Casefile True Crime - Case 310: Kalinka Bamberski
Episode Date: March 15, 2025*** Content warnings: Sexual assault, child victims ***After 14-year-old Kalinka Bamberski is found dead in her own bed in the German town of Lindau, her French father, André Bamberski, ref...uses to accept that she died of natural causes. The further he digs, he starts to suspect that foul play was involved and that the person responsible was none other than Kalinka’s stepfather, Doctor Dieter Krombach. Will André’s suspicions be taken seriously, or will he be forced to take matters into his own hands?---Narration – Anonymous HostResearch & writing – Elsha McGillCreative direction – Milly RasoProduction and music – Mike MigasAudio editing – Anthony TelferSign up for Casefile Premium:Apple PremiumSpotify PremiumPatreonFor all credits and sources, please visit https://casefilepodcast.com/case-310-kalinka-bamberski Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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What if everything you thought you knew about your own child was a lie?
Ellen Pompeo and Mark DuPlace star in Good American Family.
In this all-new limited series, a couple adopt what they believe is an eight-year-old girl,
but when concerns soon arise,
it forces them to question her actual identity.
Told from multiple perspectives,
Good American Family is inspired by the true events
behind the disturbing story of Natalia Grace
and unpacks the case that spiraled from private suspicion
to public spectacle, streaming March March 19th only on Disney+.
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1982 was shaping up to be a good year for André Bomberski. The 44-year-old accountant lived in Peschbusk, a small village just outside Toulouse in the southwest of France. A bitter divorce seven years prior had resulted in
André losing custody of his two children, Kalinka and Nicolas, who had gone to live with their mother
and her new husband in the German town of Lindau. This put a distance of over 1,000 kilometres between
André and his children, which was an ongoing source of pain for the doting
father as he continued to simultaneously grapple with the harsh reality that his wife had left him
for another man. André missed his children terribly and he was therefore relieved when
it was decided that 14-year-old Kalinka and 11-year-old Nicholas would return to France to live with him at
the end of the summer of 1982.
Kalinka had always been a very intelligent girl, but she'd been struggling academically
at the boarding school she attended in Germany, and she was missing her old life back in France.
It was agreed that the children would spend the summer vacation with their mother and
stepfather in Lendau before moving back to Peschbusk with Andre that September.
This was welcome news for Andre, who had recently started a new relationship for the first time
since his divorce. After a difficult few years, everything seemed to be falling into place for a fresh start.
That all changed on the morning of Saturday July 10, 1982, just two months before Kalinka
and Nicholas were set to return to France.
That day, the phone rang at André's house.
It was his ex-wife, Danielle Kronbach. She was beside herself.
Kalinka's spent the previous
day of Friday July 9 windsurfing on Lake Constance, the crystal clear bay located behind the Kronbach's
home in Lindau.
Danielle, Kalinka and Nicholas lived there with Danielle's husband, a respected cardiologist
named Dieter Kronbach, as well as Dr Kronbach's two older children from a previous marriage.
Danielle said that Kalinka had returned home at around 5pm.
She remarked that she was feeling tired and a little unwell, but other than that she'd been her typical happy self.
The family ate dinner together around 7.30pm, after which Dr. Kronbach's children went out and
the others soon retired to bed for the night as normal. Danielle explained that the next morning
Dr. Kronbach went to wake Kalinka up so they could go horseback riding together,
only to find her lying in her bed, unconscious. He administered various injections
in an attempt to revive her, but it was too late. She was already dead. With no physical explanation
as to how Kalinka had died, Dr. Kronbach suspected that she'd most likely suffered from heat stroke
after overexposure to the sun the previous day
and had gone into shock as a result. Paramedics were called but there was nothing they could do.
Kalinka's body was taken straight to the funeral home.
Andrei Bomberski couldn't believe what he was hearing. Kalinka was a healthy, athletic teenager who
lived an incredibly active lifestyle and had no underlying medical conditions. How could she have
possibly died in her sleep and from heat stroke no less? Furthermore, it had only been around
29 degrees Celsius in Lindau, yet Kalinka was used to much hotter
temperatures than that in France. To André, it simply didn't make sense.
His head still spinning, André immediately travelled to Lindau.
He hoped that his son Nicholas could shed some further light on the situation, but the 11-year-old said there was nothing out of the ordinary about the way Kalinka had behaved
on the night that she died. She didn't exhibit any of the major signs of heat stroke such as
dizziness, confusion, slurred speech, or profuse sweating. Nicholas didn't even recall Kalinka mentioning she was tired.
In Germany, it was protocol that police be notified and an autopsy be conducted for any
death that wasn't directly attributed to natural causes. Two days after Kalinka's death, two pathologists performed an autopsy on the teenager's body.
Given the summer heat, her body was already in an advanced state of decomposition,
yet they noted Kalinka's overall good health and hygiene. An examination of Kalinka's airways
and lungs revealed the presence of aspirated stomach contents, which
indicated that she'd likely vomited in her sleep and subsequently choked to death.
The pathologists estimated Kalinka had died around seven to eight hours after eating dinner,
putting her time of death sometime between 3 and 4 AM on Saturday July 10, 1982.
3 and 4 a.m. on Saturday July 10 1982. On the same day that the autopsy was conducted, a police officer questioned Dr. Dieter Kronbach about the events leading up to Kalinka's death.
Kronbach explained that when Kalinka returned home from Lake Constance on Friday,
she complained that she hadn't gotten much of a suntan. Just before the family sat down for
dinner at around 7.30, Kronbach said he gave her an injection of cobalt filacet, an iron supplement
that he claimed would help her tan more easily. Dr. Kronbach recalled that Kalinka went to bed
early but then got up to get a glass of water at approximately 10.30 pm.
Around midnight, he noticed that Kalinka's bedroom light was still on.
He peered in and saw that she was reading in bed.
Kronbach asked her to turn the light off before going to bed himself.
The next time he saw Kalinka was when he went into her room at around 9.30am, only to discover
that she was unconscious in her bed.
In a desperate attempt to revive her, Dr. Kronbach grabbed his doctor's kit and injected
her with a narcotic as well as a neurotransmitter. Realising it was hopeless and that she was already dead,
he phoned emergency services who came to the house and removed Kalinka's body.
They noted no signs of violence apart from the injection marks on her thorax and right arm.
A local prosecutor reviewed the case and determined that no foul play had occurred.
They closed Kolinka-Bomberski's file, leaving her family to grieve as they came to terms with this
unforeseen tragedy. Back in France, André Bomberski tried to accept that his daughter was gone, but he
couldn't shake the feeling that something wasn't right.
At Kalinka's funeral, he'd overheard whispers that she had died as a result of the iron
injection that Dieter Kronbach had given to help her tan.
This was the first André had heard about any such injection.
His ex-wife Danielle had made no mention of it.
Danielle had also promised to send Andre a copy of the autopsy report, yet one week passed
and then another, and still there was no sign of it.
Andre called Danielle and demanded to know what was going on. It was a difficult
situation to navigate given that the pair already had a complex history between them.
The two had met in the Moroccan city of Casablanca in the early 1960s, where André was overseeing a
large accounting company that specialised in international taxation.
They got married and had Kalinka shortly after, followed by Nicholas a few years after that.
Life was good for the family of four. That was until Dieter Kronbach came along.
At the time, Kronbach worked as a doctor for the German consulate in
Casablanca and lived just a few doors down from the Bomberskis. Widowed with two young children
who attended the same international school as Koelinka and Nicholas, the two families would
occasionally cross paths. But over time, Andre noticed that Dr. Kronbach seemed to show up wherever they went.
When the Bomberski family had a serious car accident in 1974, he was the first person to
arrive on the scene. Andre started to suspect that something was going on between his wife and Dr. Kronbach.
Eventually, Danielle admitted that the two were having an affair.
Andre confronted Dr. Kronbach, who refused to end the relationship with Danielle.
Desperate to save his marriage, Andre moved his family back to France. As he and Danielle worked to mend things
between them, Danielle got a job in real estate that required her to travel frequently to the
city of Nice, which was on the other side of the country. She decided it was easiest if she rented
an apartment there during the week and then returned home on the weekends.
André was a little suspicious of this. One day, he followed Danielle as she left for work and found that she drove straight to a nearby apartment. It turned out that Dr. Dede Crombac
had moved to France so he could continue his affair with Danielle.
André filed for divorce and Danielle married Krombach shortly after.
Things had been bitter between the exes ever since, with Kalinka's death marking yet another
source of contention.
When André called Danielle demanding to know what was going on with their daughter's autopsy,
Danielle thought he was overreacting. She encouraged Andre to make peace with the tragedy as best as he
could by accepting that Kalinka's time had simply come. But Andre wasn't ready to let it go. After numerous requests, three months after
Kalinka's death he finally got his hands on her autopsy findings.
The 16 page report was written in German so he immediately had it translated into French.
When Andre finally sat down to read the findings, he couldn't believe his eyes.
The first thing Andre noticed was that the pathologists had concluded that the exact
cause of Kalinka's death couldn't be determined. While she had choked on her own vomit, they
didn't know what it caused her to throw up in
the first place. They had studied the multiple injection sites on Kalinka's body and although
they found no sign of poisoning, they noted it as odd that Dr. Kronbach had attempted to
revive Kalinka with various injections. Her body had already been in a clear state of
rigor mortis when these drugs were administered,
which meant she was already dead at the time.
As a medical doctor, it should have been obvious to Krombarka that any attempt to resuscitate
her would be futile.
More alarmingly, the pathologists noted the presence of fresh blood around Kalinka's genitals as well as a
superficial tear in her labia and a white substance inside her vagina. Yet, they hadn't
conducted any tests to identify what the substance was, nor had they done any analysis to determine
whether sexual intercourse had taken place before Kalinka's death. In fact, they hadn't conducted any toxicology tests
at all, seemingly taking Dr. Krombach's word for the various medications she'd been given.
Andre was gobsmacked. In his view, it didn't sound like Kalinka had died of natural causes at all.
Kalinka had died of natural causes at all. It sounded like she'd been drugged, raped, and possibly murdered. If this was true, there was only one person who could be responsible.
The last person to have seen her alive. Dr. Dita Kronbach.
In the autopsy report, Dr. Kronbach was quoted making medical observations. To André,
it seemed as though he was there during the examination, which went entirely against
protocol as family members were not allowed to be present. In André's view, it sounded like
Krombach was providing his version of events and the pathologists were simply writing their report to suit.
Kronbach was a well-known and revered doctor in Lindau and André suspected this could
explain why further testing wasn't done and why the pathologists had been willing to overlook
the suspicious findings.
He knew these were big allegations to make, but for his daughter, it was a risk he was willing to take.
Three months after Kalinka's death, Andrei Bomberski contacted the German prosecutor who
had closed her file and demanded that the case be reopened. He requested that proper forensic and
toxicology testing be conducted on the
samples that had been taken from Kalinka's body. The prosecutor denied the request.
The German authorities said that Dr Dieter Kronbach hadn't been present during the autopsy,
but had simply entered the room momentarily to officially identify Kalinka's body.
simply entered the room momentarily to officially identify Kalinka's body.
They trusted the pathologists and saw no reason to reinvestigate the matter.
Andre called his ex-wife to voice his suspicions.
Danielle claimed she hadn't even looked at Kalinka's autopsy report.
She said she trusted her husband implicitly and had no reason to doubt his medical explanation for her daughter's death. Andrée accused Daniel of covering up for her husband,
and in turn, she accused Andrée of seeking revenge against Kronbach for the affair.
She also suspected anti-German sentiment had something to do with Andrzej's allegations.
Although Andrzej was born in France, his father's family was originally from Poland, and Andrzej
had been deported to both Poland and Germany by the Nazis during World War II.
Danielle told Andrzej as much, saying that his attempts to have Kalinka's case reopened
dishonoured her memory.
Undeterred, Andre Bomberski hired a renowned lawyer who convinced the German prosecutor
to order a review of Kalinka's autopsy report.
In November 1982, four months after the teenager's death, three experts from the
Munich Forensic Institute were assigned the task. They tested samples from the injection
sites on Kolinka Bomberski's body and confirmed there was no evidence of poison. However,
like the original pathologists, they agreed that Dr. Kronbach's resuscitation attempts
on a body in rigor mortis were crude and outright strange. The forensic experts also had questions
about Kronbach's use of cobalt felesat as a tanning aid, as they'd never known it to be used for such
a purpose. They pointed out that the only reason this medication should be administered
intravenously is in cases of severe iron deficiency anemia and only then under close medical
supervision. If not, it had the potential to be dangerous, causing serious side effects such as
headaches, dizziness, nausea, loss of consciousness, and even cardiac arrest.
They therefore suspected that Kalinka had an adverse reaction to the iron injection,
went into shock, and then choked on her own vomit. However, the initial autopsy report
estimated that Kalinka had died sometime between 3 and 4am. The Munich pathologists noted that an
adverse reaction would have happened immediately after the injection was administered, not several
hours later. Dr. Kronbach claimed he had given Kalinka the iron infusion before dinner on Friday July 9, sometime around 7 and 7.30pm. Traces of undigested food in
Kalinka's stomach also indicated that she'd died shortly after eating, leading the reviewing
pathologists to question the time of death on the original autopsy report. The original autopsy
stated that various organs had been removed from Kalinka's body during
her post-mortem exam, such as her kidneys, rectum, and genitals.
The reviewing team questioned one of the original pathologists about the tear on Kalinka's
labia.
He claimed that the damage had occurred post-mortem because of how badly decomposed Kalinka's
body had been.
The team from the Munich Forensic Institute requested access to these organs for further
analysis, but the prosecution's office brushed off their request and the matter wasn't pursued
further.
Without all the evidence, the team therefore produced an inconclusive report, stating that
while they were unable to determine Kalinka's exact cause of death, they suspected it had
something to do with the cobalt-fleset injection. For Andrej Bomberski, these findings were
significant. If Kalinka had died shortly after receiving the iron shot, then it called
into question Dr. Kronbach's claim that he'd seen Kalinka around midnight when he'd asked her to
turn off her light. While this wasn't enough to convince German prosecutors to reopen the case,
the discrepancy between the two reports only made Andrei Bomberski more certain that Dr.
Kronbach was covering something up.
He visited Kalinka's gravesite and made a vow.
He'd discover the truth and get justice for her, no matter what.
As word spread about Deda Kronbach's potential involvement in Kalinka's death,
Andre wasn't the only one whose suspicions were raised. In 1969, Kronbach's first wife,
24-year-old Monika, had been rushed to hospital after suffering from a mysterious illness that
had rendered her unable to see, speak or move. Kronbach, who had recently
graduated with honours from the University of Frankfurt, had apparently pushed aside
Monica's attending physician and injected her with what he claimed to be snake venom.
A few hours later, Monica suffered a cerebral hemorrhage and passed away.
later, Monica suffered a cerebral hemorrhage and passed away.
The doctors had attributed Monica's death to an overdose of the contraceptive pill,
but when her parents heard about what happened to Kalinka Bomberski, they suspected that Kronbach could have poisoned Monica too. They claimed that Kronbach had treated Monika terribly when she was still alive,
beating her and threatening to kill her. In 1983, Monika's parents reported their suspicions to the
German police and an investigation was launched, but no evidence was found to support their theory.
As the one-year anniversary of Kalinka's death approached, Andre's lawyer finally convinced
the Lindau Police Commissioner to interview the other family members who were present
at the Kronbach home on the night Kalinka died.
Danielle Kronbach told the police that the household had eaten dinner at around 8.30
pm, not 7.30 like her husband had originally reported.
According to Danielle, it was actually after dinner that Dr. Kronbach gave Kalinka the
iron infusion, and it wasn't to help her suntan, but to treat her anemia.
Danielle explained that both she and Kalinka received these iron injections regularly and
had never had an adverse reaction before. On the contrary, Danielle found them to be restorative.
While she hadn't been present when the injection was administered,
Danielle said she remembered it because Kalinka had a bandaid on her arm and mentioned that she'd just had her
iron shot. Danielle recalled that she and Dr. Kronbach then took their dog out for a walk,
after which Kronbach did some work in his office while Danielle went to bed. She didn't recall what
time her husband came to bed that night. He woke her up the next morning, his hands shaking and eyes bulging as he told Danielle
something had happened to Kalinka.
Danielle rushed to her daughter's bedroom, finding her lying in the fetal position, her
face blue and her body cold to the touch.
Dr. Kronbach's daughter Diana Diana, claimed that over dinner Kalinka had
complained of being sunburnt but seemed otherwise fine. Diana recalled having seen her father prepare
the cobalt-flescid injection for Kalinka afterwards, which she said was a standard
procedure in their household. Diana went out with Franz and returned home
around midnight, at which point she didn't notice anything out of the ordinary.
The next morning, she found her father trembling in Kalinka's room, shouting to Diana to fetch
his medicine bag. Kalinka's younger brother Nicholas said his sister showed no signs of poor health on the
night that she died. He didn't remember Kalinka having her ion infusion, nor did he recall seeing
a band-aid on her arm. All Nicholas remembered was that he and Kalinka squabbled over something
trivial while their parents were out walking the dog. The siblings went to bed and the next thing Nicholas knew,
he woke up to the sounds of ambulance sirens and his mother crying.
When the police commissioner tried to question Dr. Dieter Kronbach, he insisted he was too busy.
The commissioner therefore agreed to give him a list of five questions that he could answer
at his own leisure. Kronbach eventually responded to the questions via post.
In contrast to his original statement, he claimed to have given Kalinka the iron injection after
dinner at around 8.30pm and not for tanning purposes, but to treat anemia. He also added a new detail for
the first time. He claimed that after his wife and children went to bed, he did some work before
going into the kitchen. Kalinka was there complaining that she was unable to get to sleep, so he gave her a sleeping pill. When Andrei Bomberski caught wind of these witness statements, he was convinced that
Dr. Krombach had changed his version of events to fit with the results of the autopsy review.
The detail about the sleeping pill was no doubt his attempt to cover for the fact that he'd
intentionally drugged and raped Kalinka. Krombach's answers matched Danielle's to a T,
and André was certain that the two had corroborated their responses.
It was the first that André had ever heard of Kalinka being anemic,
and no blood tests had been done to confirm such a
diagnosis. Andre and his lawyer requested that Kalinka's case be officially reopened,
but once again their request was denied on the grounds that there was insufficient evidence to
warrant a new investigation. Andre was at a loss. He felt like he'd exhausted all possible avenues and feared
that Kronbach was going to get away with what he'd done to Kalinka and go on living his life like
nothing had ever happened. Refusing to let that happen, Andre had to think outside the box.
outside the box. On Friday September 30 1983, almost 15 months after Kalinka's death, Andre traveled to Lindau during Oktoberfest, an annual beer festival that attracted upwards
of 30,000 people. Andre walked the crowded streets and stopped into the bustling cafes and restaurants handing out a two-page leaflet
that began. You should know that a criminal lives in Lindau. It is Dr. Kronbach who practices at
23A Bregenza Street. On the evening of Friday July 9 1982, he killed my splendid daughter Kalinka at his own home by injecting her with cobalt
flacid.
The flyer went on to detail all of André's allegations against Kronbach and his perceived
flaws in the investigation.
He provided the Kronbach's home address, listed the names of the police commissioner, prosecutor and the
pathologists involved, and claimed that a rapist was being protected by powerful locals.
Someone told Dr Kronbach's daughter Diana about the leaflet and she immediately called
the police.
Two hours later, officers found Andre handing them out and placed him under arrest for disturbing
public order, defaming Kronbach and injuring the reputation of the prosecutor.
After sharing his side of the story, Andre was free to go, but Kronbach sued him for
defamation of character. Kronbach's lawyer denied the allegations against him, arguing that so-called
signs of sexual assault on Kalinka's body had occurred when the pathologists were redressing
her fragile and badly decomposed body after their examination. Kronbach won the lawsuit,
with a German judge ordering that Andrzej Bomberski pay him 500,000 German
marks in compensation, the equivalent of around 255,000 euros in today's money.
Andrzej was also warned that if he did such a thing again, he'd face up to six months in jail.
six months in jail. Andre was completely undeterred.
Not only did he refuse to pay the money, he also got a copy of the Lindau phone book and
started mailing the leaflet to as many people as he could, including 250 Bavarian officials.
The reaction was lacklustre, with less than a dozen of those officials agreeing that the
case warranted further attention. However, it was enough to get the Bavarian Minister of Justice
involved, and finally, a new investigation was ordered. A fresh team of German forensic experts
reviewed Kalinka's autopsy report and agreed that her death
had likely been caused as a result of the iron injection Dieter Kronbach had given her.
They determined that Kronbach's crude resuscitation attempts had happened about
10 hours after Kalinka had died, indicating that he had either tried to cover up his medical error or foul play.
However, the investigation hit a standstill after German officials told Andre they wouldn't
be able to re-examine or forensically test Kalinka's genitals for evidence of sexual
assault, as these and the other organs had been returned to France with her body.
Given that Kalinka was a French citizen, André discovered that he was also able to lodge
a criminal complaint against Adida Kronbach with the French courts.
If magistrates uncovered enough evidence to press murder charges, Kronbach could also
be tried under French law.
A French investigation was simultaneously launched,
but German officials refused the French magistrate from investigating on German territory.
This prevented them from interviewing Kronbach or the witnesses who were home on the night
Kolinka died. Kronbach and Danielle had since separated, yet they remained on good terms, and Danielle
was disgusted by André's ongoing accusations. André's lawyer attempted to summon Kronbach
to France, but he declined in a letter which read,
"...the files of the German authorities are certainly at your disposal. I see no reason for me to go to Paris
for an interview. Such a journey would be a considerable burden for me in every respect."
Things progressed at a snail's pace and it took three and a half years after Kalinka's death
before Germany agreed that the French investigators could exhume Kalinka's body for additional
examination. In December 1985, André gathered at Peschbusk Cemetery with a team of French
police officers and forensic experts as Kalinka's coffin was pulled from its gravesite. It turned
out that the teenager's body had been incredibly well preserved. But to the dismay of
those gathered, the organs that had been removed during Kalinka's autopsy, including her genitals,
weren't in the coffin as German officials had claimed.
The German forensic lab who had handled Kalinka's remains could provide no trace of them.
It appeared they were gone forever.
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What if everything you thought you knew
about your own child was a lie?
Ellen Pompeo and Mark DuPlace
starring Good American Family.
In this all-new limited series, a couple adopt what they believe is an 8-year-old girl, but
when concerns soon arise, it forces them to question her actual identity.
Told from multiple perspectives, Good American Family is inspired by the true events behind
the disturbing story of Natalia Grace, and unpacks the case that spiraled from private
suspicion to public spectacle, streaming March 19th only on Disney Plus. to continue to deliver quality content.
Without access to the sex organs that had been removed from Kalinka's body, the German court ruled there was insufficient evidence to press any charges against Adidacron
Bach, and German officials made it clear they would not
be investigating the case any further. Andrei Bomberski was horrified by the way Kalinka's
body had been treated during the autopsy. He later remarked, Kalinka got carved up like a pig in a
slaughterhouse, but nobody wanted to know how and why she died.
The only hope André had left was with the French investigation, but German officials
refused to extradite Crombac to France on the grounds that he'd essentially already been
acquitted by the German courts. The Germans claimed that undergoing prosecution in France would go against the
European Union's double jeopardy principle, which prevented individuals from being tried
for the same offence after they had already been acquitted. With no new evidence to examine,
the French magistrates requested access to the original samples taken from Kalinka's body.
They had to be manually retrieved from Munich, a process two years in the making.
In 1988, a team of three French forensic experts were finally able to examine the
available evidence for themselves. They were given skin, lung, heart and tissue samples from Kalinka's body,
yet test tubes filled with her blood had been inexplicably discarded by the first
reviewing team at the Munich Forensic Institute. The lack of blood meant they were unable to find
a definitive link between any intravenous substance and Kalinka's death.
However, the trio highlighted various gaps in the previous autopsy reports,
concluding that Kalinka Bomberski had died as a direct result of the iron injection Dr. Kronbach had given her.
With nothing in her medical records to indicate that Kalinka was anemic, the injection would have
put her body into shock, in turn causing her to lose consciousness and choke on her own vomit.
She would have died shortly after receiving the injection,
once again calling into question Krombark's timeline of events.
The drugs Krombark had injected her with hours later weren't known to be used for
resuscitation purposes, and given together, they formed a dangerous combination. Therefore,
the experts concluded the only reason Kronbach would have administered these drugs was to make
it look like he'd made a genuine attempt to revive Kalinka,
or to cover up another drug that he'd given her earlier on, possibly to enable a sexual assault.
It took another few years until the French magistrates believed they'd built up a solid
case against Kronbach. While they didn't have enough evidence to proceed with any sexual assault charges,
the courts decided that Kalinka's death was caused by a direct result of an intravenous injection
or a solution that might or might not have been cobalt felicit. It wasn't enough to uphold a
murder charge, but it was enough to indicate voluntary assault
resulting in unintentional death. In April 1993, Andre Bomberski received the news he'd been
waiting for for almost 11 years. The Paris court of Assise had just charged Dr Dieter Kronbach with killing Kalinka.
An indictment for Kronbach's arrest stated that in order to justify the injection he
gave Kalinka, Kronbach furnished conflicting and untrue accounts.
It further stated that he, quote, also lied about the chronology of the events when he affirmed that the injection had taken
place several hours before the death.
Lastly, the faked attempt to revive her and the use of mutually incompatible products
on a living being can only be explained by an intention to conceal the cause of death.
These factors taken as a whole constitute sufficient grounds for
suspecting that Dieter Kronbach gave the fatal injection not as a cure, but with the intention
of causing death. Given Kalinka's age, the maximum penalty Kronbach faced was 30 years in prison.
In Kier's age, the maximum penalty Kronbach faced was 30 years in prison. The trial was set to take place in Paris, but Kronbach successfully postponed it several
times.
When the date was finally set for early March 1995, Kronbach was protected by a law that
prevented German citizens from being prosecuted outside of their own country.
He therefore wasn't legally required to attend his own trial, and it went ahead without him in what's known as a trial in absentia. There were no defence attorneys present, nor were there any
witnesses or jury members. Instead, a judge reviewed the available evidence, which excluded the sexual assault allegations,
and concluded that Dieter Kronbach was guilty of willful violence leading to death without
intent, or in other words, manslaughter.
Without the sexual assault motive, the court concluded that Kronbach was responsible for Kalinka's death
because he'd given her the injection without then monitoring her for possible adverse reactions.
Kronbach was sentenced to 15 years in a French prison, the maximum sentence for manslaughter at the time.
Despite this conviction and sentence, Germany remained under no legal obligation
to extradite Kronbach. He was ultimately a convicted killer allowed to walk free, provided he steer
clear of France. André Bomberski wasn't the only one outraged by this technical loophole.
After an article about the case appeared in a major French newspaper the following year, Verschke wasn't the only one outraged by this technical loophole.
After an article about the case appeared in a major French newspaper the following year,
pressure was placed on the Paris public prosecutor, and eventually Interpol issued an international
arrest warrant for Kronbach.
This meant that if he attempted to leave Germany, he'd no longer be protected by German laws and would
be extradited to France to see out his sentence.
In March 1997, two years after the trial, Andrzej Bomberski's phone rang.
A German journalist was on the other line with some information they thought might be
of interest to him.
61-year-old Dieter Kronbach had just been arrested.
André's immediate thought was that Kronbach was finally being held accountable for Kalinka's death,
but what the journalist told him next was even more astonishing.
What the journalist told him next was even more astonishing.
16-year-old Laura Stieler was a Russian immigrant living in Lindau.
On the morning of Tuesday, February 11, 1997, she attended Dr. Kronbach's practice to undergo a gastroscopy, a diagnostic procedure that involves an endoscope being passed through the mouth and into the esophagus, stomach,
and bowel. As per standard practice, Laura was given an anesthetic and a sedative to make the
procedure more comfortable. The gastroscopy was completed without incident, but when Laura woke
up, she took longer than usual to recover from the anesthetic.
Dr. Kronbach and his assistant left Laura to recover on the couch in their post-treatment room.
As Laura lay there, barely able to move or speak, Dr. Kronbach returned. He began kissing her and
touching her breasts. Laura tried to push him away, but her body felt
completely paralysed from the anesthetic and she could barely lift her arms. Dr. Crumbuck locked
the door from the inside and removed his pants. He took Laura's clothes off and proceeded to rape her. After he was done, he wiped them both down with
a paper towel, helped Laura get dressed, and then drove her home. Laura reported the incident to the
police straight away and an examination confirmed the presence of semen. Dieter Kronbach was
subsequently charged with the sexual abuse of an individual unable to resist.
He denied the allegation and was jailed pending trial, but he changed his plea after learning
that the seaman had tested positive for his DNA. Andrei Bomberski travelled to Germany to be present
for Kronbach's sentencing hearing.
His presence clearly rattled Kronbach, who began yelling that the Frenchman was there to kill him.
Once order was restored in the court, Kronbach claimed that he'd been under the impression that
Laura had consented to sex, even if she hadn't explicitly said so.
Many present were taken aback by the casual way in which he spoke about what he'd done.
He seemed to have no remorse, instead testifying with what some viewed as a kind of amused
cynicism.
A psychiatrist testified that Kronbach was a narcissist who considered himself above
the law, a description many found apt after he was handed a two-year suspended sentence.
The citizens of Lindau were outraged.
Hundreds gathered to protest against the leniency of the sentence while a petition circulated
demanding that Kronbach's medical licence be revoked.
Wanting to voice his side of the story, Kronbach agreed to an exclusive interview with Barbara
Furkel, a journalist for the German TV broadcaster ZDF. Answering pre-vetted questions in the
presence of his lawyer, Kronbach sat back comfortably in his chair as
he explained that he didn't view his actions as sexual assault. He claimed that he'd simply
been expressing his fondness for Laura, going so far as to call his actions love-making.
While Kronbach admitted that Laura hadn't been enthusiastic, he explained,
I believed she was consenting. She didn't say yes, but she didn't say no either. When I kissed her,
she kissed back. Krombach recalled there was a moment during the assault that he told Laura, I love you, in Russian.
He chuckled as he remembered this, prompting Barbara Furkel to exclaim,
but you drugged her. Crombach sighed, remarking, like they said in ancient Rome, those who remained silent seemed to agree.
Those who remained silent seemed to agree.
A woman named Svanya Mawar Guntha was watching the interview and couldn't believe what she was seeing. Not only was she sickened by the way that Krombark seemed to mock his victim,
Svanya remembered Dr Krombark well.
As a teenager living in Lindau in the early 1980s, she had visited his medical office
regularly as her mother had been sick at the time.
Svanya and her sister Jana were also diagnosed as anemic and required regular iron infusions.
1985 had been a hard time for the Mawa sisters.
Their parents had been going through a brutal divorce and their mother struggled with health
problems.
Dr. Kronbach became a much needed source of support, providing positive distractions for
Svenja and Jana by taking them horse riding and out to fancy dinners. Then,
when the girls were around 14 and 16, Dr. Kronbach invited them to join him on a long weekend to the
south of France without their mother. Svanya and Yana were thrilled. After the turmoil they'd been
witnessing at home, a few days away with the charming and
sophisticated doctor seemed like a dream. They'd come to view Kronbach as a type of
substitute father figure and were excited to travel to a beautiful location.
The trip started off well, until it came time to check into their motel. The trio arrived late at night,
only to find they would all be sharing a room which contained only one double bed with a single
fold-up bed alongside it. Dr. Kronbach told the sisters he was too big to take the fold-up bed.
He said he would sleep in the double bed and the girls could choose which
one of them would join him. Janna begged Svonja to take the double bed. She had only packed a
small nightgown and she was too self-conscious to sleep alongside the 50-year-old man.
Svonja agreed and as they climbed into bed, Dr. Kronbach told the sisters that they were
due for their iron infusions. Given that he had his doctor's kit with him, he figured this was
as good a time as any. He retrieved his doctor's bag and proceeded to give them both their injections.
them both their injections. Svanya dozed off almost immediately.
She woke up some time later only to find Dr. Kronbach sexually assaulting her.
Terrified, she didn't dare move or speak.
As the assault continued, she played dead, to the point that Kronbach started shaking
her to make sure she was still alive.
Svanya found the only way she could get through it was to disassociate entirely, telling herself, this isn't happening. The next day, Svanya felt as though the whole thing had
been a horrible nightmare. She knew how highly respected Dr. Kronbach was in Lindau and felt that nobody would
believe her if she spoke up about what happened. She told her sister Jana who had nodded off as
soon as Kronbach injected her and slept through everything. Jana didn't know whether the doctor
had assaulted her too, but if he had, she felt it was best that she didn't know.
The girls eventually told their mother, who scolded them for making such an allegation against a good man.
Following the interview about Laura Stieler with Barbara Furkel,
the public backlash against Dieter Kronbach was immense. By the end of 1997, his medical
licence was revoked and he had to sell his practice. In addition to the Mauer sisters,
at least two other patients came forward claiming they too had been sexually assaulted by the doctor in the past.
None of the alleged survivors were able to press charges due to the lack of evidence,
but the public condemnation
reignited discussion about Kolinka Bomberski's death and the case started getting media attention outside of Germany.
Andrei Bomberski quit his job so that he could devote all of his time to
pursuing Dieter Kronbach. Knowing that he frequently travelled to Austria and Switzerland,
Andrzej visited police and custom posts throughout both countries, handing out dossiers containing
photos of Kronbach, newspaper articles detailing the allegations against him, and judicial
warrants for his arrest.
The reactions were mixed.
Some treated Andre as though he was crazy, while others were willing to listen to his
story.
Either way, his efforts paid off in early January 2000, when a police officer in Western Austria recognised
Dieter Kronbach from one of André's photos and placed him under arrest.
He was detained as per the terms of the European Convention on Extradition that was in place
at the time.
German officials called for his release, arguing that Kronbach had been cleared of any wrongdoing
in his home country, and that the French arrest warrant was therefore a violation of his rights.
French officials didn't argue against this, and Kronbach was subsequently released and free to
return to Germany. Kronbach and his legal team had been arguing against his manslaughter conviction
in France ever since the sentence was handed down back in 1995. They petitioned to the European
Court of Human Rights, asserting that France was wrong to conduct a trial without Kronbach
or a legal representative there to defend him.
In 2001, the court concluded that by trying Kronbach in absentee, France had violated several stipulations set out in the European Convention on Human Rights.
They found that he'd been denied a fair hearing and his right to appeal,
and that the sentence could therefore
no longer be enforced. The court voided the conviction and ordered that the French government
compensate Cronbach with 100,000 francs for costs incurred, which was around 15,000 euros at the time.
This was a major blow for Andrzej Bomberski, whose allegations against Kronbach
were finally being taken seriously after years of denial. He implored French officials to appeal
the decision to the Grand Chamber of the European Court of Human Rights, but his request was denied.
They also refused his request to re-examine Kronbach's 1995 trial.
The entire legal process had been incredibly gruelling for André, both emotionally and
financially, but still he refused to give up. André was convinced that the French authorities were prioritising their relationship with the
Germany over justice for Kalinka. This suspicion only grew after he became aware of a report from
Crombac's legal team that claimed public prosecutors in Paris had assured them that
Crombac's sentence wouldn't be enforced. In André's view, the French had failed in their duty to catch Crombac,
who was now living freely as a convicted rapist in his home country.
In 2002, he filed a complaint against several French magistrates and prosecutors,
alleging corruption and obstruction of justice. As André's newly appointed lawyer explained to the French television
show Bring in the Accused, it was an attempt to wake up a sleeping machine by the implementation
of an explosion. A judge ruled there were no grounds for André's complaint and that the
allegations wouldn't be investigated further.
The entire Kalinka-Bombarski case was transferred back to Germany, where a new prosecutor determined
yet again that no charges would be pressed against Dieter Kronbach in relation to the
teenager's death. André was aware that he'd earned a particular reputation within the French legal circles as
an annoyance. As much as this hurt him, it made him all the more determined to continue with the fight.
In 2004, the European Union implemented a new system known as the European Arrest Warrant.
This aimed to simplify and streamline the extradition process for suspects
within the EU so that they could be transferred from one EU state to another without the need for
specific extradition treaties. As a result, French prosecutors issued a fresh European arrest warrant
for Dieter Kronbach. German officials denied it again, on the grounds that the case was closed.
Although André seemed to hit a dead end at every turn, he wasn't alone in his quest for justice.
By this point, a concerned citizen had created a group in support of Andre's cause
titled Justice for Kalinka, which soon amassed over 1,000 members from all walks of life.
Members held rallies, wrote letters to people in positions of power, and created a website
detailing all the available information about Andre's legal struggles.
German filmmaker Hilke Zing was among those following
Kalinka's case. In 2006, she released a documentary dedicated to the allegations against
Dieter Kronbach titled, Kalinka's Last Journey, which featured interviews with the Mauer sisters.
After the documentary aired, Hilke received a letter from Crombac in
which he claimed that the sisters were lying about being drugged and sexually assaulted during
their trip to the south of France. Crombac said he barely knew the girls and had never taken them
on a holiday. Yet, the Mauer sisters had provided Hilke with photographs that proved the trip had
taken place, and these had been broadcast in the documentary. Speaking about Kronbach to the
Guardian, Hilke later said, "...I have no idea if he has problems with reality."
if he has problems with reality. Around the same time that the documentary aired, a German librarian named Petra Steffen sat down at her computer. Petra lived approximately 400
kilometres from Lindau in the German town of Rodenthal. Her regular doctor had recently
passed away and she'd been given the name of his replacement.
A curious person by nature, Petra typed the name of the new doctor into Google.
One of the first things that popped up was the Justice for Kalinka website followed by
Hilke Zingings documentary.
Petra was stunned as she learned about the crimes Dr. Dede Kronbach had been convicted of and
discovered that he'd been banned from practising medicine entirely. She booked an appointment to
see if the new doctor in town was indeed the same Dr. Kronbach she was reading about. After
confirming that it was, Petra wasted no time in reporting him.
Further investigation revealed that Dieter Kronbach had been working as a locum doctor
all over Germany ever since his medical licence was revoked after his rape conviction back in 1997.
He'd gotten away with it by producing a photocopy of his old medical licence, claiming that
the original had been stolen.
Crumbach was charged with 28 cases of fraud and 19 cases of illegally practising medicine.
He was placed under arrest just as the authorities suspected he was about to flee overseas. According to the Netflix documentary
My Daughter's Killer, police found him with a suitcase containing clothing, cash and a
penis pump used to treat erectile dysfunction. He was subject to a psychiatric assessment,
with two psychiatrists concluding that he was a chronic liar, sexual predator,
and a narcissist who believed he was outside the law.
Kronbach was subsequently convicted and sentenced to two years and four months in a German prison.
He served 18 months before being released early for good behaviour in June 2008.
released early for good behaviour in June 2008. By this point, 26 years had passed since Kalinka Bomberski's death.
Under French law, a 30-year statute of limitations meant there were only four years left in which
legal action could be taken against Adida Kronbach in relation to Kalinka's death.
After that, not only would he be free from facing any punishment,
but he could also choose to sue Andrzej Bomberski for defamation.
Following Kronbach's early release from prison, the Paris Court of Appeal admitted that his 1995 trial in absentia had been distorted under pressure from Germany.
The French warrant for his arrest was still in place, but other than that, in the eyes of the law,
André Bomberski had exhausted all possible options when it came to getting justice for his daughter.
It was important to André that Kronbach knew he hadn't been forgotten.
André travelled to Germany and tracked Kronbach down to Scheidegg, a small market town 20 kilometres
inland from Lindau near the Austrian border. He visited every once in a while to keep an eye on Kronbach and to make his presence known.
Then in September 2009, Andre noticed a for-sale sign at the front of Kronbach's apartment.
He spoke to some neighbours who told him that Kronbach had accepted a job in West Africa.
With the clock ticking and Kronbach on the move again, Andre knew what was now or
never. I had enough in my head, he later told the Guardian. I knew that the French government would
do nothing. I knew that the German government would do nothing. I decided that I had to do something. to this episode's sponsors. What if everything you thought you knew about your own child was a lie? Ellen Pompeo and Mark DuPlace star in Good American Family.
In this all-new limited series, a couple adopt what they believe is an 8-year-old girl, but
when concerns soon arise, it forces them to question her actual identity.
Told from multiple perspectives, Good American Family is inspired by the true events behind
the disturbing story of Natalia Grace and unpacks the case
that spiraled from private suspicion to public spectacle.
Streaming March 19th only on Disney Plus. services, you support Casefile to continue to deliver quality content."
It was just after 3.15 on the morning of Sunday October 18 2009 when a call came through to
police in the French city of Moulouse.
Go to the Rue de Tilleux lacros across from the customs office, an anonymous caller said.
You'll find a man tied up. The police station was only four blocks away.
Two squad cars raced to the narrow street near the centre of town. There, in a courtyard nestled
between two buildings, they found an elderly man lying on the ground
behind an iron gate. It was Dieter Kronbach. He was curled on the pavement, his hands and feet
bound together, and his mouth gagged with duct tape. His face was barely recognisable,
battered, bruised, and covered in blood. One of the police officers removed the tape
from his mouth. Bomberski is behind it, he said. Kronbach was rushed to hospital where he received
treatment for a fractured skull. He told the police that the previous evening he'd been at his home in Shidek when there was a knock
on the door. He answered it, only to find an unfamiliar man standing there.
Are you Krombark? the man asked with a thick Russian accent.
When Krombark answered yes, the man punched him in the face.
answered yes, the man punched him in the face. Two other men appeared and launched a violent attack.
They managed to bind and gag Kronbach before throwing him into the backseat of their car.
As the men drove along, Kronbach struggled and begged for his life.
He offered to pay the trio 50,000 euros if they'd just let him go.
Then one of the men pulled out a knife and threatened to chop his penis off.
Suddenly the driver pulled over and ordered the knife-wielding man out of the car. He said they
had over 300 kilometres to go and couldn't risk doing the drive with a dangerous man with a weapon.
The car eventually crossed the border into France and stopped in Moulouse,
the first town they came upon that had its own police station and courthouse.
The men dumped Kronbach, called the police, and fled.rei Bomberski wasn't with them, but Krombach had no doubt that he'd orchestrated the whole
thing.
The police looked into Andrei's whereabouts the night before and confirmed he'd been in
Toulouse the entire time.
However, they soon received word that Andrei had booked a flight to Moulouse that was scheduled
to arrive
that evening. At 5pm, they drove to the hotel he'd booked in and placed him under arrest.
Andre seemed genuinely shocked. He denied having anything to do with Kronbach's abduction
and claimed that he'd only travelled to Maluz because someone had informed him that Kronbach was there.
However, a search of his hotel room turned up 19,000 euros in cash,
leading investigators to suspect that he'd paid someone to carry out the attack on his behalf.
Investigators visited Kronbach's home in Scheidegg and found a utility bill near the scene.
On it was the address and phone number of an individual named Anton Krasnichy,
a Kosovan who lived in the Austrian town of Brigens.
Andrei Bomberski had recently spent time in Brigands, which was right near the German border,
just 20 kilometres from Dieter Kronbach's home. Police looked into Anton Krasniqi and discovered
that his brother-in-law had worked as a German translator for Andrzej as he spread the word around
Brigands about Kronbach's crimes. He wanted the townsfolk there to be aware of Kronbach in case he crossed the border,
at which point his international arrest warrant could be enforced.
He'd been putting up posters in cafes, bars and restaurants, appealing for assistance.
At the police station in Malouse, Andrzej Bomberski admitted to knowing Anton Krasniyczy,
but he continued to deny having
anything to do with the kidnapping plot. He said that Krasniqi had shown up at his hotel in Braganz
and offered to help transport Dita Kronbach to France. Krasniqi said he wasn't interested in money,
but just wanted to do what he believed to be the right thing.
As a father himself, he felt compelled to help.
Krasnichy explained that there were two Russian mobsters who would help him do the job for
2,000 euros apiece.
He didn't provide any more details, simply telling Andre, the less you know, the better.
Andre told the police that he insisted on paying for any expenses involved,
but asked no further questions. He claimed he didn't know when or how it was going to go down,
and that he only learned about it when Krasnichy called him from Maluze to let
him know that it was over. Anton Krasnichy confirmed Andrei's version of events. Having
served prison time before, he said he didn't care about the consequences. Appearing on My
Daughter's Killer, Krasnichy said he was moved by the battle fought by Andrei Bomberski.
This is a father who never gave up, Krasnichy remarked. He knew where his daughter's killer
was living and I had a plan to help him, hands on. As a father, I was fascinated by the strength of this man. He's a really great dad. It moves you,
and you think if that happened to you, what would you do as a father? What are you capable of doing
for your child?" For their role in the violent kidnapping, Anton Krasnichy and one of his accomplices, Kacha Bablavani, were also arrested.
Andrei Bomberski was hit with various charges, including kidnapping, criminal conspiracy,
and complicity in causing violence. Charges which came with the possibility of 15 years in prison.
Andrei's lawyer argued that his client had acted under moral duress,
knowing that if he could just get Dieter Kronbach to France, then the legal saga
regarding Kalinka would finally be over. André was free to go, but under judicial supervision,
awaiting trial. When he left the Malouse police station, several officers gathered in the lobby and gave him
a standing ovation.
As he waited for his day in court, he told the guardian,
If I should have to go to prison, I will go to prison.
Most important is that Krombark is judged, even if he is not found guilty.
For me, it was necessary to do justice.
I think I will find some peace. This is my last fight, and I shall dedicate it to the memory of
my daughter." He told La Depeche newspaper,
newspaper. I can now smile. After 27 years of fighting, I can finally say in my prayers to Kalinka that the promises I made her are beginning to be kept. The biggest part of
my fight is finished. But I will not be completely at peace until Kronbach is in front of the
court to answer for the death of my daughter."
Dieter Crombach recovered from his injuries in hospital under police custody.
Regardless of how he'd ended up in France, the arrest warrant for Kalinka's manslaughter
was still valid, and it was announced that Crombach would face a retrial in Paris, this time with both
himself and his legal counsel required to be present. Kronbach's defence team tried to have
him repatriated to Germany or to have his trial heard by the European Court of Human Rights,
but their requests were denied. They argued that the case should be thrown out entirely as the rules of
the European Union declared that an individual could not be tried twice for the same crime.
Kronbach's lawyer told reporters the whole situation was a farce, remarking,
how can he be cleared in one EU country and then tried in another?
And how can he face trial after being illegally kidnapped?
With France refusing to release Dider Kronbach, the German Department of Justice issued an
international arrest warrant for André Bomberski. The French authorities refused to extradite him,
which came as little surprise to those who had
been following the case since the beginning. Many were sympathetic to André's plight and felt he
didn't deserve to be punished, while others spoke out against vigilante justice and the extreme
violence used during the kidnapping. When it was announced that Andre intended to release a book about the case and his struggle
trying to achieve justice for Kalinka, Kronbach's lawyers tried unsuccessfully to have it banned,
saying there was no way their client could receive a fair trial if the publication went
ahead.
Kronbach's lawyer blamed anti-German sentiment for the support André received, telling the
BBC,
"...the way this affair has been covered in France is shocking.
Of course it is heartbreaking for Mr. Bomberski, but only one side of the story has been told.
Naturally, Mr. Kronbach protests his innocence.
But that's not even the point.
My client was cleared of guilt in his own country.
He was then kidnapped and taken illegally to another European country where he is now
going to be tried for murder.
Only in France could that possibly be allowed to happen.
Although the lack of physical evidence still meant Dieter Kronbach couldn't be charged
for raping Kalinka, a pre-trial review of the evidence led a team of medical professors
to determine that the injury to Kalinka's labia could only have happened while she was
still alive.
They could find no other explanation
for the white substance found in her vagina other than semen. Using advanced technology that didn't
exist at the time of the crime, they analysed Kalinka's heart and lung tissue and discovered
the presence of a benzodiazepine, a powerful sedative that conclusively proved
that Kalinka had been drugged on the night that she died.
In the lead up to Kronbach's trial, several survivors of his sexual assault came forward
from Germany willing to testify against him.
One of these women was a former patient of Kronbach's who, in 1993, had been given a
part-time job working as a cleaner for his medical practice. According to her testimony,
one day she arrived at the practice around lunchtime to find nobody there except Dr. Kronbach.
Kronbach said she was due for her iron infusion and he might as well do it there and then to
save her coming back later. The woman agreed, at which point Krombach allegedly drugged and raped
her. Knowing he had money and influence in town, the woman had been too afraid to report what he
had done. But the most surprising witness was a woman named Isabel, who had been a patient
of Dr. Krombark's during the time he was married to Wander's ex-wife, Danielle. Isabel, who had been
just 16 at the time, claimed that she began an affair with Krombark, who was around 20 years her
senior. According to Isabel, Kronbach would drug an unsuspecting
Danielle by slipping drops of sedatives into her drinks. Once she passed out upstairs,
he would call Isabel over and the two would have sex in the downstairs living room.
Up until this point, Danielle and Kronbach had remained on good terms following their
divorce in the late 1980s.
They kept in contact even when Danielle moved back to Toulouse and she continued to support
his innocence in Kalinka's death.
If anything, she felt that André's campaign against Kronbach had only served to bring
the two of them closer together.
Danielle had even appeared at a pre-trial hearing in 2010 to attest to Kronbach's good
character, telling the court that he would never rape anyone because he had no trouble
attracting women on his own.
She explained that she only left him because he was cheating on her, and she'd come to accept
that it was part of his personality to be attracted to anything that was forbidden.
But when Isabelle's story came to light, a French prosecutor advised Danielle to file a civil claim
against Kronbach so she could join the prosecution party and get full access to the case file.
she could join the prosecution party and get full access to the case file.
Danielle followed this advice and for the first time ever, learned about the true extent of the allegations against her ex-husband. It was also the first time she'd read the reports that described
cobalt filessate as a dangerous drug. Krombach had never warned her of any side effects, despite administering
it to herself, Kalinka, and hundreds of his patients regularly. Furthermore, it was only
through reading the case file that Danielle heard Isabelle's story about Kronbach sedating her so
she wouldn't know he was having sex with the 16-year-old downstairs.
Danielle's world came crashing down. She thought back to the night of Kalinka's death and realised she'd slept very deeply. As she began to view everything through a different lens,
she wondered whether Kronbach could have drugged her then too. She later told the courts,
when you've done it once, you can do it again.
Dieter Kronbach's trial was delayed multiple times as his legal team exhausted all possible
avenues attempting to have the case thrown out. It was finally set
to go ahead in late March 2011, almost a year and a half after the kidnapping and just shy of 29
years since Kalinka Bomberski's death. 75-year-old Kronbach tried one last time to have the case thrown out, telling the court,
I did not kill Kalinka. I want to stress that I am not guilty, that I did not kill Kalinka,
and that I did not rape Kalinka. The trial commenced, but five days in,
Kronbach's lawyers announced that he'd suffered a heart attack and ordered that the trial be called off indefinitely. They accused the French legal system of contributing to the stress of the
ailing man, who they said was still suffering from the injuries sustained during the kidnapping.
The trial was put on hold but resumed again five months later in October 2011.
hold but resumed again five months later in October 2011. Danielle listened in disgust as various witnesses testified to the sexual abuse they'd suffered at Krombark's hand.
She couldn't believe this was the same man she'd lived with and defended for so many years.
Now convinced he was lying about what happened to Kalinka on the night she died,
Danielle told one journalist,
I would have appreciated it if Dieter Kronbach had told me it was an accident.
I panicked and I lied.
I would have understood.
I may have forgiven him.
But now I can't forgive him. But now, I can't forgive him." A parting gift Krombark had given her
after their separation took on a whole new meaning. Figurines of the three wise monkeys
symbolising the proverb, see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil.
The trial ran for three weeks before the verdict was delivered.
Just like the Paris courts 16 years earlier, Dieter Kronbach was found guilty of willfully
causing violence towards Kalinka that resulted in her unintentional death.
Again, he was sentenced to 15 years in a French prison, a sentence that could now be enforced.
Andrei Bomberski's 30-year crusade had finally come to an end.
Outside court, he told reporters,
Of course, my first thought is for Kalinka. I have achieved what I promised, a complete and fair trial.
I have achieved what I promised, a complete and fair trial. Justice has been done in her memory, and I will be able to mourn for her." He visited the cemetery shortly after and placed a bunch of
flowers on Kalinka's grave, saying out loud, "...I promised that I would give you justice. Now,
you can rest in peace."
But the saga still wasn't over for Andre. Seven months later in May 2014, he faced his
own trial in the Maloos Magistrates Court for the role he played in Kronbach's kidnapping. Bomberski's lawyer argued
that his client shouldn't be convicted for essentially enforcing a decision that had
already been handed down by the French court, stating, "...he acted that way to fulfill his
duties as a father. He also acted so that justice could fulfill its duty."
He also acted so that justice could fulfil its duty. Andrzej Bomberski was found guilty of criminal conspiracy and complicity in aggravated assault,
but cleared of orchestrating the abduction.
He was given a one year suspended sentence, while the men who carried out the attack,
Anton Krasniqi and Kacha Bablovani,
were both sentenced to one year behind bars. Meanwhile, Dieter Kronbach spent the next few
years appealing his sentence on medical grounds. He asked to be transferred to a nursing home,
claiming he was suffering from life-threatening cardiovascular disease. His appeals were rejected until February 2020,
when the courts agreed to suspend his sentence due to the state of his health.
After serving just six of his 15-year sentence, 84-year-old Kronbach was returned to Germany,
a decision that infuriated Andrzej Bomberski. But six months later in September 2020,
Dieter Kronbach passed away at the age of 85.
According to an article written by Joshua Hammer for the Attervest magazine,
German officials have long denied that anything was done to protect Dieter Kronbach.
German officials have long denied that anything was done to protect Dieter Kronbach. In Hammer's opinion, quote,
"...what seems more likely is that sloppy forensic work, bureaucratic inertia, and at
some level a desire to close ranks against foreign interference in a domestic matter
had caused the Germans to resist pursuing the case. André has spoken openly about the mixed
feelings he has about his campaign for getting justice for Kalinka. He told a French radio
station that many people, his father in particular, always told him to drop the case and live a normal
life. He explained, "...but personally, if I had dropped it, I don't think I could have lived a normal life. He explained, but personally, if I had dropped it, I don't think
I could have lived a normal life. Opinions remain divided about the lengths
Andre went to secure Crombarch's conviction. Some view him as a hero, while others argue
that violence should never be condoned and it wasn't Andre's place to take the
law into his own hands. His lawyer told the documentary My Daughter's Killer,
Mr. Bomberski is a moral force. He isn't a vigilante. Andre isn't phased by public opinion. To him, all that matters is
that he fulfilled his promise to his daughter. In 2022, the producers of My Daughter's Killer
asked Andre what he would say to a father who found themselves in a similar situation. Andre responded,
I would tell him as it's been 39 years, don't waste your life. I fought like Don Quixote de la
Marcha against windmills. I got justice for Kalinga, but honestly, these battles are extreme.
Andre said he no longer trusted anyone, but remarked,
I hope that Kalinka is in heaven and that she knows about everything I did for her.
I think that she deserved it. With the FIZ loyalty program, you get rewarded just for having a mobile plan.
You know, for texting and stuff.
And if you're not getting rewards like extra data and dollars off with your mobile plan,
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Details at Fizz.ca.
What if everything you thought you knew about your own child was a lie? Ellen Pompeo and Mark
DuPlace star in Good American Family. In this all-new limited series, a couple adopt what they
believe is an eight-year-old girl, but when concerns soon arise, it forces them to question
her actual identity. Told from multiple perspectives, Good American Family is inspired by the true events
behind the disturbing story of Natalia Grace
and unpacks the case that spiraled from private suspicion
to public spectacle.
Streaming March 19th, only on Disney+.