Husband convicted of stabbing wife to death in front of Hardenberg daycare center
The court in Zwolle has convicted and sentenced 57-year-old Hans H. from Schoonebeek to 4 years in prison and compulsory psychiatric treatment at a TBS facility for murdering his wife. H. ambushed and fatally stabbed 53-year-old Tonnie on a street in Hardenberg, shortly after she had left the childcare center where she worked on October 29, 2024.
H. trapped the woman with his car, broke a window, and attacked her with a knife, also injuring himself in the process. When she exited the vehicle and fell to the ground, he stabbed her again and stabbed himself once more.
He drove off briefly but returned shortly afterward. A neighbor intervened, striking his car’s windshield with a broom handle to stop him. Numerous bystanders witnessed the attack. The victim later died from her injuries on the way to the hospital.
The court found H. guilty of murder. He had made several death threats toward the victim and had taken “concrete steps” showing he intended to kill her. H. rented a car in Coevorden and went out armed with two knives and a lifehammer, which he used to break the victim’s car window.
He waited for over half an hour but did not waver. “The suspect executed his plan to kill her without hesitation,” the court said. H. stabbed the victim approximately 20 times with a large kitchen knife.
The court held H. particularly accountable for the “horrific murder” occurring in the parking lot of the childcare center, just before 5 p.m., “the time when children are picked up.”
H.’s conviction also includes the assault on the victim and their youngest daughter that took place eight days earlier. Following that incident, he was issued a restraining order on October 22, 2024, which he claimed was unfair. In the days after, he repeatedly breached the order. On the morning of October 29, the woman reported this to the police. The municipality was also aware of the harassment.
The court noted that the violent incidents followed a long history of abuse. The family had endured years of H.’s drug use, paranoid delusions, and distrustful behavior. Experts in behavioral science concluded that H. was in a paranoid psychotic state during the murder and had reduced criminal responsibility, a finding the court upheld.
The sentence handed down matches the prosecution’s recommendation.
Reporting by ANP and NL Times
