My Daughter's Killer (2022) - full transcript

A NETFLIX DOCUMENTARY

Emergency services...

Yeah,
can you send an ambulance

to Rue du Tilleul?

We found an individual
with his hands and feet tied.

He was gagged with duct tape
and his head was smashed in.

Is the person conscious?

Yeah, so far he is,
but he's in really bad shape.

He says he was kidnapped in Germany.

He's wanted
for voluntary manslaughter.

Voluntary manslaughter?



For a while now.

The case
dates back almost thirty years ago,

when a 14-year-old French girl,
Kalinka, was killed in the 1980s.

There's been an unexpected development...

A father who fought a battle.

This is a father who never gave up.

He knew
where his daughter's killer was living

and I had a plan to help him.

Hands on.

What are you gonna do?

What do you do as a father?

What are you capable of doing
for your child?

MY DAUGHTER'S KILLER

LINDAU
GERMANY



JULY 10, 1982

It was early morning.

The red telephone rang.

I answered.

They said "unconscious person"
and gave the address.

My first thought was, oh,
that can't have been at Krombach's.

He's a doctor,
so why would we be called there?

He came out

and as he ran, he immediately said,
"I think it's too late."

Then he led us into the bedroom
and the girl was lying there, dead.

Kalinka, his stepdaughter.

He was agitated but composed.

Whereas the mother,
she was crying, of course.

She was completely beside herself.

My first thought
was the girl was already in rigor mortis.

And as I left, I noticed that the girl
still had a canula in her arms.

So, I said to Krombach,
"What did you inject her with?"

Then he said, "Calcium."
That he thought calcium might help.

That she'd been in the sun all day.

And he could only assume
that she'd died from the heat.

That's what he said.

A tragic case.

I just couldn't get it out of my mind.

I wanted to know how the girl had died.

She didn't die of natural causes.

I thought that something wasn't right.

On July 10, 1982,

in the morning,

her mother telephoned me
to tell me outright

of the death of Kalinka.

KALINKA'S FATHER

She told me
that Kalinka had gone into shock

due to sunstroke.

I was completely devasted. I was stunned.

PECHBUSQUE
FRANCE

LINDAU

I arrived in Germany that night.

The next day,
I drove in my car to the hospital.

I can still picture Kalinka's face.

Kalinka was lovely.

She was her parents' little darling.

Really very lovely.

From when she was tiny,
she was always smiling.

Kalinka is a flower
from the Masurian forest.

And in Polish,
it's a word that has a ring to it.

What I mean is it's musical.

I prayed that her soul would find peace.

And I left.

The next day, at her mother's house,

I went to see Nicolas.

He was only around 11 or 12 at the time.

He was the one who told me
that that day had been like any other.

Kalinka hadn't been unusually tired

and it was only later
that I started to feel, if you will,

that things weren't right.

The death of a healthy girl
who was physically fit,

I didn't understand.

I tried to make sense of this sunstroke.

Lindau was sunny. It was hot.
Around 29, 30 degrees.

But let's just say,

compared to Toulouse,
it wasn't all that hot.

It was actually
hard to believe certain things.

PECHBUSQUE
FRANCE

BAMBERSKI FAMILY

Her mother suggested
that we bury her in Pechbusque.

I think it was the day of the funeral
that there were rumours

that maybe a drug had killed Kalinka.

I am Elisabeth Aragon,
André Bamberski's neighbour.

We paid our respects at the cemetery.

That's all we could do.

I spoke to my neighbours who told me,

"They say that she actually died
from an injection

her stepfather had given her
to help her tan."

That's the explanation I was given
at the time.

An intravenous injection
to help her tan?

And you found those rumours hurtful?

Yes, they hurt.

But since there had been an autopsy,

I think that I asked her mother,
just as I was leaving,

to send me a copy of the autopsy report.

Around a week or two later,

I sort of exploded.

I got angry because I hadn't yet received
the famous autopsy report.

At what point
did you start to suspect Mr Krombach?

From the beginning of October 1982.

When I read the autopsy report,

when it arrived, it was in German,
so I had to translate it.

AUTOPSY REPORT

It mentioned
that 400 cl of Kalinka's evening meal

had come up from her stomach
into her trachea.

It went down into her lungs
and she choked to death.

But even for me, who knew nothing
on the subject of medicine or autopsies,

just by reading it...

to me, it was clear
that Kalinka had died from regurgitation,

and not from sunstroke.

But the two medical examiners

refused to specify
the cause of death in writing.

WE CANNOT DETERMINE A CLEAR CAUSE OF DEATH

I wanted to clarify things
with her mother.

She told me
she hadn't read the autopsy report!

Why not?

There were also all those irregularities.

There are sexual irregularities.

Irregularities that are apparent
even to a layman.

Injury to the right lip of the vulva.

Unable to say whether or not
sexual intercourse had taken place

before death.

For me, it was really obvious,

so I was sure
something was really not right.

TOULOUSE
FRANCE

Alexandre Parra-Bruguière,
I was a lawyer on the case in 2010,

when Kalinka Bamberski's mother
had appointed me to file a civil claim.

At the funeral, she already felt

that Mr. Bamberski
basically wanted to implicate her

as an accomplice
in the death of her daughter.

Because he wanted to know what happened,
by any means,

she was satisfied with Krombach's story.

She knows nothing about medicine,
she just married a doctor.

She took Dieter Krombach's explanations
at face value.

And she doubted
there'd been a crime committed.

The police inspector
asked five questions over the phone

which Mr Krombach wrote down
and later answered in writing from home.

BECAUSE I WAS OVERWORKED,
THEY ALLOWED ME TO ANSWER IN WRITING.

There was no investigation.

Mr Krombach wasn't even called in
for a face-to-face interview.

He wrote, "First,
I prepared 250mg of Solu Decortin

to treat the state of shock."

"I also tried injections into the heart."

I wanted more details
about what had actually happened.

So, we made an appeal

to the General Prosecutor's Office
in Munich.

MEDICAL EXAMINER

My name is Wolfgang Eisenmenger.

At the institute in Munich,
we received some skin.

The piece of skin
that was later to be identified

as the injection site in the arm.

And toxicologically,

we found no poisoning
that might've helped to explain the death.

What is your view on the injections

that Krombach gave Kalinka
in order to resuscitate her?

250mg INJECTION

Yes, it has to be said,

that it is even more unusual
for a doctor to even suggest such a thing.

Dr Krombach, when questioned,

stated that when he found the girl
in bed that morning,

she was already rigid.

Once rigor mortis has set in,

there is absolutely no point
in attempting resuscitation.

Something's not right.
The man is not telling the truth.

But it didn't help us

when it came to determining
what caused the girl's death.

There wasn't enough
to prove that she'd been killed

or intentionally killed.

It was also an issue of credibility
and judicial assessment.

PATRICIA JOLLY
JOURNALIST

My name is Patricia Jolly,
I'm a journalist.

Before Kalinka died,

the Krombach family is a blended family

in which everything
seemed to be going well.

Kalinka Bamberski and her brother Nicolas,

his son, Boris, and his daughter, Diana.

Krombach's first wife,
she died at the age of 24.

Kalinka's mother didn't speak German,

she clearly
very much trusted Dieter Krombach.

She was sure he had done nothing wrong.

She said he is a good father.

She never witnessed
inappropriate behaviour

or anything else towards her daughter.

Dieter Krombach is charming.
He laughs, he exudes the joy for life,

and then,
the German authorities don't realise...

the handsome doctor in his white coat.

Not many people are prepared
to argue with doctors.

And Mr Bamberski
is a chartered accountant,

a very serious man, quite stern.

He felt betrayed when his wife left him
and she divorced Mr Bamberski.

DIVORCE

André Bamberski follows things
through to the end.

Everything becomes an obsession.

Things must be done properly and tidy,
be well ordered.

This doggedness, this tenacity,
reaches the point of obsession.

In June of '83,
I wrote a letter to the prosecutor

to ask him about the outcome
of his investigation.

And he replied that Kalinka died
of natural causes

and that no further investigation
was necessary.

Meaning: move along, nothing to see here.

And so, I really struggled with that.

I made a leaflet.
I printed 5,000 copies...

...and I went to Lindau.

My goal
was to publicise what had happened.

It was the day of the beer festival.

The streets were very crowded.

Thirty or 50,000 people.

And so, I handed out the leaflets.

I'll read you a few passages.

"You should know
that there's a criminal living in Lindau."

"It's the doctor of medicine, Krombach."

"He killed my wonderful daughter,
Kalinka."

"Also, despite numerous references
in the medical report,

to sexual acts."

"This issue has never been addressed.
Why?"

"I publicly request
that justice finally be brought to bear."

I also went into the cafés, shops,

and handed them out
to everyone who was there.

And Diana, Krombach's daughter,

she arrived with the police to arrest me.

So, I was arrested,
and taken into custody,

POLICE

I was questioned.
In the end, they let me go.

There was no doubt
that Krombach killed Kalinka.

There was no doubt
that I would keep going.

For me, from the start,
there was another irregularity.

Which is
that he was present at the autopsy.

DIETER KROMBACH'S LAWYER

My name is Yves Levano,
I'm a lawyer in Paris.

Dieter Krombach needed a French lawyer
who speaks fluent German.

For Mr Krombach, Bamberski is crazy.

There's no other word. He's crazy.

Mr Krombach did not attend the autopsy.

He went there to identify Kalinka's body.

And then he left the room.

The pathologist said...

"As you can imagine,

we checked for signs of sexual violence,
but we didn't find any."

Yes,
because there is a reference to a lesion

to the outer labia.

Exactly.

And so, the undertakers dress the body,
clean the body,

and in doing so,
they also damage the body.

It was July, it was very hot.

The body was very fragile,
badly decomposed.

That's it.

The two forensic pathologists

took samples from all areas
of Kalinka's genitalia.

So, the irregularity is that,
subsequently, we don't know.

Nothing in the autopsy report
says what they did with it.

I can't answer that point,

but once again, if what we're saying

is that Mr Krombach
had those samples disappear,

then you're saying
that Mr Krombach had one,

two, three, four, five accomplices.

Lindau is a health resort.

A beautiful town...

with many tourists. Very many of them.

Krombach had a good medical practice.

It was always full.

I stayed on as his patient.

Because I had no reason to leave.

I didn't know why the girl had died.

I didn't know.

And he was a good doctor.

A really a good diagnostician.

Good natured.

I have nothing bad to say.

And the mother was a quiet,
really considerate person.

Love personified, I would say.

She loses
her daughter's physical presence.

And she discovers
that Mr Bamberski suspects,

more than suspects, that her husband,

the man she does not suspect
of being her daughter's killer, is,

and that she herself is an accomplice.

I thought, and I wrote,

that either she was involved in the act
that led to Kalinka's death,

or she never sought to ask the question...

how did Kalinka die?

What was the cause?

Was there conflict
with her and Mr Bamberski's divorce?

Yes.

It was an acrimonious divorce.

And so, anything that came from him,
from Mr Bamberski, was simply dismissed.

I met Danielle
in a creperie in Casablanca.

It was in 1965, she'd only just turned 20.

Dany was a pretty young woman,
tall, blonde, pleasant.

We got married

and a year and a half later,
Kalinka was born.

And when Nicolas was born,
she was already the big sister.

The rift began early 1974.

There were German records,
there were German textbooks.

I started to have my suspicions.

I made the connection
between that and Dr Krombach,

who was our neighbour three houses along.

She outright told me
that he was her lover, and so,

well, that was when we decided
to go back to France.

I thought that we'd start over.

For me, life went back to normal,

until a year later
she, allegedly, found a job in Nice.

In fact, Krombach had moved to Toulouse.

I followed her and then I realised

that instead of going to Nice
during the week,

she was living with him in this apartment.

It was me who filed for divorce.

In some way,
there's a sort of desire for revenge.

in terms of everything
that might've happened before.

Revenge on Krombach,
and revenge on her.

Which meant she was almost paranoid

about anything
that came from Mr Bamberski.

My name is Philippe Motta.

I've been a journalist in Toulouse
for about 30 years.

I met André Bamberski in 1985.

I went there unsure of things.

We have a saying in France:
is it bacon or is it pork?

you know, is it good, is it bad?

And the first thing that amazed me
was the stack of files.

Notes on everything.

His thoughts...

After everything I've been through,

I don't trust anyone.

Don't expect me to trust you.

DANY
PUT HER CONSCIENCE AT EASE

MURDER, HOMICIDE

I wrote everything down.

It has to be said,

he has a real talent
for making things difficult for himself.

It was three years after the fact,

and he asked me to look into the case.

And we ran a story, yeah.

I think we were the first paper
to write about what happened.

It's not very well written,
but there were two whole pages.

There were two whole pages
and we were careful,

we put, "A Strange Story".

A STRANGE STORY

I also interviewed the mother.

She said she'd had enough of it all.

Had enough,
because from what I understood,

she was living in Toulouse
and had, by then, left Dr Krombach.

She leaves him
because he was unfaithful

and so, it ended in divorce.

She said, "I needed support
after my daughter died,

I'm leaving."

But for another five years
she stayed very close to him.

She was convinced,
that he'd done nothing wrong.

IS DR DIETER KROMBACH A VICTIM?

And then,
I interviewed Dr Krombach.

"Andre Bamberski
has been pointing the finger at me

since day one.
But that's all. He's crazy."

And he sweeps it all aside.

"Write what you want. I don't care."

So, yeah,
that was pretty much his response.

One person says, "Krombach is a killer."

Then there's Dr Krombach who says.
André Bamberski is crazy.

Then there's a third person saying,

"Oh, I have nothing to say.
I don't want to get involved."

So... we don't have enough information
to know who's telling the truth.

A STRANGE STORY

At the time, it was still '85.

I found out that the commission
had asked the prosecutor's office

to consider further investigations.

In particular,
the exhumation of Kalinka's body.

The forensic pathologist,
who carried out the autopsy,

had said that they'd placed all the organs
back in with Kalinka's body.

THE GENITALS WERE REMOVED

But the organs
were not put back with the body.

NO REMAINING PARTS

For me, already,
this exhumation gave me confirmation

that evidence was removed.

By whom?

I think, at this point,

we will never
be able to answer that question.

And once again,
the German authorities closed the file.

Kalinka was cut up...

like a pig in a slaughterhouse.

No one wanted to know why
and how she died.

Someone had said that Kalinka was French,
so French law might have jurisdiction.

That gave me fresh hope.

I told myself,
"There is such a thing as French justice."

I appointed with my lawyer in Paris
in January 1986;

Maître François Gibault.

ANDRÉ BAMBERSKI'S LAWYER

I am a lawyer.

I took the oath in 1956.

Naturally,
Mr Bamberski gave me the autopsy report,

Kalinka's exhumation.

The organs had, in fact,
been removed and weren't in the coffin.

This is one of the mysteries.

But it is important

because Dr Krombach couldn't be prosecuted
for rape or for attempted rape,

as the genitalia had gone.

A lack of evidence, if you will.

For me,
these are miscarriages of justice.

And that's something I cannot accept.

Mr Krombach appointed a lawyer in France.

And, effectively,

Mr Krombach flat-out refused
to come to France.

We summoned him, questioned him,

and he continued to refuse to...

His approach was to always say no.

We don't know why Kalinka Bamberski died.

At that point,

the arguments for innocence
are at least as probable

as the arguments for guilt.

FORMER LINDAU RESIDENT

Mr Bamberski?

Only he sensed all along
that something was wrong,

and he was right.

Completely right.

When did you first meet Dieter Krombach?

In the early '80s.

My mother regularly went there.

As children
we would visit the practice with her.

First, it was calcium injections,
always lying down

because they made you woozy.

But I didn't ask any questions,
how old was I? 14, 15.

Then we got these famous iron injections.

My parents separated in early 1985.

Before that,
there was a lot of domestic violence.

Mr Krombach
was often there as a doctor

to kind of placate my father.

Then my father moved out

and he started to invite us
to go horse riding.

And then he had the idea
of extending the riding trips

and invited us to the Camargue.

The plan was to go for a long weekend,
from Friday to Monday.

Then we drove to Nice,
which is where the photos were taken.

I remember that he turned fifty then.

It suddenly became, "Come here."
Kisses and kisses.

But we saw that as fatherly affection.

So, that was the first time
a line was crossed, so to speak?

Yes. Absolutely.

We arrived late in the evening
and we shared a room...

with a large double and a single bed.

And the single bed was a camp bed.

And that's when he said
that he'd sleep in the big bed

and we could choose
which of us would sleep next to him.

And my sister begged me
to let her sleep in the small bed,

and for me to sleep with him
in the big bed.

He had his doctor's bag with him.

We were iron deficient
and this needed regular treatment.

And at some point, I fell asleep.

And that's when
the delightful assaults took place.

I was in shock as if paralysed.

Complete shock.

I basically just let it happen to me.

I didn't dare move or speak.

At some point, I played dead
and I remember him shaking me

because he thought I was dead.

But from sheer fear or something,
at some point I played dead.

I just thought this isn't happening.

That's why I didn't talk about it

because I should've
gone to the police or something, but no.

Krombach
was an important figure in Lindau.

A doctor!

In Germany,
doctor worshipping is still extreme.

"A doctor? That's just not...
He wouldn't do such a thing!"

"It can't be true."

No one knew
he was a narcissistic sexual pervert,

especially for young girls.

How could anyone imagine,
that as a doctor,

that as a person in his position
could commit such a crime?

To me, it was something obvious.

So, my theory is:

taking advantage of the fact
that Kalinka was sleeping alone

on the ground floor,

Krombach went downstairs
and raped Kalinka.

He raped her,

but Danielle and the German authorities
believed he was completely innocent.

That he was wrongly accused.

And that I'd made it all up.

In France, the proceedings dragged on
for quite some time.

For several years.

But in 1988,

three French professors of medicine
confirmed

that her death occurred following a shock,

but in their view, was brought on
by Mr Krombach's medical intervention...

which then led to the regurgitation.

And therefore,
Kalinka's death by asphyxiation.

The criminal division
of the Court of Appeal

referred Mr Krombach to the Assize Court
for murder.

On 9 March 1995,

the Assize Court
announced their final decisions.

Mr Krombach, of course, was not present.

He was sentenced to 15 years imprisonment.

But only for intentional violence
leading to death

that was not premeditated.

The sentence
came with an arrest warrant.

Naturally, I mean,
when a person is innocent,

and has nothing to hide,
they will try to defend themselves.

It suggested that he was guilty.

So, I said to myself,
"Right, it's over. It's all over."

I waited for the Attorney General
to have Mr Krombach arrested

and brought to France.

But at the end of December 1995,

I heard that the Ministry of Justice
had written,

"Please do not carry out
Mr Krombach's sentence."

Yeah, there was a political block
in Krombach's favour.

and against a French citizen,
the victim of a German.

And Germany said, "He was tried in Munich,
so we're not extraditing him."

After going through
these terrible experiences

during the court proceedings,

I came to the conclusion
that I couldn't trust anyone anymore.

The arrest warrant wasn't applied

because Mr Krombach was found innocent
in his own country.

That's it.

In early March 1997,

a journalist
from a local Lindau newspaper called

to let me know about a rape
carried out Dr Krombach in his office

of a patient under 16 years old.

I wasn't wrong.
Mr Krombach is in fact a sexual pervert.

I'm Barbara Völkel,
I work for the German TV broadcaster ZDF.

Almost 30 years ago,
women weren't taken seriously.

Are you in favour
of making marital rape illegal?

No!

If you went to the police and claimed
that there had been a sexual offence

or you'd been sexually abused,
it was pretty much laughed off.

In 1997, a big debate
was taking place in Germany in Parliament

over whether
to reform the Sexual Offences Act.

On a train, I read a small article
in the Allgäuer Zeitung.

A doctor, Dr Dieter Krombach,

had assaulted a 16-year-old girl
in his practice

and was sentenced
to two years' probation for it.

The sex offender remains a free man.

When I took on the case,

there was a big outcry in Lindau
on Lake Constance.

Dr Krombach could have gotten ten years.

Nobody here understands the mild sentence.

More than 2,200 signatures
have been collected in a petition

to keep the doctor
away from patients for good.

There was also a very long process,

before I was even allowed
to get an interview with Dieter Krombach.

Frontal
interviews the sex offender on camera.

It remains
the very first and last interview

that Dr Krombach ever gave
about his crimes.

His lawyers advised him
against giving any further interviews.

Only vetted questions could be asked

in the presence of his lawyer.

We expected to see a remorseful offender,

but that wasn't the case
with Dieter Krombach.

And he flirted with the camera.
and made a couple of advances towards me.

He said to me,

"Yes, lovely to see you."

"If you weren't blonde,
I wouldn't have given you this interview."

We didn't see an offender
who showed any remorse

or had any sense of wrongdoing.

You thought
she was doing this voluntarily?

She did not say yes,
but she didn't say no either.

When I kissed her, she kissed back.

At the start, I was just kissing her,
and I said, "Do you want to go further?"

We were talking about an assault
on a 16-year-old girl

and he mocked the victim
and saw nothing wrong with that.

It was very interesting for me,

and I also speak a little Russian and...

I told her "I love you" in Russian
during the act.

And, I mean,
I'm not saying she was ecstatic,

but I had the impression
that she was agreeing to it.

I told him, "But you drugged her!"

"So she couldn't defend herself."

Like they said in ancient Rome,

"Those who remain silent seem to agree."

It always makes me ill
the way he mocked the victim

in front of the camera.

He drugged her in order to abuse her
and he's still justifying his crime.

Towards the end of the interview
I asked him about Kalinka

and he said that it had been an accident.

and he just wouldn't travel to France

so that way
he wouldn't have to go to prison.

And that was where the interview ended.

After being broadcast by Frontal,

the case became known inside Germany,
more well-known worldwide, across borders.

Can I briefly speak with you?

No.

- Can we do a short interview?
- No, we cannot, we will not. Thank you.

In my view,

Kalinka's case was closed far too early
here in Germany.

There were many things that actually
pointed towards a sexual offence.

He was only given
a two-year suspended sentence

and banned from practising medicine.

Her wasn't permitted to work in a clinic,

a hospital, a dispensary,
or anywhere else ever again.

When did you start to tail Krombach?

Almost immediately after
the trial in 1997.

What was your goal
when you first started doing this?

What I wanted
was to get justice for Kalinka

against Krombach.

During those years,
I was still going there,

two, three, maybe four times a year.

I hired a detective,
who basically told me, that in his view,

he was doing locum work.

And so, his absences were of a few days,
or a week, or two weeks at most.

So, I wondered what he was up to.

My name is Petra Stephan
and I studied librarianship in the GDR.

LIBRARIAN

I ask a lot of questions,
I look into things.

That is my nature.

I believe it was early 2006.

The surgery team called me

and said, "We have a new doctor
working in Rödental."

Out of curiosity,
as always, I asked his name.

They said his name was Dieter Krombach.

Then I asked, "Where is he from?"

And the woman on the phone said,

"He's from Lindau from Lake Constance."

Hmm...

I just thought, from beautiful Lindau...?

Why would a doctor from Lindau
move to Rödental?

Mmm...

I'll just read up
on what kind of doctor he is...

JUSTICE FOR KALINKA

...and I just couldn't get over

all the terrible things
this doctor had done.

I read that his first wife
had died under mysterious circumstances,

probably from an injection.

I read that he had raped a female patient.

But first of all, I read about Kalinka.

THE MYSTERIOUS LIFE OF DR KROMBACH
FROM LINDAU BY LAKE CONSTANCE

And so, with this knowledge,
I went to my appointment at the surgery.

I was sure
this whole thing was rotten to the core.

I had a plan.

First, I'll take a look at the man,

and I'll see
if he really is who he says he is.

I was afraid. I was shaking and trembling.

I was worried that he might notice
and ask me, "What are you so afraid of?"

"Are you afraid of me?"

And I said,
"No, no, I'm not afraid of you,

I'm just nervous about the exam."

And at that point,
I already thought it's him.

So, I notified
three different authorities.

I wrote a letter to the editor,

I sent an email to the mayor,

and I wrote to the Association
of Statutory Health Insurance Physicians.

Then I also sent Mr Bamberski an email.

And he got in touch with me.

GERMANY

Thanks to this woman

a German authority has found out
that from 1997 onwards

he had worked as a locum
all across Germany.

He was giving false documents
to the various clinics,

hospitals, and doctors' practices
in which he had worked.

LICENSE TO PRACTICE

He'd never got his medical licence back,

but it seems he made himself a good copy
before it was too late.

And he used this copy
to travel around all over Germany

and spent all those years
working as a locum.

The criminal police from Coburg

caught him shortly
before he was about to flee,

run off oversees,
with a suitcase, with money...

and with a penis syringe.

It's for men
who don't want to take Viagra...

then you can peck up your penis.

It was a trial
that was very much followed by the media.

Kalinka, Bamberski's daughter,

died at the young age of 15

after an injection given by Dr Krombach.

JUDICIAL AUTHORITIES

Mr Bamberski was very calm,
he was objective,

and he was thrilled that, finally,
Krombach was facing trial in Germany.

Unfortunately,
the whole thing only related to the fact

that Krombach didn't have a licence
to practice medicine.

You can't practice medicine
without a medical licence.

I thought it's too dangerous.

If anything happens
and I know what kind of guy he is.

I have to make it public now.

At the hearing I attended in July 2007,

it came out that Mr Krombach had continued
his sexual assaults.

Two women came to testify at the trial

and there were several others
whose names were listed in the judgement.

Finally, Mr Krombach was sentenced
to 28 months in prison.

At least he got two years.

At least.

Something like that should never happen.

And then, he was released early.

I felt frustrated,
'cause I may have had some results

but I had in no way
reached my ultimate goal

to achieve justice for Kalinka's death.

It's ridiculous to think
like Mr Bamberski...

...that I made love with her?

That you raped her!

I didn't need to, I was married,

I was happy with Kalinka's mother.

Besides, she did stay until...
five years later,

I think, we got divorced.

But not because of this,

because I cheated on her
with another woman, a friend of hers.

Well, it happens.

SCHEIDEGG
GERMANY

Mr Krombach stayed in prison
until June 2008.

He returned to Scheidegg,
which is very close to Lindau.

I followed Krombach.

I went to Scheidegg three times;
in September and early October.

I found a small sign outside the house
that Krombach was living in:

House for sale.

So, he had a way to evade the authorities.

You could say I panicked a little.

I told myself,
"So, where will he go next?"

I'd reached a dead end,

there was nothing else I could do.

I couldn't do anything
with this conviction in absentia.

In September 2009, I made a decision.

I had to do something,
there was only one solution.

And that was what brought about
the abduction of Mr Krombach.

To bring Mr Krombach to France,
either voluntarily or against his will.

In my mind, justice had to be fulfilled.

It may have been something of a gamble,
but at least it was something concrete.

And did you think about having him killed?

No, I never thought
about having him killed.

Justice would never have been served.

So, for everyone, including me,
there would always have been a doubt.

Bregenz in Austria is also very close
to Scheidegg and Lindau.

And so,
I spread the word in all the cafés,

in all the restaurants,
in all hotels and chalets in Bregenz,

that I was trying to find someone
to help me move Mr Krombach

from Germany to France.

I gave them the documents
written in German with his picture,

and I added "Interpol".

On Friday,

the hotel reception called my room
to say there's a man here asking for you.

And that's when I got to meet Anton.

My name is Anton Krasniqi.
I was born in Kosovo, grew up in Austria.

As a father, I was fascinated
by the strength of this man.

He's a really great dad.

It's interesting, it moves you.

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?

What would you have done
as a father?

A short trial.

Succinct, short, quick.

I took him in my car.

We headed to Lake Constance...

and I offered to help him.

He said, "I'm offering to do this
out of compassion."

"I don't want any money."

"Yes," he said, "how much do you want?"

I looked at him and laughed.
I said, "No. No money."

So I said,
"There are costs involved, though."

He said, "Well, yes, but after it's done."

So, for me, there was no risk involved.

Have you ever been in prison?

Oh, yes.

If you think about consequences,
about what could happen,

I don't care about that.

If he had been a mafia type,

he would've asked for money up front.

I know a Russian gang, Georgian...

and I brought two of them along.

- How much was it?
- It was €2,000 each.

Did you talk
about how it would happen?

No, not at all.

He said, "The less you know, the better."

So, let's say I gave him my approval.

It was an act of faith.

If you don't believe in anything,
you don't get anywhere.

I went back to Toulouse.

I waited. Nothing. No news.

I took my sister's car.

There's plenty of space in the back,
the rear windows are tinted.

Ideal.

The plan, when you see him,

you grab him, you put him in the car,
and you transport him.

Basic. Simple.

Krombach wasn't at home.

Around 9 p.m.
I see a car enter the garage.

I say, "Okay, he's here."

A light inside the house.

I knock,

but I move away from the door.

Three, four metres from the door.

He comes out.

"Good evening, are you Mr Krombach?"
I said in German.

He said, "Yes. What do you want?"

The two Russians jumped in
from the left and right.

He started to shout, "Help. Help me!"

We had to get him in the car,
tape his mouth.

And that's what we did.

He knew what was happening.

He shouted, he asked,
"Are you taking me to France?"

"Are you going to kill me?"

I said, "No one's going to kill you."

He said, "Take me back home.
I'll give you €500,000."

"No. No way we're taking you back.
We don't want money.

I was driving,

the two Russians
and Dr Krombach were in the back.

I heard in Russian,
"No, no, don't do that. Don't do that."

I turned to look and saw
one of the Russians had got a knife.

Apparently,
he wanted to cut off his genitals.

I stopped the car
and I told the guy, "Go!"

It's too risky for me, to drive 300,
400 km, with a guy with a knife.

The guy said, "Okay, I want my money."

"Okay, you'll get your money. Bye!"

To me, it was important to just
get Krombach to somewhere in France.

Suddenly, I see: "Exit: Mulhouse".

Yeah, great.

It was the first town
with law enforcement, a police station.

The courthouse is right next door.

In front of the courthouse,
there were four police cars.

I couldn't unload there.

I went down the first little street I saw.

Krombach was calling quietly.

"Help, help!"

We fully opened the gate,
I left him there.

At 3:20 in the morning,

I received an anonymous phone call.

"Call the police in Mulhouse

to let them know
that Krombach is on the pavement

outside the customs house."

I called, I told them my story.

The guy took me for crazy.

He's wanted
for voluntary manslaughter.

Voluntary manslaughter?

For a while now.

Rue du Tilleul?

Yeah, Rue du Tilleul,
near the customs building.

- Is there an arrest warrant?
- Yes, it says "dangerous individual."

I said, "What I'm telling you
is completely true."

"There's a Europe-wide arrest warrant,
so go and look for him and you'll see."

This guy is wanted...

Wait,
there's a guy who is gagged,

with his hands and feet tied.

We are on Rue du Tilleul.

His hands are bound. Wait.

He's with a guy who's been gagged.

We are on Rue du Tilleul,
he's been gagged.

His hands and feet are tied.

Ten minutes later, he said,

"We found him,
but you beat him up pretty badly."

I said, "No, I didn't beat him up
because I'm in Toulouse."

- Sir? Sir?
- Yes.

Is your first name Dieter?

Yes.

His first name is Dieter.

He says he was abducted in Germany.

Is he conscious?

Yes, so far, he is,
but he's in really bad shape.

They promised me
they would bring me back home.

They promised him
they would bring him back home.

What nationality did you say they were,
Russian?

They spoke Russian.

- They spoke Russian.
- Okay.

Did you think you would be arrested?

No, not at all.
That's why I said I was surprised.

I booked a hotel room in Mulhouse
and booked a flight.

When I got to the hotel,
it was five, six o'clock in the evening.

The police came and knocked at my door.

They asked me if I was Mr Bamberski.

"Right, we're taking you into custody."

And they took me to the police station
where the interrogation began.

When I was taken by two police officers

to be brought
in front of the court prosecutor,

they all gave me a guard of honour
in the police station lobby.

They all stood up and...

They were all standing.

And clapping.

And that was really a great comfort.

Mr Krombach,
they let me know that he was there,

that he hadn't been released.

Strictly speaking,
I would say he'd run out of legal options.

André Bamberski,
indicted for kidnapping,

faces up to ten years imprisonment.

ANDRÉ BAMBERSKI'S LAWYER

My name is Laurent De Caunes,
I'm a lawyer in Toulouse.

I heard about Mr Krombach's abduction

when I was told
Mr Bamberski was in custody in Mulhouse.

That was the moment
I really freaked out.

I should've looked
into the consequences earlier

of initiating an abduction.

The media enjoy language
that is a little hyperbolic,

a little theatrical,
a scandal revealed.

So then, we entered a very strange phase

during which
Mr Bamberski was the plaintiff

in the proceedings against Mr Krombach

as well as being
the prospective defendant,

in proceedings against him.

At 11 p.m.,

André Bamberski gets out, free.

but he's been indicted
on charges of kidnapping

and criminal association.

I gave my consent
on October 9, 2009,

for Krombach to be brought to France.

DIETER KROMBACH'S LAWYER

I am Philippe Ohayon, I'm a lawyer,

and I defended Dieter Krombach,
in these two criminal proceedings.

He'd been incarcerated.

His face was swollen,
he looked like a steak.

You can imagine
the terrible state he was in.

He was traumatized.
He claimed to be innocent.

He screamed his innocence, he was angry.

The abduction was extremely violent.

And Mr Bamberski said,
"No, it's not my fault

because I never told them
to hit him or hurt him."

Mr Bamberski, in my view,

is someone for whom the end
always justifies the means.

I maintained, we maintained,

that André Bamberski acted
under moral duress.

Because he knew
that if Krombach was detained,

the court case would finally be over.

A real adversarial trial.

A real trial for justice.

The purpose of justice
is never to take revenge.

It's how it's been since the dawn of time.

Justice is not revenge,
quite the opposite.

After Dieter Krombach was abducted,

that's when
I got in touch with Diana Krombach.

The 2009 interview
took place outside her father's house

where he was abducted from.

And she was still convinced
of her father's innocence.

I am 100% convinced
of my father's innocence.

Over the years,

these things
are an incredible emotional burden

for the family.

Can you show us where this happened?

I just know from my dad's account.

I know this is his parking space,

and he said it happened
just before he got to the car.

The police saw a huge pool of blood here.

Initially, the police assumed
that he'd been murdered.

Did Germany ask that he be returned?

Of course.

In fact, they were very surprised,
that they even had to ask.

As I say, it was a big surprise.

That's what we fought over
during a period of months and months.

But it didn't work out that way.

PARIS
FRANCE

EQUALITY

In the Criminal Court of Paris,

Mr Krombach continued to be accused
on the same charge

as during his trial in absentia of 1995,

for the murder,
aggravated murder, of Kalinka.

ASSIZE COURT

Emotions were running high

at the start of Dieter Krombach's trial
this morning

at the Court of Assizes, Paris.

A day marked by the first face-to-face

between the man who is accused
of killing young Kalinka

and her father, André Bamberski.

My first thought
and my first words

are for Kalinka.

The atmosphere at the trial
is a kind of trial by media,

whereby the German was the one who,
for all these years,

evaded justice
and is finally going to pay.

That was the feeling.

Mr Krombach is not in good shape.

Thanks to Bamberski's friends.

It's a surrealistic situation.

Someone there in the box,

because the accusing party
brought him to France,

using horrific violence.

There's this anti-German sentiment
in a climate of real conspiracy,

where the German legal system

is accused of protecting
an everyday general practitioner in Lindau

which makes no sense.

What is the truth?

The truth is my father didn't do anything.

He's not guilty.
It's the act of a crazy man, a maniac.

Dr Krombach,

a good father supported by his children.

But he has a split personality.

He was a Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde.

Mr Bamberski is a moral force.

He isn't a vigilante,
he isn't the masked avenger,

but a warrior.

A warrior monk.

Mr Bamberski,
he's determined, as always.

Is it a relief for him
that justice is finally happening?

It's a relief
because it's what he always aimed for,

Krombach to be judged.

Ms Gonnin is a very calm, sweet woman.
who lives with the pain of what happened

because, in fact, the abduction,
Krombach's arrest, the media attention...

again, she's hurt by these circumstances

and she doesn't believe
that Dieter Krombach is guilty.

I think, at first,
she saw herself as a victim

of what she considered
a type of judicial violence and assault

perpetrated by Mr Bamberski.

The trial is Bamberski against Krombach,
it is vengeance on Krombach.

They asked me to follow the hearings

to keep a chronicle of the trial.

Can you imagine,
the courtroom was holding its breath,

that really was the case,
and when Krombach arrived.

So, very quickly,
the trial slipped away from him.

Because when the questions suit him,

he has no problem hearing.

And he answers pretty well.

But when the questions
are a little awkward, a little...

he does this with his hand.

DIETER KROMBACH

But then,
there's a really shocking incident.

We arrive at the end of the fifth
or sixth day,

we hear he's had a heart attack.

His life is endangered,
he has cardiac issues.

An expert confirmed it.

Dieter Krombach
is no longer able to appear in court.

Facing justice,

the German cardiologist
has invoked a medical issue...

It was fabricated. Pure and simple.

Some of you journalists
reporting the case

contacted Mr Levano, Mr Ohayon,
before the trial

and they always said
the trial wouldn't happen.

It actually isn't happening.

Curiously,
it's a medical problem in his speciality,

cardiology.

SIX MONTHS LATER

...Kalinka,

whom he believes
was killed by her stepfather,

Dieter Krombach...

Why didn't he think to call the police

so they could protect the scene?

...Danielle Gonnin, Kalinka's mother.

The former spouses
do not even make eye contact.

What is your state of mind?

I am...

much more, much more confident
and calmer than last time.

Meaning?

Meaning...

everything has been done

so that Mr Krombach
doesn't provoke another cardiac issue.

Of course, it needs to end.

Of course, he wants to,
to prove his innocence.

Because he is innocent.

Testifying against him
was a very difficult step for me.

To describe it all again
in front of so many people.

Mr Krombach, I met him
in the summer of 1993 for the first time.

I was 29 years old.

And he was older,
around late fifties, would be my guess.

Someone recommended him to me.

"He's really nice,
he's a really good doctor."

He diagnosed an iron deficiency.

He would have to give me
an iron injection.

I had the injection a few times
and everything was okay, at that point.

At the time, my husband and I
had a few financial difficulties

then he offered me a job
working at his practice.

I was supposed to clean the floors,
sweep, dust a little.

I always came at lunchtime
because they had their lunchbreak.

No one was there, no patients either.

At the time, I thought nothing of it.

And so, one day I came into the hall

and I could hear noises.

So, I called out, "Hello? Who's there?"

And he was at the back, in the lab.

And he asked, that since he was there,
should he just give me the injection.

That way,

I wouldn't have to come back again
later that afternoon during clinic hours.

And so, I didn't think anything of it,
and I said yes.

Yes... and then,
it was a completely different injection.

I know that then I was sort of paralysed.

And I know that I wanted to get up
and that he just gently, with two fingers,

pushed me back.

And then... yes, it happened.

It was an actual rape, yes.

- Can we stop for a break? Okay.
- Yes, of course.

POLICE

I couldn't think clearly enough
to say to myself, "I'll go to the police."

All I can say is I was full of fear.
Full of fear and shame.

Mr Krombach was very rich
and he was very influential

and I thought I'm just...

I was never able
to defend Dieter Krombach

against these charges.

That is, those without proof,
the other charges.

Krombach said that he didn't know me,

he'd never seen me before,

that I was only there
to make myself seem important.

Justice has rules

and the first rule
is to prove any accusations.

ASSIZE COURTROOM No. 3

I heard he was actually really worried
about my testimony,

and the chamber was full.

And he had two lawyers,
quite ferocious types.

The Mauer sisters
were never part of trial.

I was never able to defend Mr Krombach
against their accusations.

How did Danielle Gonnin react
to the testimony of the other victims?

With disgust.

The feeling
of having been wrong for 28 years.

I remember her turning towards me
and saying, "So, he's really a pervert."

"I lived with a pervert for years
without realising it."

Everything shocked her.
The victims' age, the MO,

the young girls
who were minors at the time,

the way he sedated them
and sexually abused them.

Danielle Gonnin didn't analyse,
didn't look at the vials of medicine

that he injected into Kalinka's body.

She didn't look at what it was,
she trusted him.

Dr Krombach, who's a cardiologist,

and so, everyone agrees
that his attempts to resuscitate Kalinka,

both the way he acted
and the product he administered,

are completely against
all medical protocols.

She also discovered the infidelity
that occurred under her roof.

Her husband drugged her
numerous times

in order to cheat on her
with her 16-years-old neighbour.

The girl explained

that when she started
having sexual relations with Krombach,

it was in his house.

So, the house
where he lived with Ms Gonnin.

On the sofa in the living room,
so as not to be disturbed,

he would drug his wife.

He'd pour a few drops of a sedative
into Danielle Gonnin's glass,

so she would sleep really deeply

and wouldn't, of course,
hear him engaging in sexual acts

in the next room.

Danielle Gonnin told the court

that she'd slept abnormally
on the night of the crime.

She has doubts now,
that she could have been sedated.

I had my doubts,

now it's more than doubt.

I'm almost certain that he is lying.

That hurts.

And now, I have to live with that.

I would have appreciated
if Dieter Krombach 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.

Above all,
what was very hard for Ms Gonnin

was the sense that many people saw her
as someone who knew what was happening,

but didn't want to say anything,
or believe it, or hear it. There you go.

And this is this image
that she just couldn't bear.

Of course, we were pleased
because I was able to say to her mother,

to everyone, to all the media,
"Look, I wasn't wrong."

Dr Krombach was only sentenced
to 15 years in prison...

for violence.

Of course,
my first thought is for Kalinka.

Justice has been done in her memory.

And I'll now be able to grieve for her.

DIETER KROMBACH WAS SENTENCED
TO 15 YEARS IN PRISON

FOR "BODILY HARM
LEADING TO UNINTENTIONAL DEATH."

HE'S ALWAYS CLAIMED HIS INNOCENCE

DESPITE ANDRÉ BAMBERSKI'S PROTESTS,

HE WAS RELEASED ON FEBRUARY 22, 2020
FOR MEDICAL REASONS.

HE DIED ON SEPTEMBER 12, 2020, IN GERMANY.

TO DATE, 16 WOMEN HAVE COME FORWARD

WITH SEXUAL ABUSE CLAIMS...

What was your sentence?

One year in prison.

When I was in prison in Austria,
my father visited.

He said, "Son... you know what you did?"

I said, "Yes."

They're proud of me.
Everyone is proud of me.

As for me,

in the trial
for the abduction in Mulhouse,

I found out that I was condemned
to a one-year suspended sentence

for instigating the abduction.

I hope that Kalinka is in heaven,

and that she knows
about everything I did for her.

I think that she deserved it.

What would you say
to a father who has lost his daughter?

I would tell him,
as it's been 39 years,

"Don't waste your life."

I fought like Don Quixote de la Mancha.

Against windmills.

I got justice for her.

But honestly,

these battles are extreme.