Belgian pedophile accomplice on cusp of freedom
Topics: From the Wires, News
Journalists wait outside of the Poor Clares Convent in Malonne, Belgium on Tuesday, Aug. 28, 2012. Michelle Martin, who is scheduled to be released on Tuesday, was convicted to 30 years in prison for helping her husband kidnap, rape and kill several young girls in the 1990's. She has served 16 years of her term but could be released within days, and plans to live with the nuns here . (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo)(Credit: AP)BRUSSELS (AP) — Belgium’s highest court considered Tuesday whether to grant conditional early release to one of the nation’s most despised criminals, the accomplice and former wife of a pedophile and child killer, even though she let two of his victims starve to death.
The Court of Cassation can only rule on procedural issues in the decision by a lower court to allow Michelle Martin to live in a convent after serving barely half of her 30-year sentence for her part in the mid-1990s kidnappings, rapes and killings by her then-husband, Marc Dutroux.
The overwhelming expectation is that Martin will be granted her freedom, especially after the legal adviser to the court said he had seen no procedural infringements meriting a revision of the earlier decision.
Even some of the parents of Dutroux’s and Martin’s victims have lost hope that Martin will be denied release.
“No. Honestly, no,” said Jean-Denis Lejeune, whose 8-year-old daughter Julie was one of the girls who starved to death, when asked he had hope the decision would be reversed. He said he was convinced the full court would follow the advice of the advocate general.
Away from the Court of Cassation, where arguments were heard from both sides in an ornate, wood-paneled room lit by gilded chandeliers, security forces are already preparing Martin’s arrival in Mallone, the verdant village in the hills 75 kilometers (45 miles) south of the capital, where the Clarisse convent is waiting to host her.
A few policemen were already stationed close to the convent but apart from the comings and goings of locals, little was happening.
Next to the convent, fluorescent graffiti protesting Martin’s possible arrival was removed. At a religious statue near the gate, two teddy bears still sat next to a picture of the two eight-year-olds who starved to death in Dutroux’s dungeon in 1996.
“Shame on the sisters,” one billboard said, in reference to the nuns who are willing to take Martin in.
Martin depicted herself as a more passive culprit than Dutroux, someone who was acting on the whims of a psychopath. But she is still blamed for aiding her then-husband’s depraved and murderous spree, and she is particularly loathed for letting two 8-year-old girls starve to death while Dutroux was briefly imprisoned.




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