Mind of a Serial Killer - The American Bluebeard Pt. 1
Episode Date: February 2, 2026In the early 1900s, a charming German immigrant used lies, fake identities, and newspaper marriage ads to lure women into his web. What began as romance quickly turned into manipulation, financial rui...n, and disappearance. Known as “The American Bluebeard,” Helmuth Schmidt built a double life fueled by control, deception, and a growing appetite for risk. As his lies multiplied and his behavior escalated, the women closest to him paid the price. This episode explores how Schmidt crafted his image, exploited trust, and crossed the line from fraud into something far more dangerous—setting the stage for one of America’s most disturbing early serial killers. If you’re new here, don’t forget to follow Serial Killers & Murderous Minds to never miss a case! For ad-free listening and early access to episodes, subscribe to Crime House+ on Apple Podcasts. Serial Killers & Murderous Minds is a Crime House Original Podcast, powered by PAVE Studios 🎧 Need More to Binge? Listen to other Crime House Originals Clues, Crimes Of…, Murder True Crime Stories, Crime House 24/7, and more wherever you get your podcasts! Follow me on Social Instagram: @Crimehouse TikTok: @Crimehouse Facebook: @crimehousestudios YouTube: @crimehousestudios To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hi, Crime House community. It's Vanessa Richardson.
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Everyone tells the occasional lie.
Maybe to get out of a sticky situation, to save face, or to make themselves look better.
Usually, white lies are harmless, as long as the person telling them knows where to draw the line.
But the lies Helmut Schmidt told were anything but harmless.
In the early 20th century, Helmut used newspaper ads to lure women into marrying him.
Sometimes it was a ruse to take their money.
Other times, he did it just for kicks.
But most of the time, what the women thought was a match made in heaven
turned out to be a fatal attraction.
The human mind is powerful.
It shapes how we think, feel, love, and hate.
But sometimes it drives me.
It drives people to commit the unthinkable.
This is serial killers and murderous minds, a crime house original.
I'm Vanessa Richardson.
And I'm forensic psychologist Dr. Tristan Engels.
Every Monday and Thursday, we uncover the darkest minds in history,
analyzing what makes a killer.
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Before we get started, you should know that this episode contains discussion of domestic abuse, suicide, and murder.
Listener discretion is advised.
Today we begin our deep dive on Helmut Schmidt, a serial killer who lured, trapped, and killed so many brides.
He earned the nickname the American Bluebeard after the folktale about a man who murders his wives.
As Vanessa goes through the story, I'll be talking about things like how some killers,
control and manipulation tactics as a game, how changing M.O.s can serve as thrill-seeking behavior,
and how being driven by the thrill can cause killers to slip up. And as always, we'll be asking the
question, what makes a killer? Helmut Schmidt built his entire life on lies. Very little is known
about his early years, and that's exactly how he liked it. Based on what we do know,
Helmut Emile Max Schmidt was born in Rostock, Germany on July 4, 1876.
He was the illegitimate son of an aristocrat named Julius Schmidt,
and even though Helmut didn't grow up in a traditional household,
he had a relatively privileged upbringing.
When he got older, he reportedly attended Heidelberg University.
After graduating, Helmut worked as a watchmaker and jeweler,
and eventually opened his own jewelry shop in Berlin.
He was successful and seemed to lead a quiet, unassuming life.
But wherever he went, Helmut stood out because he had a collection of scars across his face,
six on the left side of his chin and two on his forehead.
They were extremely noticeable, especially since Helmut's appearance was pretty unremarkable otherwise.
He was average height and a little on the thin side.
That might have been part of the reason Helmut liked to brag that he got his scars by
fighting in duels. Maybe he wanted to seem tough. However, non-fatal duels were a popular sporting
event among college men in Germany at the time. They were known as mensurs or student duels.
So it's possible he exaggerated just how much danger he'd really faced.
This might be challenging to really explore when we don't have accurate background information
on Helmut, but even still, if what we do have is from his own reports, that is also clinically
revealing, even if he was an unreliable historian. At a minimum, it's possible that Helmut was using
his scars and stories regarding where they came from to compensate for insecurity. So if he felt
ordinary, powerless, or dismissed in life, then projecting strength and masculinity was likely
his way of regulating his shame or self-doubt. But I am very curious where he truly did get them
from. Was it the dueling, or was it a traumatic accident or something more sinister?
like abuse in his own home, for example.
That missing piece would be really useful
in understanding him a little bit more.
Do you think it's possible
that having quote-unquote illegitimate parentage
would have made him feel like he needed
to talk himself up to people more?
Oh yeah, that's definitely possible,
especially if we consider the historical
and cultural context and the associated stigmas.
One common way people do that
is by exaggerating achievements
or fabricating their history
or creating symbols of strength
to overwrite their shapes,
from that. So inflating himself can be an attempt to control how others define him before they can
reduce him even further. So in that sense, exaggeration can become less about deception for fun
and more about an effort to outrun an identity that he didn't get to choose for himself, which may
have been how this started out for him to begin with. Helmut didn't just tell tall tales to win
people over, what he may have lacked in physical attractiveness he made up for in magnetism.
He was so successful with women that he even believed he could control them by using a hypnotic
gaze.
I want to pause here because that hypnotic gaze claim might sound delusional or psychotic at
first, but that's not always the case.
Believing your charming or influential isn't the same as losing touch with reality necessarily.
This seems more like grandiosity and self-mythologize.
which is now an established pattern of his.
He wasn't detached from reality.
He was crafting an image.
This kind of exaggerated belief was formed with intention.
It was global.
It started off with the dueling
and making up stories about his scars
and now onto this.
It doesn't seem fixed
like we would expect in psychosis,
at least not yet.
Well, just before the turn of the 20th century,
when Helmut was in his mid-20s,
he used this tactic on a woman named Anita,
who found him charming and iriscus
resistible. Helmut and Anita eventually got married, and in the year 1900, they had a daughter they
named Gertrude. It seemed like Helmut loved family life, but only because for him, being the man of the
house meant being able to boss his wife and daughter around. Helmut didn't provide for his family
out of true love, but because he liked being able to threaten to take it all away. The Schmitz put
down roots in Hamburg, Germany, where Helmut bought an impressive house. Over the years, he
lavished his wife and daughter with fine clothing and jewelry, and he also forced them into
obedience with military-style discipline. If they ever did anything that went against his wishes,
he'd become enraged. As Gertrude got older, she and Anita knew they could never stand up to him.
Not even when Helmut started spending more time with his bookkeeper, 26-year-old Margarita Beres.
On top of that, whenever they were out in public, Helmut started referring to Margarita,
as his sister. Anita knew something was up, but there was nothing she could do. She didn't want her
husband to put her out on the streets. Helmut has positioned himself as the sole provider,
financially isolating Anita. He's then vacillating between giving her lavish gifts and abuse,
which is classic coercive control and how trauma bonds form. He's leveraging resources. He's making
dependence the price of safety and obedience the price of staying housed and being rewarded. And that
dynamic creates space for open boundary violations. And referring to his bookkeeper as his sister in
public feels like a dominance display for both Anita and Margarita. He's signaling that he can do
what he wants with compliance and without consequence because he controls the resources. And when
someone knows their partner can't afford to lose that stability, humiliation becomes a tool.
This is a humiliation tactic. It's a tragic pattern we see to this day in relationships
where there is intimate partner violence.
This seems like a big question, but in general,
where does infidelity usually stem from?
Is it fair to say that for Helmut,
it's more about power than anything?
And also, what does it say about him
that he started an affair with his own employee?
That's an excellent question.
Infidelity is rarely just about sex,
but it also doesn't stem from one specific cause.
It can come from insecurity,
dissatisfaction in the marriage or partnership,
emotional disconnection, thrill or novelty seeking.
But I think in Helmut's case, it's about power.
And having an affair with his employee
strengthens that power even more.
That dynamic is imbalanced from the start in Helmut's favor.
His employee's livelihood depends on him.
Much in the same way his wife and child's livelihoods depend on him,
making consent blurry and control vastly easier for him.
He could have chosen anyone else,
But the fact that he chose another woman who's dependent on him
indicates, at least to me, that his infidelity is truly about dominance,
control, entitlement, and the thrill of violating boundaries without consequence.
Helmut didn't have control over everything, though.
By 1913, when he was 37, he heard through some well-connected friends that war was on the horizon.
Being healthy and young, Helmut would likely be drafted into what would eventually
be known as World War I, but he had no desire to go off and fight. Instead, he made plans to flee
to the United States. He packed a trunk full of jewelry from his shop and bought tickets for himself,
Anita and Gertrude, for a ship bound for New York. But there may have been other reasons
Helmut wanted to get out of Dodge, because around the same time, German authorities filed an
arrest warrant for Helmut on fraud charges. However, he skipped town before they could bring him into
custody. Helmut made his way west in the fall of 1913. However, he boarded the ship alone,
because Anita and Gertrude planned to follow him a week later. That wasn't all, Helmut had also
bought a ticket for Margarita and told Anita to bring her with them. Anita wasn't happy about this,
but she didn't want to think about how Helmut would react if she arrived without her,
so she agreed. When Helmut made it to New York on November 6th,
1913, he gave the name Max Schmidt. Max was his middle name, but this was one of the first of
many times he would use a false identity. He got an apartment in the East Village where Anita,
Gertrude, and Margarita soon joined him. After a few months in the city, Helmut purchased a farm
in Lakewood, New Jersey, and moved everyone there. He said it was because he wanted more fresh air,
but in reality, Helmut likely wanted more isolation because he had to be a lot of the same thing. He said he had
had sinister plans brewing, and he wanted to avoid scrutiny.
When the family moved to Lakewood, Helmut told Gertrude, who was now 13, to tell everyone
that Margarita was his sister, just like he'd done back in Germany.
This only made Anita more resentful of their situation, but Helmut said Margarita had
no money and nowhere else to go.
Even though Anita was unhappy, Helmut's guilt trip worked, and she stopped arguing.
Helmut shift tactics here. Instead of relying solely on domineering control, he moves into guilt-tripping.
Earlier, his power came from money, housing, and intimidation. But during periods of transition, like moving countries or financial shifts, control can slip slightly, especially with Anita's resentment growing.
And guilt-tripping works by hijacking empathy. So by framing Margarita as helpless with no money and nowhere to go, Helmut appeals.
to a part of Anita that she identifies with. Anita herself likely feels trapped in powerless
already, still hoping for rescue of her own even, so that makes the manipulation especially effective
on her, and it's cruel. It is elements of gaslighting, too, because he's forcing her to question
her own reality and her own judgment. At the same time, Helmut recasts himself as reasonable,
and he positions Anita as the morally responsible one for Margarita's suffering.
That flip alone can silence protest without overt cruelty even though it is still coercive.
So instead of fear, he's using moral obligation and pressure.
This kind of shift often happens when an abuser senses resistance.
And guilt is particularly effective when the victim is isolated and dependent, which Anita already is,
but now even more so after being completely uprooted and moved to another country.
For the next few months, the Schmidt household seemed to exist without any major incidents,
but that was all about to change.
Money had been tight ever since they'd come to the U.S., and one day in March 1914,
while Gertrude was getting ready for school, Anita told her she was heading into the city that day to pawn some jewelry.
However, when Gertrude returned home from school later on, Anita wasn't there.
hours passed as Gertrude waited for her mother to walk through the door.
Then hours became days.
Gertrude grew increasingly distressed,
especially because Helmut wasn't doing anything about it.
He didn't go into the city to try and look for his wife.
He didn't even alert the authorities about her disappearance.
Instead, he eventually told Gertrude that her mother had gone back to Germany
and that he didn't have the money to track her down.
If Gertrude wanted to question Helmut, she was too afraid.
After that, Anita was never seen or heard from again.
As her fate remained a mystery, Helmut continued on with his double life.
He was about to find new ways to lure and ensnare women,
and soon he started playing a deadly game.
In the spring of 1914, 37-year-old Helmut Schmidt was living in New Jersey with his wife,
Anita, his daughter Gertrude, and his mistress, Margarita, when Anita suddenly disappeared.
Helmut didn't look for Anita, and authorities never questioned him about her disappearance.
Anita had disappeared right after she told Gertrude she was going to pawn some jewelry.
She believed they needed the money. In reality, Helmut wanted to keep the jewels and expensive
trinkets he'd brought from Germany for other purposes. After Anita's disappearance, Helmut
moved on quickly. Even though Margarita, who he'd been cheating on Anita with, lived with him on the
farm, he was ready to look for a new wife. Helmut started placing marriage ads in the New York
Review and the New York Herald. On November 8th, 1914, he ran one that said, educated, in good
circumstances, owns seven-room house, large garden, seeks suitable lady or widow for marriage,
only well-meaning offers with full description of circumstances.
By full description of circumstances, Helmut meant finances.
He wanted someone who could help support the household.
A 43-year-old woman named Anna Hakeh answered his ad,
and they started exchanging letters.
Helmut told Anna his name was John Switt,
and he was a machinist with some good job opportunities in Detroit.
He said he was looking for someone to move there with him.
Anna was interested, and she told Helmut she had $1,400 in savings.
That's about $45,000 in today's money.
Helmut liked the sound of that.
He courted Anna for three weeks, writing her flirtatious letters,
and sending her luxurious gifts, including some of the jewelry he'd brought from Germany.
Anna was enchanted, and on December 14, 1914, just a few weeks after they first started writing,
Anna and Helmut got married in New York.
Helmut used his fake name, which meant Anna's last name was now Swit.
This made it all the more difficult for Anna to track him down
when he suddenly disappeared just three days later.
He had never given her his real address.
And since he'd used a fake name, Anna had no way to get in touch with her new husband.
And not only was he gone, but all her savings were too.
Anna knew that she'd been swindled,
but she didn't know that her groom
had also been courting another woman all along.
Adele Ulrich was a single 41-year-old woman
working as a bookkeeper for a brewery
when she answered Helmut's ad in the New York Review.
Like he had with Anna,
Helmut wrote Adele charming, flirty letters.
The only difference was that Adele knew her suitor
by the name Emil Braun.
Clearly, the use of different names while doing this was partly for cover so that he wouldn't be identified because he's a burgeoning con man, much like the Tinder Swindler, whose wife disappeared mysteriously and surely wants this new con to be successful as long as possible.
But this is also a psychological strategy.
Compartmentalization allows someone to split their life into separate identities, each with its own rules, responsibilities, and moral limits.
This is not new for Helmut.
He started doing this the moment he came to the United States when he went by Max Schmidt.
And then now we see John Switt and Emil Braun.
This is now a pattern.
And I'm trained in pattern recognition.
Each alias allowed him to step into a role with its own rules.
That's, again, compartmentalization.
By splitting himself this way, he didn't have to integrate his behavior across circumstances or relationships.
Betrayal and one identity didn't have to.
to register as betrayal in another. It's like he's starting over, starting fresh. That separation can
reduce feelings of guilt. It definitely dulls empathy if he has any to begin with and makes exploitation
feel justified or even clever rather than harmful. It also gave him control. Each woman interacted
with a curated version of him, isolated from the other curated versions of him. No overlap means
no challenging was likely going to happen to him.
Does this suggest a level of detachment?
I mean, I feel like it does.
Or do you think Helmut was just having fun,
toying with these women?
I think it's likely both.
I mean, it certainly starts with detachment.
And that started early.
He started curating a persona about himself
to fend against feelings of shame,
like we talked about when you highlighted
with, you know, the dueling
and trying to come up with stories
that amplified him in a positive way.
regarding his scars, that allowed him to feel powerful.
And because people bought it, it also likely gave him a thrill.
And not only did that detachment grow, but so did that enjoyment, because his deception
was working.
So then there comes the thrill and the fun with toying with people.
Well, Helmut not only used different names, but he also used different tactics to win people
over once he realized what they liked.
As you said, it was like a curated experience, a curated version of Helmut.
Instead of sending Adele lavish gifts, he enthralled her with stories about the duels he got into back in Germany and bragged about the scars on his face.
By November 20th, 1914, about two weeks after posting that ad that Adele responded to,
Helmut and Gertrude went to meet her in New York.
The three of them had a nice time chatting, but more importantly for Helmut, Adele shared that she had about $3,500 in savings.
That's about $110,000 today.
After that, Helmut started love bombing Adele with expensive gifts.
Now that she was interested in him as a man, he wanted to prove he was a worthy provider, too.
In one week, Helmut sent Adele three diamond rings, a silver mesh bag, silver spoons, and even fresh eggs and chickens.
But what really won Adele over was the way Helmut talked about wanting a loving mother for girls.
He'd told her that his wife had passed away from an illness and that their home was missing a woman's touch.
Adele had no idea that there was, in fact, a woman living with Helmut and Gertrude, Margarita,
and Helmut would make sure she never found out the truth.
In mid-December, Adele visited Helmut and Gertrude on their farm in New Jersey.
Margarita was also there that day, and Helmut introduced her as his sister.
Throughout her visit, Adele had a nagging feeling that Margarita was trying to tell her something,
but Helmut didn't let the two women speak to each other.
And a few days later, Margarita was completely out of the picture.
Helmut told Gertrude that Margarita had gone on a trip to New York,
where she got into an accident and died tragically.
However, he told Adele that she had run off to Denmark to get married.
Adele had no reason to question him, and on December 30th, 1914, she and Helmut were married.
Adele was excited to begin her new life as a wife and stepmother.
However, from the moment she stepped over the threshold, everything changed between her and
Helmut.
Once Helmut got access to Adele's finances, he started emotionally abusing her.
Not only did he openly cheat on her with multiple women in the neighborhood, but he started
berating her appearance, calling her ugly, and saying she looked much older than she claimed to be.
His comments often made her burst into tears. And even though she'd run out of the room so he
wouldn't see her cry, Adele could hear Helmut laughing at her as she ran out of the room.
This suggests that all of Helmut's earlier kindness and effort into winning over Adel was obviously
entirely performative. Once he achieved his goal and secured access,
to her finances, the relationship no longer served the same purpose, so his mask dropped. This is
instrumental. He wasn't bonding with Adele as a person. He was attaching to what she could provide him.
When the need for charm ended, control took its place. The emotional abuse, the insults who described,
the infidelity, the humiliation, which we know as a tool of his, served another function, too.
By attacking her self-worth, he weakened her ability to resist or leave. Laughing at her distress,
is particularly concerning because it shows emotional detachment and a lack of empathy.
Her pain wasn't a consequence to him. It was reinforcing.
Again, part of his enjoyment was this process.
Helmut's heel turn seemed to be part of his bigger plan.
The more he wore Adele down emotionally, the more money he drained from her account without any pushback.
Between all the emotional and now financial abuse, Adel became noticeably
depressed and suicidal, which Helmut saw as an opportunity to carry out the final, grim part of his
plan. Helmut bought a gun and left it on Adele's dresser. Later that night, his cruel comments
sent her running into the bedroom where she discovered the weapon. Adel picked it up and considered
whether she should use it to take her own life. Deep in thought and despair, she glanced up at her
reflection in the mirror, and to her shock and horror, she saw Helmut standing outside,
grinning at her. Adele quickly put the gun down and drew the curtains. After that, Adele carried on
safely for the next few weeks, but now that Helmut had taken all of her money, he was still plotting
how to get rid of her for good, and on January 30, 1915, he tried again. Helmut and Adel had been married
for a month at that point. That day, he took her, Gertrude, and a couple of neighbors on a drive
through some winding country roads. Adel was in the passenger seat next to him, and everyone else was in
the back. It was a peaceful day until all of a sudden Helmut swerved the car, sending Adele to the
floor and knocking her unconscious. When she woke up, she was sure that he'd done it on purpose,
and she was probably right. Let's talk about the reasoning behind Helmut's.
Mout's methods in both instances. I'm talking the gun and the car because it's clear his intent in
both cases was to kill Adele and get some enjoyment out of that. There's definitely sadistic qualities here.
Both methods offer plausible deniability. A suicide, even if it was coerced, would later be framed as
hysteria likely given the era's views of women's mental health, but also that would never be
pinned on him. The car accident or the car incident could be explained as an accident.
a mistake or even blamed on poor road conditions. Either scenario could be written off as a
tragedy rather than a murder. And second, the presence of a potential witness in this case is
daughter Gertrude likely didn't register as a threat to him. For people with strong entitlement
and even optimism bias, a witness who is loyal to them often feel like shields, not risks.
And these methods allowed him to maintain control without direct confrontation, a
Dell had no proof.
Who's going to listen to her, especially back then?
And even now, a lot of times women aren't listened to or believed.
Engineering harm this way let him stay emotionally detached while still orchestrating violence.
This car incident represents escalation.
When indirectly coercing her into suicide failed, he moved to a much more direct,
but still deniable method.
That shift really tells us this wasn't impulsive.
it was calculated, strategic, and again, instrumental.
And he's had two women in his life disappear without a trace.
So he's likely very emboldened by that success by now.
What do you make of Helmut's blend of methodical behavior,
like using multiple identities and planting a gun in Adele's room
and that terrifying image of him grinning at her through the window that was horrifying?
And the chaotic behavior, like trying to orchestrate that car accident.
Is it possible he has no real motive for his actions and is just a stone-cold psychopath?
So even psychopaths have motives for what they do.
They're never without motives.
It's the nature of their motive that we look at, and it's not always obvious, but it's there.
With Helmut, I think what we're seeing are multiple motives at once, which is actually common
in people with antisocial or psychopathic traits.
Planning and impulsivity can coexist.
The long cons like parasitic lifestyles, multiple identities,
identities, calculated marriages, exploitation, financial manipulation. These all serve as instrumental
goals like money, control, or escape. The more chaotic acts, like in this case the car incident,
tend to emerge when those calculated plans are threatened, were not effective, or if they're under
stress, or there's some kind of time-sensitive deadline. That's when their frustration,
entitlement and impatience take over.
In this case, when it comes to killing Adele,
I think that Helmut is motivated by financial exploitation,
power and dominance, risk management, entitlement,
thrill-seeking or stimulation,
statistic gratification, which is secondary, not primary,
and identity reinforcement or self-validation.
He's got a lot of motives here.
Helmut is a very complex, very, very ill man.
Well, Adele had finally seen enough of Helmut's true colors.
She knew she wasn't safe as long as she was married to him.
So after the car crash, he refused to take her to the hospital.
Instead, he called a doctor to the house.
The doctor prescribed painkillers, but Helmut wouldn't let Adele have any, so she suffered
in agony for days.
When the doctor returned for a follow-up visit, Adele tried to slip him a note with her brother's
address in New York.
In the note, Adele asked the doctor to notify her brother if she died.
However, Helmut caught her and took the note before the doctor could see it.
At the same time, Helmut seemed to realize that if he tried to stage another accident,
it would look way too suspicious.
Based on Adele's mental state, he figured she wouldn't cause him any trouble if he simply
abandoned her.
So once she was healed, he dropped her off at her brother's place in New York and never
returned. Adele never saw or spoke to the man she knew as E.Mille Braun ever again.
Meanwhile, another woman in New York was getting to know him for the first time.
Helmut had continued to place marriage ads, and he'd been corresponding with a 28-year-old
housekeeper named Irma Palatinas. Irma was nowhere near as wealthy as Helmut's past victims,
but she was young and pretty, and he was attracted to her. After a few months,
of courtship they got married in April 1915.
Afterward, Helmut told Irma and Gertrude they were moving to Detroit.
They packed their bags and started a new life in a house on Glenwood Avenue,
which Helmut bought with money he'd taken from Adele.
Moving to a new city was just the first phase of Helmut's plan to isolate Irma.
First, he started telling their new neighbors that she was his housekeeper, not his wife,
and wouldn't let her socialize with anyone.
Then he forbade her from keeping in touch with her family back in New York.
By December of that year, Irma was completely alone, aside from Helmut and Gertrude.
But they were barely around since Gertrude was at school,
and Helmut had started working long hours at a Ford factory.
On top of that, he'd started spending all his free time out at local pubs.
Irma knew she'd made a big mistake by marrying him.
However, she never had a chance to do anything about it
because on December 20th, 1915,
Helmut attacked Irma out of nowhere.
He strangled her with a clothesline
until she stopped breathing.
Then he wrapped her body in a tarp
and buried her under the garage.
Before we talk about Helmut's behavior here with Irma,
I want to backtrack a bit.
I think there are a few reasons he tells his neighbors
that Irma is his housekeeper.
One, obviously it makes him appear as if he's more affluent, which feeds his grandiosity, but it also lowers suspicion.
Two, it makes him feel power over her and allows him to remain emotionally detached, which is part of his pathological compartmentalization.
And then lastly, no one will ask questions when the housekeeper goes missing and he tells them that she's fired or moved away.
But what's striking about this marriage is Helmut's adaptive pattern.
He married Irma knowing that she did not have money.
So it appears that unlike his previous marriages, this was not financially motivated.
And that's what stands out.
He also didn't seem to need money right now, though, because he had Adele's money.
So instead, Irma was utility.
She was a cover story.
She provided domestic labor, at least for a temporary period of time.
she was obedient and she provided insulation from suspicion.
I think this was likely his attempt also at containment after what happened with Adele.
But the speed matters because she did not come from much and he did not need to spend a lot of time wooing her.
He could gain total domination almost immediately because he already had the power in this relationship.
He didn't need to earn it.
And the suddenness of Irma's murder suggests a lower threshold for,
violence. Again, this is escalation, which is common with serial offenders. He's harmed someone before,
possibly even murdered them, and he likely believes he can do it again. And he's detached, so he's more
focused on the outcome. Sweet Irma was to be removed once she outlived her usefulness to him. That is
severe callousness and objectification. He's refining behavior based on what has or hasn't worked
before, which is, again, typical pattern for serial offenders.
This was planned from the start, as if he married her just for this moment, and it's very
chilling.
Helmut may have been unleashing more of his inner violence, but on the outside, he played it
cool.
He told his neighbors that his housekeeper stole $700 of his hard-earned money before running
off to South America.
No one seemed to question Helmut.
And now that he'd gotten away with such a sudden murder.
which he'd apparently done just for the thrill, he was hooked on that feeling.
Helmut immediately started thinking of his next attack.
But before that happened, he met a woman who brought out yet another sinister side to him.
Power, fame, obsession, betrayal, these are more than headlines.
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the hosts of Two Girls One Ghost and our newest show, Crimes of, a crimehouse original powered by Pave Studios.
Crimes of is a weekly True Crime Anthology series that explores a new theme each season from Unsolved Murders, Mysterious Disappearances, and more.
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By the end of 1915, 39-year-old Helmut Schmidt had left behind a trail of romances that all ended suspiciously.
His first wife, Anita, who was also his daughter, Gertrude's mother, had disappeared without us.
Trace. So did his former mistress, Margarita. Then Helmut abandoned his second and third wives,
Anna and Adele, after stealing all their money. Finally, Helmut killed his fourth wife, Irma,
shortly after they moved to Detroit. And he was nowhere close to being done. About three months
before Irma died, Helmut had used his marriage ad ruse to start courting a new woman named Helen Teets.
was a 32-year-old dressmaker living in New York City, running a successful business with her sister,
Mina. Helmut used the name Adolf Ulrich for their interactions. Pretty soon, she told them that
she'd saved $6,250, which is just under $200,000 today. Some of it was in cash, but a lot of it was also
in the form of German war bonds, both of which were fine with Helmut. As he'd done in the past,
Helmut bombarded Helen with expensive gifts, including a watch, pins, earrings, and a brooch.
And on December 22, 1915, about two days after Helmut killed Irma,
Helen left behind her life in New York and went to Detroit to marry him.
Once Helmut got his hands on Helen's money, he moved her and his daughter Gertrude into a new home
on Nine Oakdale Boulevard in the neighborhood of Royal Oak.
And then he carried on with a normal domestic life.
Unlike with Irma, Adele, and possibly Anita,
Helmut didn't try to hurt Helen.
He wanted to keep her around,
possibly because he wanted to be able to cash in on the war bonds later on.
Let's talk about his changing methods again.
But before we do, I want to backtrack a little.
When we talk about psychopathy, I want to make it clear,
it's not a diagnosis and it's not one single trait.
It's a cluster of traits and it's a pattern. Clinically, we often break it into two broad clusters, how someone relates to people and how they live their life. The first cluster is about the emotional and interpersonal side of the person. This includes things like superficial charm, grandiosity, manipulation and deceit, and a lack of empathy or remorse. People with these traits don't form attachments the way that most of us do. Relationships to them,
are about utility. People are assets or obstacles. The second cluster is about lifestyle and behavior.
This is where we see impulsivity, criminal versatility, irresponsibility, and something called a
parasitic lifestyle, which I'm sure you've heard me mention in this episode or other episodes.
That means living off of other people by design. They extract money, housing, stability, or
status through manipulation rather than working for it. And they can,
key thing to understand about this concept is this. A parasite doesn't destroy the host unless it benefits them. And that's exactly what we're seeing with Helmut. With some women, he drained them emotionally, financially, and then eliminated them when they no longer were useful to him. But with Helen, there's a change. She has German war bonds. That means she's not disposable yet. She's an asset. So instead, he has
has to adapt by becoming careful, controlled, and patient.
Emotional or physical violence would interfere with the payoff, and his emotional detachment
allows him to view her purely as a financial instrument, and his parasitic lifestyle
tells him to preserve the resource and preserve the host. This is important because it challenges
the myth that psychopaths are always impulsive or reckless. Many aren't. When the reward is high enough,
they can suppress aggression or impulse, they can play the long game, and they can perform convincingly.
So again, this is optimization.
And to be clear, I obviously haven't met Helmut, thank goodness, nor have I evaluated him.
But what I can say, though, is that when you look at his behavior over time and the pattern there,
a significant number of psychopathy traits are clearly present.
How often do violent offenders show changing MOs?
Quite often, actually more often than many people may realize.
It's about being adaptable.
They refine their methods as they go because they're learning.
It's also for risk management and achieving their goals,
and it's based on their personality traits,
specifically what reinforces them and what provides the best results.
Well, even though he opted to keep Helen alive,
Helmut still had that thirst for blood.
So while his life with Helen carried on normally, he hunted for his next victim in the marriage ads.
Soon he got a hit.
Augusta Steinbach was born in Germany and lived in France for a while before she came to the United States.
She spent her entire career as a ladies' maid and currently worked as a live-in maid for the wife of a wealthy New York banker.
She had everything she'd always wanted, nice clothes and jewelry and an exciting life in the big city.
She also had a bubbly personality and positive outlook that made her extremely popular.
Despite all of this, though, the only thing Augusta really wanted was a home and family of her own.
At 38 years old, she was considered an old maid at the time.
She didn't have many options when it came to romantic suitors,
so she turned to the marriage ads in the New York Herald and New York Review,
and there, one ad from a man in Michigan caught her eye.
He lived in Royal Oak, Michigan, and had a steady monthly income.
His name was Herman Noigabower.
Of course, Herman was really Helmut Schmidt.
But Augusta didn't know that.
And as they wrote back and forth, she liked him more and more.
He told her he worked at Ford Motor Company and owned multiple properties in the Detroit area,
including the house on Nine Oakdale Boulevard, where he lived with his two sisters, Gertrude and Helen.
Helmut promised Augusta he could provide her with all the material things she enjoyed.
In return, Augusta likely promised to provide a clean house, hot meals, and a steamy sex life.
That was all Helmut needed to hear.
He proposed marriage and invited Augusta to come live with him in Detroit.
Augusta's dreams were finally coming true.
However, not everyone in her life was happy for her.
She had a close friend named Agnes Domenecki, who she'd known me.
who she'd known most of her life.
They'd gone to France and the U.S. together.
In their spare time, and as was custom for young German women at the time,
Augusta and Agnes used tarot cards to try and predict their futures,
especially their love lives.
In February of 1917, when Augusta told Agnes her plans,
Agnes read her cards and saw nothing but darkness in her future.
Agnes begged Augusta not to go to Detroit,
But Augusta didn't listen.
She left New York with $800 in her pocket.
She and Helmut had made plans for him to pick her up at the train station in Detroit,
but when she got there, he was nowhere to be found.
Augusta waited for hours until facing the harsh reality.
She'd been stood up.
She wandered around for a while until she found a boarding house,
which was run by a couple named the Hetheringtons.
Augusta was at the boarding house for a few days before Helmut tracked her down there.
He showed up on the Hetherington's doorstep and apologized profusely to Augusta for failing to show up.
He said he was ashamed of his behavior and said he wanted to properly court her from then on.
Augusta forgave him and agreed.
For the next few weeks, Helmut visited Augusta regularly.
However, he made sure that the Hetheringtons, who Augusta had,
become close to, rarely saw him. In fact, Mr. Hetherington only ever laid eyes on Helmut once,
and Mrs. Hetherington never did. Going to the boarding house while deliberately avoiding the
Hetheringtons was calculated, obviously. Helmut needed access to Augusta without creating
witnesses. It's selective exposure. He wanted control over the interaction, not accountability
for it. He wanted to manipulate Augusta emotionally while keeping himself invisible to
anyone who might later ask questions. It also mirrors a pattern we had already seen. Helmut consistently
managed who knew what and when, like how his daughter is never his daughter, or how his past wives
were housekeepers or bookkeepers. This is designed to be effective manipulatively, keeping a facade
when it comes to his daughter and preempt concern or suspicion when his new wife vanished suddenly.
So avoiding the Hetheringtons ensured there was no trail connecting him to Augusta, or at least
least so he thought. He has a pattern of engineering plausible deniability. It's part of his methods.
But I think the bigger question is, or like perhaps maybe some of the listeners might be wondering,
why would he stand her up in the first place? What does that accomplish for him? That's not a mistake.
I mean, unless there was something that got in the way of him getting there, which I highly doubt,
I think this was a test. He needed her to be desperate, compliant, and forgiving because
if she is willing to stay with him after being humiliated like this, it tells an abuser that they can be controlled.
What he did destabilized her. It lowered her expectations and shifted the power balance before they even really started their relationship.
And now he just recast himself as both the problem and the solution. And in doing so, he replaced all suspicion with gratitude by rescuing her from the harm that he caused her.
This is highly abusive behavior.
He's doing this because he's enjoying it.
It's part of his thrill.
This entire abusive cycle is something that he gets gratification from.
Helmut knew if he ever wanted to get Augusta alone,
he'd have to convince her she could trust him,
even if that meant putting in extra effort to hide from the Hetheringtons.
Eventually, it worked,
and Augusta agreed to go to Helmut's house in Royal Oak to meet his sisters.
Before meeting them, though, Augusta was.
already certain she wanted to move in. Helmut's house was everything she'd ever wanted. It had a
wrap-around porch and was filled with fine furniture, silver, a sewing machine, and even a piano.
She and Gertrude, who she believed was Helmut's teenage sister, hid it off right away. However, Augusta
sensed that Helmut's other sister, Helen, who he said was a widow, felt threatened by her.
She thought maybe Helen didn't like the idea of someone else taking over as the woman of the house.
But that wasn't enough to change Augusta's mind about her new beau.
She wrote to Agnes back in New York to tell her she thought he was going to propose and how excited she was.
Agnes had only become more unhappy about Augusta's new relationship.
The two women had been writing letters to each other while Augusta was at the boarding house,
and in one of them Augusta said Helmut, who she believed was actually named Herman,
had asked her to cut ties with all her friends back in New York.
He said she could only keep in touch with Agnes,
but that she wasn't allowed to tell Agnes how they'd really met.
Agnes thought there was something really suspicious about that.
She kept trying to stop Augusta from going through with the marriage,
but it was no use.
Helmut proposed, and they set a wedding date for mid-March of 1917.
A few days before their wedding was supposed to take place,
On March 11th, Helmut picked up Augusta at the boarding house for the last time.
They went back to Royal Oak together.
He said Helen and Gertrude weren't home,
but that they'd be back soon to start helping with wedding preparations.
Then as soon as Helmut and Augusta stepped through the door,
he dropped all pretenses.
Helmut bashed Augusta over the head before strangling her with a rope.
Once she was no longer breathing,
he dragged her body to the basement, where he hoisted her through a small window that was under the front porch.
He covered her body with quicklime and buried her in a shallow grave.
When Gertrude and Helen came home later, Helmut acted like nothing happened.
Helmut felt confident that no one would ever figure out what had happened,
but he had no idea that people were already trying to find Augusta.
Two weeks after Augusta moved out of the boarding house for good,
a wedding present was delivered there for her.
Augusta hadn't left a forwarding address.
She'd only told the Hetheringtons that she was moving to Royal Oak.
However, she had excitedly described the house to them in detail,
and based on that description,
they were eventually able to locate nine Oakdale Boulevard.
They drove there one day, knocked on the door, and Helen answered.
They said they were looking for a woman named,
Augusta and her fiancée, Herman Neuegrabauer.
Helen said no one by those names lived there and closed the door.
The Hetheringtons were confused.
The house matched Augusta's description perfectly,
and Helen looked a lot like Herman's older sister who Augusta had told them about.
They thought there must have been a misunderstanding,
so over the next few days they kept going back.
But Helen always answered the door, and she refused to speak with them.
Finally, one evening, the Hetheringtons got a knock on their own door.
When they opened up, they were surprised to see Helen standing there.
They were even more surprised when she confessed that she'd been lying to them.
She said her husband, Helmut, had driven her there to straighten things out.
According to Helen, Helmut was acquainted with Herman,
and apparently Herman had lost his job at Ford,
so Augusta decided not to marry him after all and went back to New York.
Helen didn't offer any more details.
She simply turned and walked back to the car
where Helmut was waiting for her.
The Hetheringtons closed the door,
but they peered out the window as Helen got into the car.
That's when Mr. Hetherington noticed something strange.
He'd only met Herman once,
but the man in the car looked a lot like him.
So Helmut likely risked this exposure
because he thought it would be minimal
if Helen did the talking,
and he stayed in the car because the benefit would be narrative control.
He also didn't think he'd been seen.
Either way, that's the entitlement speaking.
Helmut had gotten away with deception repeatedly.
Each success likely reinforced the belief
that he could talk his way out of suspicion
even if someone thought they'd recognized him.
So does someone like Helmut?
Being seen didn't automatically mean being caught.
It's also escalation under pressure.
This is the first time that anyone has come to Helmut's heart.
home looking for one of the women he has killed. And that threatens his sense of control. Someone like
Helmut is more likely to try and manage the risk directly and trust their own charm and manipulation
to do that. What do you make of the fact that he had Helen do all the talking? I think this was a way
for him to control her too, or was he just trying to keep his distance from the Hetheringtons?
So I think it's both. I mean, we know how abusive and manipulative he was and having Helen do the
talking allowed him to use her as an instrument while keeping himself insulated. At the same time,
Helen likely understood the consequences of saying no. That's how coercive dynamics work. Once someone
lies for another person, especially knowingly, they become a bit more entangled. She's now part of
the deception. That doesn't erase her agency, but it does help explain how fear, dependency and pressure
can affect someone's choices and keep them compliant in dynamics like this. It's a very common.
complex issue.
Even though Mr. Heatherington couldn't be sure that it was Augusta's fiancé in the car,
he had a pit in his stomach.
The couple couldn't help but wonder if something nefarious was going on.
Meanwhile, Helmut drove back to Royal Oak, confident that he'd tied up all the loose ends
of Augusta's murder.
He had no idea that by trying to throw the Heatheringtons off his scent, he'd actually handed
them a major clue.
soon, a group of concerned citizens and law enforcement would stop at nothing to figure out what was really going on inside Nine Oakdale Boulevard.
Thanks so much for listening. We'll be back next time for the conclusion of our deep dive on Helmut Schmidt.
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Thank you for listening.
Hey there, we're Sabrina DeAnraoga and Corinne Vien, hosts of Crimes Up.
Crimes of is a weekly true crime series with each season diving into a different theme,
from unsolved murders to mysterious disappearances and the cases that haunt us most.
And since this Valentine's season, we are unpacking crimes of passion,
when love turns into obsession, passion twists into paranoia,
and jealousy drives people beyond the edge of reason.
Crimes of is a crimehouse original.
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New episodes every Tuesday.
