Smail Tulja

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Smail Tulja
Born
Smajo Džurlić

1940 or 1941
Died12 February 2012
CitizenshipMontenegrin
SpouseMary Beal (murdered 1990)
Conviction(s)Murder
Criminal penalty12 years (2010)
Details
Victims1–8+
Span of crimes
1990–2006
CountryUnited States, Belgium, Albania
State(s)New York
Date apprehended
2007

Smail Tulja (born Smajo Džurlić; 1940 or 1941 in Plav, Montenegro, Yugoslavia) was a Montenegrin who was convicted in a Montenegro court, in July 2010, for the 1990 murder of Mary Beal in New York City.[1] Beal went missing on September 15, 1990 and was found three weeks later in two garbage bags. She had been decapitated and dismembered.[1]

Džurlić changed his name to Tulja after fleeing the U.S., with his third wife, following Beal's murder.

Tulja/Džurlić is suspected of being the "Butcher of Mons", in the mid-1990s. He had fled to the Belgian city, still with his third wife, sometime after the murder of Mary Beal. The female victims in Belgium share the similarity of being found dismembered and in garbage bags scattered across the city.[2] Two dismembered female murder victims were found in Albania in 2006. Albanian police asked the American Embassy Regional Security Office for assistance, who coordinated with the FBI resulting in a chain of events that did not solve the Albanian deaths, but did link NYPD to the FBI investigation and Tulja/Džurlić's 2007 arrest in Montenegro by local authorities. That country had just declared independence in 2006, and did not yet have an extradition treaty with the U.S. The Montenegrin court system tried him for Beal's murder in New York City, convicting him in June 2010 and sending him to jail for 12 years a few weeks later.[1]

The FBI/NYPD believe that Tulja/Džurlić may have committed at least eight total murders in Belgium (five), Albania (two) and America (Beal), though Belgian and Albanian police have not made any conclusive connections to those murders.[2]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c Nicholas Schmidle (2012-01-05). "On the Trail of an Intercontinental Killer". New York Times. Retrieved 2014-09-10.
  2. ^ a b "Police investigate serial killings in U.S., Europe". USA Today. 2007-02-23. Retrieved 2014-03-27.

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