MARC DUTROUX
Police Faulted
During April of 1997, a parliamentary committee investigating the handling of the Dutroux case said that the young girls who were murdered might have been alive today, if the police had not made so many mistakes during the investigation into the pedophile ring. The committee further recommended that Brussels prosecutor Benoit Dejemeppe be dismissed because he failed to do his job properly. Other officials were found responsible for the deaths of the girls. Investigators were charged with ignoring warnings by informants during a crucial stage during the investigation, mistreating the parents of the victims and failing to pass on vital information between prosecutors and police. Moreover, the report called for, “an overhaul of Belgium’s police, replacing the current three services -- the local police, judicial police and the national gendarmerie - with one local and one national service.” Further details concerning the hearings, including suggested government reforms, were listed in a report of over 300 pages, which was handed out to party leaders.

Dutroux and his accomplices were scheduled for trial in 2000 for deaths of the four girls and the pedophile ring operation.
































