WROCLAW, Poland -- A court Wednesday convicted an author of
directing the killing of a businessman in a crime that bore eerie
similarities to a murder he described in a novel three years later.
The court ruled that Krystian Bala planned and directed the
grisly killing of Dariusz Janiszewski, but said there was
insufficient evidence to convict him of carrying out the murder
himself. He was sentenced to 25 years in prison.
"The evidence gathered gives sufficient basis to say that
Krystian Bala committed the crime of leading the killing of Dariusz
Janiszewski," Judge Lidia Hojenska said. "He was the initiator of
the murder; his role was leading and planning it."
Hojenska said it was not clear who actually killed Janiszewski
and who might have aided Bala in the crime, but that the evidence
overwhelmingly pointed to Bala's involvement in the events that led
to Janiszewski's disappearance.
Bala, 34, sat stone-faced between two policemen as Hojenska read
the verdict. Bala's family and lawyer said they planned to appeal.
"Justice was served, but the verdict will never be adequate to
the crime," said Janiszewski's father, Tadeusz, who held a photo of
his son during the hearing. "It's tough to talk about being happy
with it because nothing will bring my son back."
Fishermen dragged Janiszewski's corpse — stripped to a shirt and
underwear — from the muddy banks of the Oder River in southwestern
Poland on December 10, 2000. His body showed signs of starvation and
torture. His hands were bound behind his back and tied to a noose
around his neck.
Police quickly identified the victim as Janiszewski, who had
disappeared four weeks earlier. But they struggled to dig up clues
and dropped the case after six months.
Five years later, a tip led them to Bala's 2003 novel, "Amok," an
alcohol- and sex-fueled tale narrated by a man named Chris, who
stabs a woman after binding her hands behind her back and then
running the rope to a noose around her neck. The similarities
aroused investigators' suspicions, although the parallels were not
part of their case to the panel of judges.
The judge said Bala was driven by jealousy to kill Janiszewski,
whom Bala suspected of having an affair with his estranged wife.
"He was pathologically jealous of his wife," the judge said. "He
could not allow his estranged wife, whom he treated as property, to
have ties with another man."
Bala argued that he had never met or talked to Janiszewski.
Hojenska said a host of circumstantial evidence led the court to
its verdict.
Police had tracked down a phone card used to make calls from a
public phone to Janiszewski's office and then to his cell phone the
morning he disappeared. Calls were made the same day using the same
card to Bala's girlfriend and his parents.
Prosecutors also said that someone using Bala's account on an
Internet auction site sold Janiszewski's cell phone four days after
his disappearance. Bala could not explain that.
In 2003, a Polish TV show on unsolved crimes broadcast a segment
on Janiszewski's murder. Soon after the clip aired, the program's
Web site dedicated to the case received hits from computers in
Singapore, South Korea and Japan. Prosecutors say Bala was visiting
those countries on the dates of the Web site hits.
The court also noted that a psychological assessment said that
Bala has "sadistic tendencies" and a need to demonstrate
superiority. Experts said the narrator-killer in his book bears a
psychological resemblance to Bala, who acknowledged using the name
"Chris" when abroad and online.
"There are certain similar characteristics between the book's
narrator and the author — shared psychological characteristics, life
experiences, studying philosophy, parties, travel," the judge said
Wednesday, while noting there were some differences, as well,
between the fictional and the actual crimes.
The most glaring difference: In the book, the narrator got away
with murder.