logo
He Killed a Boy and Sent Taunting Letters — Then Claimed He Did It for a Disturbingly Personal Reason

He Killed a Boy and Sent Taunting Letters — Then Claimed He Did It for a Disturbingly Personal Reason

Yahoo10-05-2025
Luc Tarron, 11, was murdered in 1964
In the subsequent weeks, his killer taunted police and the boy's family signed by "l'Etrangleur" — or 'The Strangler"
As he was being escorted to jail, the accused killer yelled out to a crowd, 'They're right! I am a monster!'
In 1964, the parents of Luc Taron thought they had already lived through their worst nightmare when their 11-year-old son was found murdered in the woods near their suburban Paris home. But when the killer began taunting both them and the police with dozens of letters, it became clear their nightmare had only just begun.
Luc, an 11-year-old boy from the south suburbs of Paris, abruptly left his family's home the night of May 26, 1964, after getting into an argument with his mother over 15 francs he had secretly taken from her. Assuming the boy had simply run away from home, the Tarons expected Luc to be back soon.
But early the next morning, the 11-year-old boy's body was discovered mutilated in the Verrières-le-Buisson woods in the Paris suburbs.
Then, for nearly two months after Luc was found dead, the boy's killer taunted police and the boy's family with dozens of letters, according to Time, Le Monde, and L'Express. PEOPLE is looking back at the 1964 case and how police say they ultimately tracked down the man who became known locally as 'The Strangler.'
After Luc's body was discovered, his killer began bombarding local police, the media, and the boy's parents with dozens of letters, according to L'Express, which revisited the once-front-page case in 2005. Investigators were unable to link him to any additional murders, leading authorities to believe he had falsely claimed responsibility for more crimes than he actually committed, L'Express reported.
Want to keep up with the latest crime coverage? Sign up for for breaking crime news, ongoing trial coverage and details of intriguing unsolved cases.
The notes were always signed off as "l'Etrangleur", or 'The Strangler,' according to Le Monde. And soon, news reports began identifying him as such while police searched for answers.
Time reported that later in 1964, police arrested 27-year-old Lucien Léger and charged him with Luc's murder after he made multiple phone calls boasting about the killings. French authorities brought Léger, a student nurse, in for questioning and searched his apartment during the interview, Time reported. Inside, police found newspaper clippings about the case, as well as a 'rose-tinted' notepad matching the one used for the killer's letters.
Léger confessed after 24 hours of police interviews, according to the outlet, and as he was being escorted to jail, the accused killer yelled out to a crowd, 'They're right! I am a monster!'
But later on, according to Le Monde, Léger retracted his statements about the killing and said he had only written a few of the messages to police. Still, Léger was convicted of the boy's murder in 1966, according to the European Court of Human Rights, which posthumously reviewed Léger's argument that he should have been released from prison. Throughout his nearly 40-year prison sentence, Léger claimed he had a 'memory loss' during the events of the night Luc was killed and filed several appeals for a retrial and resentencing.
Léger was ultimately released from prison in October 2005 and lived three years before he was found dead in his home in 2008, according to the European Court of Human Rights' case.
The 1964 Time story about Léger portrayed the convicted murderer as a 'disappointingly' normal man with a hobby of 'banal' writing – despite once being heralded in the press as a criminal mastermind who Le Monde said had 'haunted' Paris with his braggadocious letters about Luc's murder for several weeks.
When police asked Léger why he went after Luc, the killer said he picked the 11-year-old boy to abduct and murder because 'he seemed as unhappy as I was when I was his age.'
Read the original article on People
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Maryland mother charged with murder of her 3-year-old child
Maryland mother charged with murder of her 3-year-old child

CBS News

time24 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Maryland mother charged with murder of her 3-year-old child

A Maryland mother was charged with murder Wednesday in connection with the death of her 3-year-old child in November 2024, according to Howard County police. Police said Shalyne Brown, 27, does not have a permanent address, but was staying in Columbia at the time of her child's death. She was charged with murder and child abuse, officials said. Officers said they were called to the home in Columbia on Nov. 1, 2024, for a reported dead child. When they arrived, officers found that the child's body had multiple bruises and scars. An autopsy, completed in March, showed that the child's death was due to dehydration and malnourishment, police said. Through an investigation, police determined that Brown was responsible for her child's death due to neglect and abuse. Brown was arrested in Pennsylvania and was transferred to the Howard County Detention Center, where she is being held without bond. She is expected to appear in court on September 4, court records show. In Maryland, nearly 83 children died from neglect or abuse in 2023, according to a report from the Children's Bureau of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Maryland has seen several cases of maternal filicide, or instances where a mother kills her child, in recent years. In May, a Baltimore County mother, Aurielle Montgomery, pleaded guilty to killing her 1-year-old daughter in 2022. Officials determined that her child, Nyemia Gilliard, died from trauma. Montgomery was the sole caregiver for Gilliard, who was found unresponsive in an "odd position" in a Baltimore home, court documents detailed. Another similar case in June led to charges for a Maryland couple. Maryland mother Darrian Randle and her boyfriend, Cedrick Britten, were accused of killing Randle's 3-year-old and attempting to hide her body before reporting a false kidnapping in Delaware. According to court documents, an investigation after the false kidnapping report led to the discovery of 3-year-old Nola Dinkin's body in a Cecil County park. Randle and Britten are both facing charges in connection with Dinkin's death.

Prosecutor explains what he wants to hear from the Menendez brothers at their parole hearing
Prosecutor explains what he wants to hear from the Menendez brothers at their parole hearing

CNN

timean hour ago

  • CNN

Prosecutor explains what he wants to hear from the Menendez brothers at their parole hearing

Prosecutor Nathan Hochman speaks with CNN's Wolf Blitzer about a parole hearing for the Menendez brothers. Erik and Lyle Menendez are facing a California parole board that will decide if they should have a chance at freedom after spending more than three decades behind bars for the 1989 killings of their parents in their Beverly Hills home. Erik and Lyle Menendez admitted to killing their parents, but they have long maintained the crimes were committed in self-defense after enduring years of physical and sexual abuse by their father, which they say their mother knew about and chose to ignore.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store