The Rotenburg Cannibal: Inside Germany's Darkest Crime
How a computer technician and a willing victim met for an act of cannibalism that shocked the world

Sagsdetaljer
Quick Facts
Quick Facts
On March 2001, Armin Meiwes, a 39-year-old computer repair technician from Wüstefeld, Germany, murdered and cannibalized Bernd Brandes, a 43-year-old engineer from Berlin. What made this case uniquely disturbing was that Brandes responded voluntarily to Meiwes' online advertisement seeking a victim, making it arguably the most consensual act of cannibalism in modern criminal history—though consent cannot legalize such crimes.
Meiwes had posted an advertisement on the internet under the alias "Franky," explicitly seeking what he termed "a young, well-built man" to be killed and eaten. The posting was not hidden or coded; it was a direct solicitation. Brandes, living in Berlin, answered the call. The two communicated online before agreeing to meet at Meiwes' isolated house in Wüstefeld, in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia.
What transpired on that day was meticulously documented. Meiwes recorded the entire ordeal on video—approximately four hours of footage capturing the horrific events. Brandes, attempting to manage the unimaginable pain, had consumed sleeping pills beforehand to dull his senses. During the encounter, Meiwes castrated Brandes before fatally stabbing him. Over the following 20 months, Meiwes consumed approximately 44 pounds of Brandes' flesh, storing portions in a freezer with a false bottom while burying inedible remains in the garden.
Meiwes operated under another sinister persona in his communications: "Der Metzgermeister"—The Master Butcher—which he signed in emails discussing his crimes. This dual identity reflected the calculated nature of his actions. He was not a impulsive killer but rather someone who actively sought out and planned this crime with methodical precision.


