Age, Biography and Wiki

Margit Filó (Margit Julianna Elek) was born on 10 June, 1915 in Magyarcsanád, Austria-Hungary, is a Hungarian serial killer. Discover Margit Filó's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is she in this year and how she spends money? Also learn how she earned most of networth at the age of 108 years old?

Popular As Margit Julianna Elek
Occupation N/A
Age 108 years old
Zodiac Sign Gemini
Born 10 June 1915
Birthday 10 June
Birthplace Magyarcsanád, Austria-Hungary
Date of death Unknown
Died Place Lipótmező Mental Asylum, Budapest, Hungarian People's Republic
Nationality Hungary

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 10 June. She is a member of famous killer with the age 108 years old group.

Margit Filó Height, Weight & Measurements

At 108 years old, Margit Filó height not available right now. We will update Margit Filó's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.

Physical Status
Height Not Available
Weight Not Available
Body Measurements Not Available
Eye Color Not Available
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Dating & Relationship status

She is currently single. She is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about She's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, She has no children.

Family
Parents Not Available
Husband Not Available
Sibling Not Available
Children Not Available

Margit Filó Net Worth

Her net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Margit Filó worth at the age of 108 years old? Margit Filó’s income source is mostly from being a successful killer. She is from Hungary. We have estimated Margit Filó's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2024 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2024 Under Review
Net Worth in 2023 Pending
Salary in 2023 Under Review
House Not Available
Cars Not Available
Source of Income killer

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Timeline

1914

Margit Julianna Elek (June 10, 1914 – year of death unknown), known as The Rókus Black Widow, was a Hungarian serial killer who poisoned at least four people between 1958 and 1968.

Ruled incompetent to stand trial, she was transferred to a mental hospital in Budapest, where she subsequently died.

Margit Filó was born on June 10, 1914, on Attila Street in Makó.

Her family was poor, and so, Margit was forced to work from childhood.

1938

In 1938, she was interred at a closed psychiatric hospital due to schizophrenia, and after her release, she was contracted to work at Ferenc Nagy's poultry farm in Makó.

1949

In 1949, she began quarreling with her employer over the work conditions at the farm, eventually successfully suing him for 14,000 forints.

Using this money, she bought a housing complex on 38 Hétvezér Street in Szeged's Rókus District, and allowing tenants to use the upper floor apartments.

Filó was disappointed that she had to occupy a ground floor apartment, unlike the poorer residents of the building, who were allocated flats on the upper floors by the city council.

1950

At a young age, Filó maintained relationships primarily with women, but in 1950, she met and married chimney sweeper and former veteran Mihály Barna.

In the late 1950s, both Barna and his mother died in quick succession, but it couldn't be conclusively proven that they had been murdered.

In the year after her husband's death, Filó began a relationship with the 62-year-old wealthy farmer Sándor Varga, whom she had met on the market.

Varga owned a good quality house and his own estate in Kiszombor, where the couple would soon settle in, bringing Biczó along with them.

1952

In 1952, she was interned at a mental hospital for a short time, but when she was discharged, she and her husband bought a house in Debrecen.

However, despite being relatively well off, Filó continued to perform her duties in dirty clothes.

For the next eight years, the couple lived together, seemingly without any issues, but over time, Barna's health deteriorated to the point that he needed constant care.

As a result, his mother moved in with the couple, with Margit hiring 73-year-old Lajosné Biczó as a domestic aide to nurse her husband.

1958

In October 1958, Filó incapacitated Biczó with medicine dissolved in a glass of water and then suffocated the woman while she was unconscious by pressing her hands against her mouth and nose until she couldn't breathe.

The autopsy concluded that Biczó had been killed in a homicidal manner, and Filó was arrested, but since authorities were unable to conclusively prove that she was the killer, they released her.

According to her will, Biczó's movable property was then transferred to Filó.

Investigators also learned that the will of Lajosné Biczó from 1958 was a forgery, and that Filó's then-fiancée, Sándor Varga, had actually signed it.

When brought to court, Filó tried to explain that she had killed her victims for humanitarian purposes, as, according to her, they were visibly suffering.

She also claimed that their deaths benefitted the Hungarian People's Republic, as the state would no longer be required to pay pensions to them.

The court, taking into account that Filó had been interred at mental institutions on two previous occasions, ordered her to undergo a psychiatric reevaluation.

During the tests, Filó initially denied any responsibility, but then started claiming that she had had nine husbands in total, and that she would confess if the doctors gave her bread and tomatoes.

1959

In the autumn of 1959, Varga and Filó officially married, with Sándor naming his newlywed wife as his sole heir.

Barely two months after the wedding, on Christmas, Filó extracted poison from thorn apple leaves collected at the edge of town, which she put into some cabbage prepared for her husband.

Varga and two other family members became violently ill from the poison, but did not die, so his wife repeated the act two days later, this time poisoning a soup, from whose effects Sándor finally succumbed.

After Varga's property was transferred to her, Filó sold it all and then moved back to Rókus.

1963

The next murder occurred in 1963, when Filó came across 75-year-old Iloná Siegel, a neighbor who was very sickly.

She offered to make a monetary contract with Siegel, who agreed, and just after the pair departed, Filó visited a tombstone manufacturer and placed an order for Siegel.

Two weeks later, she poisoned Siegel with the previous medicinal extract, and while her victim was unconscious, she strangled her with a pillow or a quilt.

The coroner detected nothing suspicious about the death, and thusly Siegel's properties, worth 20,000 forints, were given to Filó.

Over the next few years, Filó began to grow tired of her poor tenants, wishing to kick them out and replace with some of the industrial workers who were moving to Szeged.

1968

By 1968, she managed to convince several residents to leave, but one of them, a 77-year-old widow Mrs. Mihály Tóthpál, refused.

Deciding that she wanted to get rid of her, Filó signed a business deal with Tóthpál, and on July 9, 1968, she poisoned, beat and strangled her.

However, while abusing her elderly victim, she unwittingly broke several of her ribs, which was noticed by the coroners.

This finding was reported to the police, who immediately arrested Margit Filó as a suspect in the murder.

While searching her house, authorities stumbled upon several human skulls and several kilograms of toxic substances.

When questioned about these items, Filó claimed that she had stolen the skulls from the local cemetery, and that the poisons were for spells and potions which she supposedly used on acquaintances to fall in love with her.

Sensing that she might've had previous experiences in killings, police exhumed the bodies of Siegel, Varga and Barna, managing to prove that, with the exception of Barna, the victims had been poisoned.