After almost 30 years a father get his revenge.

Winter Woman

Well-Known Member
The love of a parent for their child never diminishes over time.

http://thestir.cafemom.com/in_the_news/127723/hero_dad_kidnaps_daughters_rapist?utm_medium=sem2&utm_campaign=outbrain&utm_source=outbrain&utm_content=outbrain


The words "world's best dad" are embroidered on hats and printed on t-shirts all over this country, but a Frenchman named Andre Bamberski just cornered the market on paternal superlatives. After three decades spent trying to find justice for his daughter's rape and murder in 1982, Bamberski found the man he says did it, kidnapped him in Germany, and placed him in the hands of police in France. Can you really blame him?

I know, I just came out and supported an international crime. But just the thought of someone hurting my little girl raises my hackles. I still hold a grudge against the kid who kicked sand in her face on the first day of kindergarten. Yes, I have a grudge against a (now) 6-year-old. I'm not proud of it. But I'm a parent; protecting my daughter became priority number one the minute I saw that second line on the pregnancy test. Forevermore, that will be my job.


Andre Bamberski has spent almost 30 years living with the knowledge that his daughter wasn't just hurt. She was sexually abused and killed. And no one has ever had to pay for the crime. Losing a child can tear marriages apart and even prompt some parents to take their own lives to escape the pain. That Bamberski kept fighting is a sign of incredible strength, or maybe of the importance of his mission?


According to The New York Times, Dieter Krombach was married to Bamberski's ex-wife, and hence stepfather to 14-year-old Kalinka. French police say the German doctor raped and then killed his stepdaughter at his home in Germany. But Krombach has resisted French officials' requests that he come into their country for questioning for the past 29 years. The German government, claiming there isn't sufficient evidence to suggest he played a role in the girl's death, has likewise refused to extradite him.


Bamberski's decision to kidnap Krombach couldn't have been easy. He tried legal channels, and felt like he was failing to live up to his duty as a dad. So he took the illegal route. He became a criminal for his daughter's sake. At 72, he's now an old man who will have to face charges for sneaking the doctor across the border. But that likely won't happen until after he gets to sit through Krombach's murder trial in a Parisian courtroom.
 

Shannon Alexander

Well-Known Member
I vote this feel good story of the day... It sounds like a movie that Hollywood should make...

I'm not sure I would have had the restraint to not just kill him and dump the body...

Kudos to him...
 

Shannon Alexander

Well-Known Member
I think it would do well as a movie... For some reason tho I'm thinking either John Cusack or Nicholas Cage as the father...
 

Winter Woman

Well-Known Member
I'm thinking that Irish guy, what's his name. Dark hair and a foreboding look.

or someone like Harvey Keitel
 

SocataSmoker

Well-Known Member
If he had raped and killed my daughter, he would have never seen the walls of a prison, only the icy walls of a glacier's crevasse approaching as he fell out of my plane...

Ooops...
 

spandy

Well-Known Member
So that brings to question to the fathers out there....what would you do?


I would of put a fuckin bullet in his skull. No way that piece of shit lives to have an opportunity to do that to someone else regardless how long it's been. Now amount of prison would ever amount to "justice" for what that man has done.
 

jdillinger

Active Member
Sounds like the movie taken, except liam neeson was too late and instead of bringing the guy responsible back he would just kill him.
 

Airwave

Well-Known Member
The love of a parent for their child never diminishes over time.

http://thestir.cafemom.com/in_the_news/127723/hero_dad_kidnaps_daughters_rapist?utm_medium=sem2&utm_campaign=outbrain&utm_source=outbrain&utm_content=outbrain


The words "world's best dad" are embroidered on hats and printed on t-shirts all over this country, but a Frenchman named Andre Bamberski just cornered the market on paternal superlatives. After three decades spent trying to find justice for his daughter's rape and murder in 1982, Bamberski found the man he says did it, kidnapped him in Germany, and placed him in the hands of police in France. Can you really blame him?

I know, I just came out and supported an international crime. But just the thought of someone hurting my little girl raises my hackles. I still hold a grudge against the kid who kicked sand in her face on the first day of kindergarten. Yes, I have a grudge against a (now) 6-year-old. I'm not proud of it. But I'm a parent; protecting my daughter became priority number one the minute I saw that second line on the pregnancy test. Forevermore, that will be my job.


Andre Bamberski has spent almost 30 years living with the knowledge that his daughter wasn't just hurt. She was sexually abused and killed. And no one has ever had to pay for the crime. Losing a child can tear marriages apart and even prompt some parents to take their own lives to escape the pain. That Bamberski kept fighting is a sign of incredible strength, or maybe of the importance of his mission?


According to The New York Times, Dieter Krombach was married to Bamberski's ex-wife, and hence stepfather to 14-year-old Kalinka. French police say the German doctor raped and then killed his stepdaughter at his home in Germany. But Krombach has resisted French officials' requests that he come into their country for questioning for the past 29 years. The German government, claiming there isn't sufficient evidence to suggest he played a role in the girl's death, has likewise refused to extradite him.


Bamberski's decision to kidnap Krombach couldn't have been easy. He tried legal channels, and felt like he was failing to live up to his duty as a dad. So he took the illegal route. He became a criminal for his daughter's sake. At 72, he's now an old man who will have to face charges for sneaking the doctor across the border. But that likely won't happen until after he gets to sit through Krombach's murder trial in a Parisian courtroom.
Be interesting to know exactly how he found him, contained him and transported him all that way.

I think the father didn't kill him because he isn't 100% sure that it was the German guy that did that to his daughter, and he's hoping the courts will find out for sure. If he did kill him and it later turns out that he was innocent, then he's just killed an innocent person.
 

blazinkill504

Well-Known Member
id shove a rigid broom up his asshole and glue it in place and after a couple days of him cryin for his life when hes pretty close to starvin id show him a pictre...first id cut his eyelids off so he cant look away and have a pic of my kid in front of him for a while then kill his ass dexter style.
 

Psychedelic Breakfast

Well-Known Member
I really thought it would end up with him finding him and killing him. If the only crime is this guy brought a killer to justice then i second this feel good story of the day
 

spandy

Well-Known Member
Oh wow you guys are crazy, lol. No, not me. Wouldn't even torture the guy or say a word to him. Just a loud bang, check pulse, bye. Torture is only effective if you need information or if you are going to let them live. If you are going to kill them, fucking just do it.
 
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