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Sylvestre
MATUSCHKA
Date of arrest:
October 10, 1931
Sylvestre Matuschka
(born 1892, date of death unknown) (in Hungarian publications:
Matuska Szilveszter), a former officer in the Austro-Hungarian
army, was arrested in October 1931 and charged with arranging the
derailment of several trains. It is conjectured that he caused the
crashes in order to obtain sexual gratification.
Matuschka's most notorious crime was the derailment
of the Vienna Express headed towards Vienna as it was crossing the
Biatorbágy bridge near Budapest at 12.20am on 13 September 1931. The
incident resulted in the death of 22 people and the wounding of 120
others, 17 of them severely.
Matuschka carried out his crime by blowing up a
portion of the bridge, causing the engine and nine of the eleven coaches
forming the train to plunge into a ravine 30 meters deep. Matuschka was
discovered at the scene of the crime but, having passed himself off as a
surviving passenger, he was only arrested one month later, on 10 October
1931.
At his trial, Matuschka claimed to have been ordered
to derail the express by God. He was found guilty of murder and
sentenced to death, but the sentence was commuted and the former army
officer reportedly escaped from jail in Vác in 1944. According to some
reports, he served as an explosives expert during the latter stages of
World War II; he was never recaptured and his fate is unknown.
Matuschka has been quoted as explaining his crimes by
saying: "I wrecked trains because I like to see people die. I like to
hear them scream." It was reported that he achieved orgasm while
watching the trains he had sabotaged crash.
In 1990 Matuschka became the subject of a song,
Sylvestre Matuschka, by the band Lard. In 1982 a Hungarian/German TV
film based on the case, titled The Viaduct, was broadcast.
Szilveszter Matuska
(January 29, 1892, Csantavér (now Čantavir, Serbia) - disappeared circa
1945), was a Hungarian mass murderer and mechanical engineer who made
two successful and at least two unsuccessful attempts to derail
passenger trains in Hungary, Germany and Austria in 1930 and 1931.
Crimes
Matuska made at least two failed attempts to
derail trains in Austria in December 1930 and January 1931.
Matuska's first successful crime was the
derailment of the Berlin-Basel express train south of Berlin on
August 8, 1931. Scores of people were injured, but there were no
deaths. Because of the discovery of a defaced Nazi newspaper at
the scene of the crime, among other things, the attack was
believed to have been politically motivated. A bounty of 100,000
reichsmark was put on the perpetrator.
Matuska's second and more notorious successful
crime was the derailment of the Vienna Express headed towards
Vienna as it was crossing the Biatorbágy bridge near Budapest at
12.20am on 13 September 1931. 22 people died and 120 others were
injured, 17 of them severely.
Matuska carried out his crime by blowing up a
portion of the bridge, causing the engine and nine of the eleven
coaches forming the train to plunge into a ravine 30 meters deep.
Matuska was discovered at the scene of the crime but, having
passed himself off as a surviving passenger, he was released.
Investigators in the three countries were on his trail, however,
and he was arrested in Vienna one month later, on 10 October 1931,
whereupon he soon confessed.
Matuska was tried and convicted in Austria for
two unsuccessful attempts. He was later extradited to Hungary on
condition that he not be executed. He was found guilty of murder
and sentenced to death, but the sentence was commuted to life
imprisonment as agreed with Austria.
Matuska reportedly escaped from jail in Vác in
1944. According to some reports, he served as an explosives expert
during the latter stages of World War II; he was never recaptured
and his fate is unknown. Rumours have circulated that he appeared
on the communist side in the Korean War, but there is no evidence
to support this.
Matuska's motives remain unclear. His first
attack was initially thought to have been politically motivated.
At his trial, Matuska claimed to have been ordered to derail the
express by God. Matuska has also been quoted as explaining his
crimes by saying: "I wrecked trains because I like to see people
die. I like to hear them scream." It was reported that he achieved
orgasm while watching the trains he had sabotaged crash.
In 1990 Matuska became the subject of a song,
Sylvestre Matuschka, by the band Lard. In 1982 a Hungarian/German
TV film based on the case, titled The Viaduct, was
broadcast.
Wikipedia.org
Sylvester Matuschka
On the 12th September 1931, at
late night, the rails were blown up in front of the Orient
Express as it crossed the bridge - the train fell into the
abyss, 23 dead.
The culprit was Sylvester Matuschka (or, with
Hungarian spelling, Szilveszter Matuska - he was a typical multilingual,
multi-identity subject of the Habsburg monarchy), a mine owner then with
residence in Vienna, who served in a railway sabotage unit in Hungary
during WWI - i.e., plenty of explosives experience. He mingled among the
injured passengers, and boarded a train home unharrassed - but in Vienna
he was arrested: Austrian police was already looking for him, in
connection with two previous derailing attacks which were his 'exercises'
for the big one (the last day of 1930 at Anzbach near Vienna, and August
1931 between Jüterbog and Kloster Zinna near Berlin).
And from here it gets strange. In Hungary, the
government announced the state of emergency, and implemented a pre-planned
crack-down on the communists (helped by the fact that Matuschka -
or, in more tinfoil-hat versions, police conspirators - left behind
misleading anonymous letters praising a 'revolution'). They held a
communist suspect, and even while the trial of the real culprit
went on in Austria, executed the two leaders of the communist party
as the brains behind that communist. Eyewitnesses were listened to only
in a second trial.
There are speculations based on some pecularities
that Matuschka had cover from the authorities and was allowed to
escape - at any rate, he was the member of a far-right ex-officers'
association. Likewise, from the right-wing press of the time, new
theories were spun forth that Matuschka was a super-secret
communist agent, planted by the Soviets into a right-wing background
years earlier (a bit incoherent: if so, why leave letters behind that
make the communist motivation explicit?...).
In the trial itself, Matuschka behaved in a very
eccentric way, and after originally confessing to the crime, he even
began to blame an imaginary friend. The expert conclusion then and
now was that he was not insane, he was acting over-the-top.
In the end he got life inprisonment - and things get even more
mysterious at this point.
Matuschka disappeared during WWII. There are two
versions of what happened to him - and both with documentary evidence
and testimonies! One has him staying in prison until the Russians
came, when he'd welcome the soldiers as the last inmate, then disappears.
But the other has him offering his bombing expertise to the army in
November 1942, when the Russians began to push back the fascist invaders
- and disappearing or getting killed on the Eastern Front two years
later. At any rate, some people claim that they met him in the seventies
when he re-visited Hungary, of course under false name - while others
speculate that he was taken by the Russians and made to work for them.
The viaduct itself was disused two-three decades ago,
when the railway line was realigned - but in 1982, they were used in a
spectacular re-creation of the trainwreck for the US-West German-Hungarian
movie The Train Killer (Der Fall MatuschkaViadukt),
starring Michael Sarrazin.