Belgium closes 40-year probe into spree killings that gripped country

A press conference is organized to announce the closure of the judicial investigation into the Brabant killers (Tueurs du Brabant / Bende van Nijvel) case. Juan Godbille/Belga/dpa

Belgian prosecutors on Friday announced they were ending a 40-year investigation into an armed gang that terrorized the country in the 1980s and killed 28 people, including children, in a series of robberies and shooting sprees.

The decision was announced at a press conference in Brussels, Belga news agency reports.

Several of the attacks targeted supermarkets, but while the gunmen used extreme violence against bystanders, the goods they stole were often trivial by comparison, such as coffee and wine. They also attacked gun shops and higher-value targets.

None of the attackers - known to the Belgian public as the Brabant Killers or the Nivelles Gang - were ever caught, and their motives remain the subject of speculation.

There are suspicions they were linked to the far-right and the country's now-abolished gendarmerie.

On New Year's Eve 1981, automatic weapons were stolen in a burglary of a gendarmerie compound in Brussels. A string of increasingly violent armed robberies at grocery stores and gun shops followed in 1982. Then in 1983 and 1985, there were waves of attacks on supermarkets, in which the gang opened fire on customers.

Belga reports that lawyer Jean-Paul Macau, who was injured in one of the supermarket attacks, said on Friday: "It's very disappointing to have waited so long to hear this, when the case is still unsolved. It's unique in the annals of Belgian justice that we haven't been able to find out the truth!"

Macau said he hopes the case might one day be reopened, but admitted that he's pessimistic: "There wasn't enough diligence at the beginning. We didn't use all the resources we could have."

A press conference is organized to announce the closure of the judicial investigation into the Brabant killers (Tueurs du Brabant / Bende van Nijvel) case. Juan Godbille/Belga/dpa