know, he's risking quite a severe end if the Gestapo think that he is really a resistance fighter.
00:51:58But I think the Gestapo would take the wrong angle here, not that they would necessarily have known that by
00:52:02torturing him,
00:52:03because you can't really punish a psychopath for their behaviour, it doesn't really work like that.
00:52:07So torturing isn't going to encourage Petiot to do anything different, because psychopaths don't respond to punishment,
00:52:14it's not something that they really have the capacity to do in their brains.
00:52:16Despite his refusal to cooperate, in January 1944, the Gestapo surprisingly releases Marcel Petiot,
00:52:25planning to monitor the doctor further on the outside.
00:52:28Yet fearful that his actual crimes will be discovered by the Germans,
00:52:32and with decomposing bodies still littering the floor of his Rue Le Sueur basement,
00:52:37Petiot returns to dispose of the evidence.
00:52:40He calls his brother, Maurice, in Auxerre, and has him deliver 400 kilos of quicklime,
00:52:46then fires up his furnace and begins incinerating the remains.
00:52:51Yet rather than oversee the entire process, he leaves the property, the flesh still burning in the basement.
00:52:58He let the furnace burn. Why? Why did he do that?
00:53:03He seemed to have planned everything else so well. Why was he so stupid doing that?
00:53:09It really feels like, and this is actually quite typical of a psychopath, he's sort of lost interest in that
00:53:16part of it.
00:53:16He's left with these corpses, what does he do with them?
00:53:19So he creates this sort of quasi-industrial place where he can burn them and then dissolve the bodies in
00:53:24quicklime,
00:53:25as quickly as possible, but it sounds like it's messier and less straightforward than he bargained for.
00:53:31And I think this is sort of the roots of his eventual capture, because he can't stop the filthy smoke
00:53:37coming out,
00:53:37he can't stop the smells of decomposition.
00:53:39So eventually, suspicions are raised and he's found out.
00:53:44On March 11th 1944, the police are called to 21 Rue Le Sueur and the fateful discovery is made.
00:53:51With Petiot and his wife nowhere to be found, Commissaire Georges Massou's manhunt gets underway.
00:53:57The note left on the door of the property leads them directly to the house of the doctor's brother, Maurice,
00:54:03in Auxerre.
00:54:04And within three days, they track him down and arrest him.
00:54:08They also discover Petiot's wife, Georgette, at the Auxerre train station, and she too is brought in for questioning.
00:54:15But the doctor himself proves more elusive, and the police's search is soon disrupted as the Second World War enters
00:54:22a decisive new stage.
00:54:24On June 6th, D-Day occurs, when the Allies invade the beaches of Normandy and France is transformed into a
00:54:32battleground once again.
00:54:34And with the tables now turning, the resistance suddenly gains an influx of volunteers looking to join their ranks.
00:54:41There's lots of reasons why people after D-Day decided to join the resistance.
00:54:47Some people just felt a sudden urge to want to do something, not anything, to kind of release themselves.
00:54:55But at the same time, some people really thought,
00:54:59I have not had a very good record for the last four years.
00:55:03Some of my actions have actually been quite shady.
00:55:06I better join the resistance now so that there's a good place for me in the new France.
00:55:12Once Vichy and the occupation ends, my resistance record is going to protect me.
00:55:19And although the motivations of these new recruits may be ambiguous,
00:55:23as the Allies fight their way across France, within rural towns and in cities countrywide,
00:55:29this expanded resistance joins the campaign.
00:55:33The D-Day invasion was at the beginning of June 1944,
00:55:37and it took about two months for the Allies to make their way across Normandy to Paris.
00:55:44As soon as the Allies landed, the resistance everywhere started blowing up bridges, blowing up trains,
00:55:50doing everything they could to make sure that the Germans couldn't send reinforcements.
00:55:53And in Paris, the resistance put up barriers in the street and began attacking the Germans
00:55:57and creating as much chaos as they possibly could.
00:56:05The liberation of Paris is accomplished by the Americans, British and Canadians advancing from the Normandy beaches.
00:56:13The French resistance, though, is important in securing the city from within.
00:56:17The existence of large and growing numbers of resistors,
00:56:21who now are emboldened to become resistors by the turning of the tide,
00:56:24leads to the rapid pacification of Paris and its preservation as one of the jewels of civilization.
00:56:33The Parisians were out on the streets.
00:56:38They were kissing the GIs and giving them flowers and roses.
00:56:44It was their liberation.
00:56:47Paris was free.
00:56:49The occupation was over.
00:56:51With victory comes an immediate regime change.
00:56:55The Vichy government of collaborationists is toppled and power passes to General Charles de Gaulle.
00:57:01And his central aim is to unify the people of this fractured nation.
00:57:06At the liberation of France, it was really important for de Gaulle and for others at the top
00:57:12to make sure that France spoke with a single voice.
00:57:14And one of the ways that we tried to do this was to say we were a nation of resistors.
00:57:22A handful, a minuscule number of people in France collaborated.
00:57:27But the rest of you, the rest of France, even if we weren't acting as resistors,
00:57:33we believed in the resistance.
00:57:35So this myth of the resistance, something which was created at the liberation by de Gaulle,
00:57:40this was very powerful.
00:57:43While celebrations break out across the city, there are some who are far less jubilant.
00:57:48For those who aided the Germans, there are brutal repercussions,
00:57:52as angry Parisians set up people's courts and begin serving out harsh street justice.
00:57:58To bring order to the city, the resistance transforms into the French forces of the interior, the FFI,
00:58:04and they help police the liberated streets.
00:58:08But again, with motivations to join often dubious, this voluntary army becomes the perfect hiding place for fugitives looking to
00:58:16escape their past.
00:58:17Everybody who just wanted to help and be patriotic joined the FFI.
00:58:23And collaborators went join the FFI to hide.
00:58:30Petiot joined the FFI and they made him a captain.
00:58:37Remarkably undeterred by the extensive police operation that has been hunting him for months,
00:58:42Marcel Petiot has never left Paris at all.
00:58:46Assuming a false identity, Captain Henri ValΓ©ry, the doctor has remained one step ahead of the investigators pursuing him.
00:58:53And proving a master of disguise, even played a role in the liberation of Paris itself.
00:58:59Yet Commissaire Massoud, the detective in charge of the manhunt, sees an opportunity in newly liberated France.
00:59:07With the press free once again, he leaks a phony news story to a reporter,
00:59:12one that falsely exposes Petiot as a Nazi collaborator.
00:59:17Massoud clearly knew that with somebody like Petiot, and he knew enough about him by then, that this was going
00:59:22to make him very angry.
00:59:23Which indeed it did. Within a few days, a letter from Marcel Petiot reached the newspaper boasting of how he
00:59:29had been a resistance,
00:59:30how he had never collaborated and so on.
00:59:32The police looked at the handwriting on the letter and they knew from some of the internal information that,
00:59:37one, it suggested that Petiot was still in Paris, and two, that he was probably serving in the French forces
00:59:43of the interior.
00:59:43So they sent samples of the handwriting around to officers in the French forces of the interior,
00:59:50and asked them to compare them to the handwriting of all of the officers in the FFI stationed in Paris.
00:59:55The trap works. And within weeks, Petiot is arrested at a Paris metro station and pulled in for interrogation.
01:00:04Heavily bearded and significantly more gaunt, on his person are several false documents,
01:00:09including the altered ration card of eight-year-old RenΓ© Kneller.
01:00:14Protesting his innocence, and claiming the murders of which he was accused were legitimate resistance executions,
01:00:20he is immediately jailed pending a trial.
01:00:23Here he waits for more than a year, the story disappearing from the headlines amidst the more substantial cases of
01:00:30high-level collaborators and Vichyites.
01:00:33Yet when he finally does go before a judge, the doctor comes to the forefront once again, pushing even the
01:00:40Nuremberg trials from the front pages.
01:00:43Exuding intelligence, passion and charisma, he maintains his innocence like a master showman.
01:00:50It was a sensational case. I mean, people had been following this in the newspapers for two years by then.
01:00:56And Petiot had been so defiant and announced ahead of time that he was going to have fun, that this
01:01:01was going to be an entertaining trial.
01:01:03So nobody knew what was going to happen with it. It really, as one person said, was the theatrical event
01:01:08of the year.
01:01:09Suddenly he was famous. Infamous, yes. But to him, he was famous. And he wasn't guilty. Oh, no.
01:01:20I think there was probably a very real danger that Petiot could have walked free from that trial.
01:01:25I think it was, I'm not going to say it was poorly conducted because I just, I don't think that
01:01:29the justice system had ever seen anybody quite like Petiot at that time.
01:01:34And certainly not in the context of, you know, a country just coming out of occupation.
01:01:40Most psychopaths usually have IQs probably in the region of around about 90, so significantly below the norm.
01:01:46It is quite rare to see somebody who's quite so articulate, quite so, you know, professionally capable as Petiot is.
01:01:53And to have somebody like that, who's also got the psychopathic features of being very charming, very glib, up to
01:01:59a point, it ceases to become a bad whether he's found guilty or not.
01:02:02He wants it to be the Marcel Petiot show and he wants to make sure that his voice is heard
01:02:06and his identity as a patriot is affirmed by the people in the courtroom.
01:02:10The prosecution has substantial material evidence to link the doctor to his alleged victims.
01:02:16At Petiot's Rue Le Sueur home, the police have recovered a wealth of personal clothing.
01:02:21Dresses, hats, shoes and fur coats belonging to Josephine Grippet, Joe Le Boxeur, Kurt and Margaret Kneller and many others.
01:02:31Interrogation of the doctor's brother, Maurice Petiot, has also led to the discovery of 49 suitcases in a large attic
01:02:38in Oserre, all of which are sat piled high in the courtroom as evidence of this murder network.
01:02:45But Petiot himself does not dispute this evidence and instead incorporates it into his own defence.
01:02:52Outside of the courtroom, although Petiot is back on the front pages, the French public is no longer so certain
01:02:59of his guilt.
01:03:01The backstory puts him on the map.
01:03:03People now go, let's sort of look at him. What does he look like?
01:03:06People are looking for an answer and they get an answer, but it's an answer that is full of ambiguities.
01:03:12It isn't like Petiot is on trial and then they decide he's insane and not fit to stand trial.
01:03:17No, we have a man standing up and putting forward a very elaborate story to defend himself.
01:03:26Petiot was accused of 27 murders. He claimed that he had killed 63 people.
01:03:32But he said his were all justifiable homicides.
01:03:35For people like Gushenov, he said, I got him out of France. He's in South America. South America is a
01:03:41big place. Go find him.
01:03:42For Joe the Boxer and the pimps and collaborators, he said, yes, I killed him and I'm very proud of
01:03:47it.
01:03:47I should get a medal rather than being prosecuted. Why are you persecuting me this way?
01:03:52The ambiguity of Petiot's defense. There is an echo with the ambiguity of the moment, if you like.
01:04:04There are going to be people in any situation where there's a change of regime, particularly where the regime is
01:04:10being replaced, is one that's involved collaboration with a foreign power.
01:04:14There's going to be a moment when people will say, actually, I'm going to pretend I was something else.
01:04:21I'm going to pretend I did things I didn't do and I'm going to deny I did things that other
01:04:25people say I did do.
01:04:26Now, you're going to have that on a mass scale. People are going to tell themselves stories about what they
01:04:30did or didn't do.
01:04:31You're people who say they were in the resistance. Where's the evidence? In order to try and adapt to the
01:04:37new society.
01:04:39And Petiot is living that out publicly in a very extreme form, I think.
01:04:46And Petiot latches on to these ambiguities to his own advantage, knowing that his claims of being a persecuted resistance
01:04:53hero will play well to his audience.
01:04:56A psychopath is particularly well poised to exploit those kind of things because of a trait that we call pathological
01:05:02lying.
01:05:03A pathological liar doesn't have really a sort of ground truth to what they're saying.
01:05:07There isn't really, I think, in Petiot's mind, a ground truth about whether or not he is a resistance fighter,
01:05:13whether or not he has been gassing the Gestapo collaborators, whether or not he is doing this for fighting against
01:05:19or not.
01:05:20It's all very murky, and because of that, he can simply emphasise the parts of which he wants to believe
01:05:25at any given time to any given responder.
01:05:28Which means that you can't really catch a pathological liar out of a lie because they can always find another
01:05:33way around it.
01:05:34It simply is left to the beholder to try and find a point, which I think in Petiot's trial they
01:05:39do find,
01:05:40where simply the lie just isn't convincing anymore because the weight of evidence goes against it.
01:05:45No matter how engrossing his performance, nor how inconclusive the case against him,
01:05:50as the trial draws to a close, the jury swiftly delivers a verdict of guilty.
01:05:55While his wife, brother and unwitting accomplices, Fourier and Pantard, are exonerated,
01:06:00Petiot is sentenced to death, still maintaining that he was acting only on orders as a genuine member of the
01:06:06resistance.
01:06:07On May 25th 1946, he is brought into the courtyard of Sante prison and awaits his execution.
01:06:14As he stands beside the guillotine, he addresses the witnesses and tells them,
01:06:18look away, this won't be pretty.
01:06:21After the blade comes down, a court official looks at his severed head and later reports that Petiot was smiling.
01:06:27You only have to see, right at the last, when he's facing the guillotine, and good riddance too, I might
01:06:35add,
01:06:36even that's a smiling affair.
01:06:39Turn away, this won't be pretty.
01:06:42It's psychopathic.
01:06:45With the war now over, and with the treacherous masterminds of the Vichy regime brought to justice,
01:06:50the years of occupation become an era many survivors choose to forget.
01:06:55And the unbelievable case of Dr Marcel Petiot is also confined to that same dark chapter in France's history.
01:07:03One of the nation's most prolific and cold-hearted serial killers,
01:07:06who may never have become so infamous were it not for the war itself.
01:07:13In a time of sort of tragedy and death, this was almost a footnote of tragedy and death, which is
01:07:18the funny thing.
01:07:19I think Petiot will probably remain a unique case because it just required such a precise set of circumstances
01:07:27for somebody who was quite psychopathic, yes, but also quite prone to violence.
01:07:32And had this very callous attitude to his fellow men and women that they were simply chaff under the wheels
01:07:38for him to advance his career and his financial standings.
01:07:41And I don't think that if that was to happen today there would be anything like the space for him
01:07:47to get away with that for so long.
01:07:49It is totally grotesque what he did.
01:07:52He shamelessly, ruthlessly took advantage of the situation for his own gain.
01:07:59And it is marvellous that finally justice came to him.
01:08:04Would he have become a serial killer if the war had never happened?
01:08:09I don't think so.
01:08:12The war gave him a fantastic opportunity to enrich himself.
01:08:17And to enrich himself, he had to kill.
01:08:21He enjoyed showing that he was better than everyone else.
01:08:24He could make other people believe anything.
01:08:26He could make people love him and adore him and respect him.
01:08:30He could take their things, he could take their lives.
01:08:32Everybody else was at his disposal.
01:08:34He was the one who was in supreme control of everything.
01:08:37My question is, why wasn't he resistant?
01:08:39He was brave, he was intelligent, he was absolutely courageous and defiant of the Germans when they had him in
01:08:45a prison.
01:08:46If he had wanted money, Germans and collaborators probably had more money than some of the poor refugees that he
01:08:51in fact killed.
01:08:52If he just liked killing people, there were plenty of Germans and collaborators to kill.
01:08:56He would have genuinely been admired by people, so why did he not do that?
01:09:02And the only explanation that I can come up with is that he only would have been fooling half the
01:09:07people.
01:09:08Whereas this way, he was fooling everybody.
01:09:10And the only explanation that he was supposed to kill was he and his people for the dead.
01:09:26Not too bad, but he wasn't a man.
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