Christian Gerhartsreiter — The Rockefeller Impostor
Mand uden identitet der udgav sig for milliardærarving

Mand uden identitet der udgav sig for milliardærarving

The Invisible Man
Christian Gerhartsreiter arrived in the United States in 1982 as a young German man without any particular plan or education. He made, however, a remarkable discovery: America was populated with people who wanted to believe in him—especially if he presented himself as wealthy and aristocratic. Over the next three decades, he would cultivate this discovery into an art form, living under at least twenty-two different identities, each with its own banks, car registrations, and social circles.
The central fact about Gerhartsreiter was his total shamelessness. He was neither particularly intelligent nor particularly skilled at what he did. He was not considered especially charming by those who met him, but he possessed one crucial ability: he was willing to lie without end and without shame. Where most people would feel uncomfortable claiming false titles or experience, Gerhartsreiter would simply continue talking until other people accepted his version of reality.
Geburt in Deutschland
Christian Gerhartsreiter wird in Bergen, Deutschland geboren. Über seine Kindheit und Familie ist wenig bekannt.
Einwanderung in die USA
Gerhartsreiter kommt als junger Mann in die USA und beginnt sein Leben unter verschiedenen falschen Identitäten.
Verschwinden von John und Linda Sohus
John Sohus und seine Frau Linda verschwinden spurlos aus ihrem Haus in San Marino, Kalifornien. Gerhartsreiter hatte dort unter dem Namen Christopher Chichester gewohnt.
Leiche von John Sohus gefunden
Bei Renovierungsarbeiten werden die Überreste von John Sohus im Garten des Anwesens entdeckt. Linda bleibt verschwunden.
Heirat als Clark Rockefeller
Gerhartsreiter heiratet unter der Identität 'Clark Rockefeller' die Harvard-Absolventin Sandra Boss und integriert sich in die Bostoner Oberschicht.
Entführung der Tochter
Gerhartsreiter entführt während eines überwachten Besuchs seine siebenjährige Tochter in Boston. Er wird wenige Tage später in Baltimore verhaftet.
Anklage wegen Mordes
Nach DNA-Analysen wird Gerhartsreiter offiziell wegen des Mordes an John Sohus angeklagt und nach Kalifornien überstellt.
Verurteilung zu lebenslanger Haft
Christian Gerhartsreiter wird wegen Mordes ersten Grades schuldig gesprochen und zu lebenslanger Haft ohne Bewährung verurteilt.
A Career in Fraud
His most famous identity was "Clark Rockefeller," which he used from the 1990s onward. Under this name, he posed as a member of the Rockefeller family—specifically claiming to be a distant cousin or heir, depending on the situation. He lived in Boston and later Connecticut, where he gained membership in exclusive clubs and befriended wealthy families.
Gerhartsreiter's strategy was never to become too famous or attract attention. He targeted individuals or small groups rather than attempting larger schemes. He borrowed money he never repaid. He sold assets he did not own. He used fraudulent checks and assumed false job titles. None of it was particularly sophisticated—it was nearly bewilderingly banal—but it worked because people did not expect to be deceived by a man introduced through social channels.
He married a woman named Sandra Boss in 2010, having claimed to be a working child psychiatrist. She had children from a previous relationship, and when the marriage fell apart, a custody dispute ensued—a conflict that ultimately exposed the lack of documentation for nearly everything "Clark Rockefeller" had claimed about himself.
The Murder of John Sohus
But before all of this came to light, Gerhartsreiter was a murderer. In 1985, he worked as a gardening assistant for a technologist named John Sohus in Los Altos Hills, California. Sohus had a younger sister, Marlene, who also lived on the property. One day in July 1985, both disappeared from their home and were never seen again.
Years earlier, someone had attempted to excavate the area around the Sohus house without finding anything, but in 2010, while Gerhartsreiter was imprisoned for fraud related to his divorce, the area was excavated again. This time, the remains of both John and Marlene Sohus were found buried in different parts of the property.
Gerhartsreiter had been identified as the last person to be with them. He was charged with both murders. During the trial, it became clear that he had committed these killings by blows to the head with a coping stone or similar instrument. His motive was never fully clarified—it could have been robbery, it could have been a dispute over work conditions, or it could simply have been his ability to kill without particular reason.
Prosecution and Conviction
In July 2012, Gerhartsreiter was convicted of first and second-degree murder in the deaths of both John and Marlene Sohus. In 2013, he was sentenced to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole.
What is remarkable about the case is how long it took to solve the murders. Gerhartsreiter had lived under false names, had made legal name changes, and had essentially erased his previous self-presentation entirely. Identity fraud became his tool for concealing both his crimes and his true past.
Today, Christian Gerhartsreiter is regarded as an emblematic figure in American fraud history: the man without an identity who became so many people that he ended up being none of them. His case illustrates both humanity's capacity for manipulation and society's vulnerability to well-crafted lies.
Aftershock and Analysis
The Gerhartsreiter case has inspired several books and documentary series, including the HBO documentary "Clark" (2009), which examines his life before the murders were solved. Documentary filmmaking and true crime have made his case a classic within the impostor genre.
His case raises important questions about identity, verification, and trust in modern society. How could a man without attested sources or documentation be accepted into social circles up to the level of club membership? How could he marry without anyone asking fundamental questions? How can a municipality or state verify the identity of its residents in a way that cannot be compromised by a person dedicated to lying?
American fraud schemes have historically flourished during periods of high mobility and low verification. Gerhartsreiter was merely the latest version of a longer tradition of American con artists and false aristocrats.