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Title: Crime author charged with murder
Description: interesting news story


nwpassage - August 9, 2007 04:48 PM (GMT)
I don't read much mystery myself, but I was wondering what y'all thought of this story?

Crime author charged with murder after the police read his perfect plot
From The Times
August 9, 2007
Roger Boyes in Berlin

An author leafing through a newspaper comes across tantalising details of a murder so grisly that he becomes obsessed, and imagines the events into a novel. Or a murderer, so self-satisfied with the brilliance of his perfect crime, pens an account to pass off as fiction and enshrine it in literary history.

Where reality ends and fiction begins in the stomach-turning novel Amok is the central task before the jury in Poland’s trial of the decade. Four years after he published his bloody bestseller, Krystian Bala has found himself on trial for the same torture and murder that he detailed in his novel.

Amok, Mr Bala claims, was inspired by news reports of the murder of a Polish businessman, whose mutilated body was fished out of the Oder river in the town of Wroclaw, close to the German border in southwest Poland, in December 2000. Police identified the dead man as Dariusz J, the owner of a small advertising agency. His death had been a grim one. His body bore the marks of torture, his limbs were distended. His hands were bound and tied to a noose around his neck.

Initial inquiries showed that he was well liked, successful and solvent. With no motive or suspect, the police were stumped. The case was broadcast on Poland’s version of the BBC television programme Crimewatch but it produced no serious leads — only some strange e-mails sent from internet cafés in Indonesia and South Korea, describing the murder as “the perfect crime”.

Five years later, police received an anonymous call. They were told to take a look at the book Amok, published in 2003, three years after the killing. Chief Inspector Jacek Wroblewski was shocked by what he found in the pages. The book contained intimate details of the murder that could be known only to police — or the killer. Further investigations revealed that the victim was an acquaintance of Mr Bala’s estranged wife.

Mr Bala was arrested and, according to him, hooded, beaten and insulted during a day of interrogation. “They seemed to know the book by heart,” he told outraged supporters later. “They quoted pieces from it that they found offensive and asked me about even the smallest detail. The police were treating the book as if it was a literal autobiography rather than a piece of fiction.”

Mr Bala told police that he had collated the available details from press reports and imagined the missing parts, which happened to be the grisliest. Mr Wroblewski was not convinced, but after three days Mr Bala was released from Wroclaw jail when police, who denied illtreating the writer, conceded that the evidence was slim.

The mockery that the inspector suffered from the Polish press only increased his resolve. The first break for the police came when they discovered that Mr Bala, a highly experienced diver, was on a diving trip to South Korea and Indonesia at the time that the e-mails were sent. Then they discovered that he had sold a mobile phone four days after the body of Dariusz J was discovered. It was the same model that the victim was known to have owned, but that police had never found.

Mr Bala offered to take a lie-detector test to prove his innocence and passed. When the transcripts were read out in court, the judge was struck by the very long pauses taken by Mr Bala before answering, a technique that may allow a suspect to mask the physical signs of lying.

“My view is that Bala was using the breathing techniques that he had learnt as a diver,” the inspector told the court.

During the trial, which has now been adjourned, Mr Bala has managed to answer almost every nugget of evidence against him. The case, his lawyer says, is largely circumstantial — “like the plot of a novel”. Mr Bala’s former wife told the court that he was an obsessive, wanting to control her friendships even after their divorce.

Whether that will be enough to demonstrate that Mr Bala had the motive to commit murder, write a novel about it and then tip off the police remains to be seen. The literary riddle will probably outlive the courtroom judgment.

cheesygiraffe - August 9, 2007 04:59 PM (GMT)
Wow! :blink:
I read a book where the main character was an author and she had someone copying the murders in her books but this is whoa.... I shouldn't be surprised really I guess I'm surprised it hasn't happened before this. :(

lizziwhizz - August 9, 2007 06:45 PM (GMT)
Is it the author's only book? 'Cause that would definitely make me pause. But if the author has published lots of crime novels...
dunno. I don't know what the government is like in Poland, either, to know whether it's common to charge ppl with crimes with little evidence, mistreatment during interrogation, etc. Very weird, but interesting, story.

dancing-dog - August 9, 2007 06:52 PM (GMT)
It's weird but I'm sure it's not unheard of - a mystery writer gets so into his stories that he decides to "test" one of them out - or a murderer is so proud of his perfect crime that he writes a book about it.

Scary either way, really.

Marlene - August 9, 2007 07:04 PM (GMT)
I am terrible but I want to read that book. :ph34r:

blackteiwaz - August 9, 2007 09:14 PM (GMT)
:ditto: :blush:

Marlene - August 9, 2007 09:26 PM (GMT)
QUOTE (blackteiwaz @ Aug 9 2007, 11:14 PM)
:ditto: :blush:

O I am so glad I am not the only one. :wub:

Going to search around ;)

blackteiwaz - August 9, 2007 09:33 PM (GMT)
:blush: Already looked in Amazon, but couldn't find it :shrug:

Marlene - August 10, 2007 05:01 PM (GMT)
blackteiwaz. I think it has not been translated. I checked google, and I only see some results in Bulgarian.

You do have the chance that it will be translated after this :pirate: I hope he does not earn money then but I still want to read it. :blush:

blackteiwaz - August 13, 2007 01:15 AM (GMT)
Thank you Marlene for the info.
I think there is a good chance it will get translated now, let me know if you hear about it. :wink:

corry000 - August 13, 2007 04:03 PM (GMT)
That's very intriguing. I'm from Poland myself but I have never heard of this story. Thank you for posting!!

corry000 - August 13, 2007 04:04 PM (GMT)
QUOTE (Marlene @ Aug 10 2007, 11:01 AM)
blackteiwaz. I think it has not been translated. I checked google, and I only see some results in Bulgarian.

You do have the chance that it will be translated after this :pirate: I hope he does not earn money then but I still want to read it. :blush:

I should probably offer to translate the book. I'm a freelance translator and it would be a very exciting job :)

blackteiwaz - August 13, 2007 11:04 PM (GMT)
QUOTE (corry000 @ Aug 13 2007, 10:04 AM)
QUOTE (Marlene @ Aug 10 2007, 11:01 AM)
blackteiwaz. I think it has not been translated. I checked google, and I only see some results in Bulgarian.

You do have the chance that it will be translated after this  :pirate: I hope he does not earn money then but I still want to read it.  :blush:

I should probably offer to translate the book. I'm a freelance translator and it would be a very exciting job :)

That would be great!
You would have an interesting time working and we would be able to read it!
:giggle:

geishabird - September 5, 2007 01:53 PM (GMT)
Update on this story: he's been convicted!

http://edition.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/europe/0...r.ap/index.html

Breeze - September 5, 2007 11:04 PM (GMT)
Whoa, majorly creepy....




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