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Wolfgang Abel (serial killer) was born on 1959, is a German-Italian serial killer duo. Discover Wolfgang Abel (serial killer)'s Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is he in this year and how he spends money? Also learn how he earned most of networth at the age of 65 years old?

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Wolfgang Abel (serial killer) Height, Weight & Measurements

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Wolfgang Abel (serial killer) Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Wolfgang Abel (serial killer) worth at the age of 65 years old? Wolfgang Abel (serial killer)’s income source is mostly from being a successful Killer. He is from . We have estimated Wolfgang Abel (serial killer)'s net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2024 $1 Million - $5 Million
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Timeline

1959

Wolfgang Abel (born 25 March 1959) and Marco Furlan (born 16 January 1960) are a German-Italian serial killer duo who were arrested for a series of murders in Italy, the Netherlands and Germany between 1977 and 1984.

They claimed innocence, saying they were scapegoats for a police force that could not find the real criminals.

The two members of the Ludwig group were both sons of the upper bourgeoisie of the city and came from the Verona hinterland: Marco Furlan, resident of the prestigious Borgo Trento district, was the son of the Head of the Burns Unit of the Ospedale Civile Maggiore in Verona (in this regard, many of "Ludwig"'s victims who were burned alive was emblematic) and at the time of his arrest he was about to graduate in physics at the University of Padua; Wolfgang Abel lived in Negrar di Valpolicella, where his family had moved to after a period in Munich.

The son of a managing director of a German insurance company, he was a graduate in mathematics with honours and worked in the same insurance company as his father.

Furlan and Abel met in high school, soon finding themselves in agreement about needing to clean up the world from everything that they thought was "deviated": prostitutes, homeless, homosexuals, drug addicts, "sinful" priests, nightclubs and pornographic cinemas.

Their relationship continued beyond school and was consolidated by virtue of the fact that both were part of a group of young people at the time, who used to meet in Piazza Vittorio Veneto in Borgo Trento.

At each of these crime scenes was a leaflet, written in Italian, headed with the name "Ludwig" over a Nazi eagle and swastika.

Each had a slogan, such as "We are the last of the Nazis" and "Death comes to those who betray the true god", and explained the reason for each murder.

1977

Abel and Furlan's criminal career together began on 25 August 1977 in Verona, when they burned Roma drug addict Guerrino Spinelli alive with four molotov cocktails in his Fiat 126.

1978

On 17 December 1978, the murder of homosexual waiter Luciano Stefanato followed, stabbed 30 times in Padua, with two blades later being stuck in his back.

1979

Almost a year later, on 12 December 1979, Furlan and Abel stabbed 22-year-old drug addict Claudio Costa to death in Venice.

1980

The homicidal series continued in 1980 in Vicenza, with the axe murder of 52-year-old prostitute Alice Maria Baretta.

On 25 November of the same year they claimed responsibility for the first time in the crimes, by sending a letter with the name Ludwig in the Il Gazzettino newspaper's headquarters in Mestre.

1981

They were also accused of having set a fire on 25 May 1981 to a small abandoned structure in Verona, La torretta di Lungadige San Giorgio, formerly a part of old Austrian fortifications, which had become a shelter for beggars, drug addicts and homeless people: 17-year-old Luca Martinotti, who was spending the night there with another friend, died, while his friend was seriously injured.

They were acquitted of this crime, although a letter allegedly signed by Ludwig had reached the editorial office of la Repubblica.

"LUDWIG OUR FAITH IS NAZISM OUR JUSTICE IS DEATH OUR DEMOCRACY IS EXTERMINATION LET IT BE KNOWN THAT WE HAVE PROMPTLY CLAIMED RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE FIRE AT SAN GIORGIO IN VERONA WITH A MESSAGE SENT TO 'LA REPUBBLICA' WE ATTACH A METAL DISK IDENTICAL TO ONE APPLIED ON THE LARGEST OF THE THREE USED TORCHES GOTT MIT UNS"

1982

On 20 July 1982, Ludwig targeted Father Gabriele Pigato and Father Giuseppe Lovato, both 70-year-old friars of the Monte Berico in Vicenza, both attacked while walking in via Gen. Cialdini (a street that runs along the walls of the general house) and hit with hammers by the two young men: Father Gabriele died immediately, while Father Giuseppe was transported in very serious condition to the San Bartolo Hospital, where he died shortly after.

1983

On 26 February 1983, the priest Don Armando Bison was killed in Trento, he was found with an awl stuck in the skull, with a crucifix attached.

On 14 May 1983, they set fire to the red light cinema "Eros" in Milan, killing six people (including the 46-year-old doctor Livio Ceresoli, who entered the building to provide medical aid and who was posthumously awarded the Award for Civil Valor) and wounding 32 others.

The two, however, had not taken into account the fact that the Italian public premises had to furnish fireproof coverings following the Cinema Statuto fire, which took place in Turin in February 1983.

The disco's carpet was therefore flame resistant and slowed down the fire's propagation, which allowed a security officer to extinguish it.

Once discovered, the two assassins tried to attack the bouncer to escape, but they were stopped, surrounded by the crowd and finally arrested by police, who saved them from being lynched by the patrons.

The number of Ludwig's attacks ended with 28 dead and 39 wounded.

Abel was subjected to psychiatric examination, also requested by the defenders of Furlan, Tiburzio De Zuani and Piero Longo, but the accused refused to undergo the talks.

Specialists Balloni and Reggiani claimed that Abel had a reduced ability to understand the consequences of his actions, and also claimed that he had grown up without the affective attention that allowed him to develop a healthy personality, but this was very disputed.

1984

On 8 January 1984, they started a fire at the "Liverpool Disco" in Munich, in which an Italian waitress who worked there died, with seven others injured; this last act was claimed in a leaflet sent to some newspapers, reading: At the Liverpool, they don't fuck anymore!

On the evening of 4 March 1984, the two criminals entered the Melamara Disco in Castiglione delle Stiviere in the Province of Mantua, where at the time there were 400 young people, most of whom were masked for a carnival party.

In a moment of confusion, one of the two killers (disguised as a Pierrot) opened the emergency exit and let in his partner, who had two bags with as many gasoline canisters as they could carry.

Half-hidden in a dark corner, Abel and Furlan began to pour gasoline on the carpet and set it on fire.

1987

On 10 February 1987, both were sentenced to 30 years' imprisonment, while the public prosecutor had asked for both to be sentenced to life imprisonment.

1988

On 15 June 1988, the Court of Assizes of Venice appealed both for the beginning of imprisonment and ordered that Furlan be imprisoned in Casale di Scodosia, a town in the Province of Padua, from which Furlan fled in February 1991, just before the final sentence was handed down by Court of Cassation.

1990

They decided to organize in the city of Florence on 27 February 1990, a mass beating ensuing against street vendors and immigrant drug dealers present in various parts of the city, leaving the Italian newspapers some flyers in which they claimed aggression by signing as Ludwig.

Later they went on with bomb attacks against nomad camps in Tuscany, causing numerous injuries against the Roma.

Particularly bloody was a bomb attack on an immigrant camp in the Province of Pisa, where a little girl lost an eye and a hand.

These violent actions caused much outrage because some victims of the attacks were children.

This increased public pressure for an intervention by the Italian Police and the Carabinieri, who arrested the perpetrators of the attacks.

1999

He was captured in May 1995 in Crete, where he lived under a false name, and was brought back to Italy; in the meantime, on 10 April 1999, the Court of Appeal of Venice, presided by Nicola Lercario, had sentenced him to 27 years' imprisonment, with the sentence being confirmed on 11 February 1991 by the Court of Cassation.

On the same occasion, Abel was also sentenced to 27 years.

Shortly after the arrest in Crete, Furlan tried to commit suicide in prison by trying to hang himself on the bars with a sheet, but remained unharmed.

The name Ludwig was later taken up by other fanatics of the Italian far right, who had never had any contact with either Abel or Furlan, but through the newspapers, they were attracted by their racist ideas.