Jacob Reinitz
יעקב רייניץ
Born(1879-09-11)September 11, 1879
DiedMarch 19, 1934(1934-03-19) (aged 54)
Cause of deathHanging
Known forMurder of Jewish business partners
Criminal chargeMurder
PenaltyHanging
Details
Victims
  • Herman (Hersh) Gross
  • Shlomo Leibter
  • Jacob Leibovitch

Jacob Reinitz was a Jewish smuggler from Satu Mare who gained notoriety for murdering his Jewish business partners.[1]

Murders

Reinitz was a Chassidic Jew from Satu Mare who lured multiple business partners including his neighbor Herman Gross to the border with the promise of lucrative smuggling prospects along the Ukrainian - Czechoslovakian border. At the border he would rob the victim of the monies brought purportedly for smuggling and murder them.[1][2] Gross' wife reported the murder to the local police. She claimed that Reinitz came to their house one night and awakened her husband, urging him to come with him to the border with a large sum of cash. Reinitz claimed he had no idea what occurred to his partners. Upon searching Reinitz's attic they found some of Gross' belongings covered in blood.[3] Gross' body was found in the forest, his head bludgeoned with a hammer. While imprisoned, Reinitz became the gabbay of the small synagogue in jail though his beard was shorn.[4]

Sentencing and death

Reinitz was sentenced to death by hanging. At the time of his sentencing he was the second Jew to be sentenced to death by hanging in the country.[1]

Informant

During World War I, Reinitz acted as an informant notifying authorities of Jewish deserters.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Jewish Smuggler to Hang for the Murder of Six Other Jews". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. 28 September 1923. Retrieved 21 June 2021.
  2. "פרומער איד איז זיך מודה אין מארד פון דריי אידען אין אונגארן" (in Yiddish). Forverts. 29 August 1926. Retrieved 21 June 2021.
  3. "דער פראצעס פון די צורי אוננארישע אידען שמוגלערס וועלכע האבען ערמארדעט זייער שותף" (in Yiddish). Forverts. 9 July 1928. Retrieved 21 June 2021.
  4. "יודישער אנגעקלאגטער אונשולדיג פעראורטיילט צו לעבענסלענגליכע תפיסה" (in Yiddish). Moment. 11 April 1929. Retrieved 21 June 2021.
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