Belgian police target possible pedophile network
August 20, 1996
Web posted at: 8:35 p.m. EDT (0035 GMT)
BRUSSELS, Belgium (CNN) -- Police investigating a child-sex ring
in Belgium have expanded their search for two teen-age
girls beyond the country's borders, authorities said Tuesday.
Convicted rapist Marc Dutroux admitted to police he kidnapped
19-year-old An Marchal and 17-year-old Eefje Lambreks last
August. The two disappeared on a camping trip at a Belgian
seaside resort.
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Public Prosecutor Michel Bourlet said up to 30 extra
investigators would join a team searching for the girls.
"There are elements that allow us to believe that the two
girls are still alive," Bourlet told a news conference late
Tuesday.
Information from Dutroux and accomplices make police suspect
there is a wider network of trafficking in children and teens
for pedophiles, child pornography and prostitution.
An's parents said they were grateful for the indication the
girls are still alive, and that they did not run away from
home, as police had been suggesting.
Paul Marchal appealed to the kidnappers to release the girls
unharmed, saying it was better for them as well as the
families.
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Some arrests made
At least 15 children and teens have disappeared in Belgium in
the past six years. Seven have been found dead, six are
missing and two were rescued. Both girls had been sexually abused.
Four gang members have been arrested and charged. Dutroux was
formally charged Friday with abduction and illegal
imprisonment of children after police raided the house he
owned in Charleroi and rescued a 14-year-old girl and
a 12-year-old girl from the underground chamber.
Michel Lelievre was charged with the same offense. Michelle
Martin, Dutroux' second wife, has been charged as an
accomplice. Jean-Michel Nihoul was charged Tuesday with
criminal association.
Dutroux led police Saturday to the bodies of 8-year-olds
Julie Lejeune and Melissa Russo, kidnapped in June 1995 and
starved to death in February or March. He denies
responsibility for their deaths.
The two girls will be buried in a private ceremony on
Thursday followed by a televised public memorial service in
Liege at which police expect up to 100,000 people.
As the two friends lay side by side in white coffins on
Tuesday, each bearing a brass plaque inscribed simply "Julie"
and "Melissa," weeping people filed past at the rate of 500
an hour to pay their respects.
Brussels Bureau Chief Patricia Kelly and
Reuters contributed to this report.
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