Judas
Page 1
Copyright © 2018 by Astrid Holleeder
Translation © 2017 by Welmoed Smith & Caspar Wijers
Cover design by Will Speed; cover photograph courtesy of the author
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First North American Ebook Edition: August 2018
First published in the Netherlands under the title Judas: een familiekroniek by Lebowski Publishers, an imprint of Overamstel Publishers, November 2016
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All images courtesy of the private collection of the Holleeder family
ISBN 978-0-316-47531-0
E3-20180406-DANF
Contents
Cover
Title
Copyright
Dedication
Prologue: The First Attempt on Cor’s Life
Part I: Family Business Mom
Sonja and Cor
The Heineken Kidnapping
In My Heart
Jaap Witzenhausen
Part II: Heineken’s Curse Amstelveen
Life After the Attack
The Second Attempt
The Third Attempt
Sonja’s Grief
Part III: Hidden Agenda A Plan Forms
The Release
Dying I
The Meeting
Lawyer
Francis and Wim
Rats
Meetings with Betty
The Method
Extorting Sonja
Richie
Giving Out the Confidential Statements
The Threatening of Peter
Wim’s Arrest
Part IV: Diary of a Witness The Order Is Issued
The Pit
The Counterattack
Annulment
I’ll Kill Him
Sandra and the Women
Fred Ros
Sandra’s First Meeting with the CIU
The Attempt in Amstelveen
Wim Arrested After Statements Made by Ros
Part V: Women Floor Holleeder Prison Visit
Mom’s Blessing
Use of Preliminary Statements
Women Floor Holleeder
Consequences
Car Wash
Together Forever
Shooting Lessons
Dying II
Farewell to My Job
Wim Hears Us Testify
ESP (Extra-Security Prison)
Fort Knox
The Confrontation
Tired
No Limit Soldiers
Scooter Incident
We Celebrate Cor’s Birthday
Afterword
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Newsletters
This book is dedicated to my mother. I have written it for my daughter and the children and grandchildren.
Prologue
The First Attempt on
Cor’s Life
(1996)
ON MARCH 27, 1996, MY SISTER SONJA HOLLEEDER AND HER HUSBAND, Cor van Hout, picked up their son Richie from kindergarten. Cor parked his car in front of their home on Deurloostraat, and they stayed in the car, laughing with Richie, who was singing along with his favorite song, “Funiculì Funiculà” by Andrea Bocelli, in the back seat, leaning forward between his parents.
My mother just happened to be standing at their kitchen window when a man wearing a dark coat walked toward Cor’s parked car. At the same time, Sonja looked at Cor and noticed someone approaching in the background. At first she thought he was going to ask for directions, but the determined look on his face made her uneasy. He approached the car on Cor’s side.
Through the window, Sonja looked straight into his face, and it’s still etched into her memory. A yellow-brown face, with lots of wrinkles.
“Cor, what does he want?” she shouted. Cor looked to the left.
Before he could answer, the man pointed a gun at Cor and started shooting. At that moment, Cor dove aside to cover.
Sonja started screaming. Richie was in the back seat of the car; had he been hit? Had Cor been hit? She opened her car door and tumbled out. To prevent herself from getting shot, she crawled on her knees to the back door, opened it, and pulled Richie out. With him in her arms, she ran inside. The door was already open as my mother had rushed out to help her.
Cor had been hit several times. He staggered out to chase the shooter, but, unhinged by his injuries, he started walking in the wrong direction. After he had made it a couple hundred yards, the neighbors helped him back to the house.
Numb and bleeding profusely, Cor just sat there in the stairwell of Number 22 until the ambulance arrived.
I was in my office on Willem Pijperstraat when I got a call on my cell phone. My mom was yelling into the phone.
“Are they alive?” I shouted.
“Yes, they’re alive, but Cor was hit. Come over now, please!”
“Is it bad, Mom?”
“I don’t know. They took Cor away in an ambulance.”
In a panic, I closed my office and drove to Deurloostraat, where Sonja was waiting for me. She opened the door and fell into my arms, crying, “Cor was hit everywhere!”
“Where?” I asked. “Where was he hit? Will he survive?”
“Yeah, they took him to VU Hospital. He was hit in his arm, shoulder, and back, and one bullet shattered his jaw. But he’ll live; he’s in surgery right now.”
“What about Rich? Is Richie okay?” I asked.
“Yes,” she said, “he’s upstairs. He wasn’t hit. Thank God he doesn’t really understand what happened. Please act as normal as you can.”
“Of course.” She was badly shaken and hyperventilating.
We went upstairs, where Richie and my mother were. He was playing on the floor. Luckily the child hadn’t seen Cor’s bloody injuries. Sonja had pulled him from the car quickly enough and taken him inside right away.
“Hi, honey,” I said to him. “Are you having fun playing?”
He looked up and, seeing me, exclaimed, “Assie, Assie, flames! Flames!”
I pulled him onto my lap and asked him, “What about the flames? Go on and tell Auntie.”
He was just two and a half years old, and he told me in his own way what had happened. A really naughty man had thrown rocks at the car and there were flames. That was his version, and we wanted to keep it that way.
“Such a naughty man! But he’s gone now, sweetie. Daddy chased him away.”
Sonja asked, “Could you pick Francis up from school? She doesn’t know yet and I want to have her with me. I’m not sure what other crazy stuff might go down.”
“I’ll go over right now.”
I drove to Francis’s school and told the janitor I was her aunt and she had to com
e with me to the hospital.
From her classroom, Francis had already seen me standing in the hall and was startled. The janitor went in and whispered to the teacher, and Francis came out.
“Come on, honey,” I said. As we walked down the hallway I told her what had happened, trying to remain calm.
She stood still and grabbed hold of me, her face turning pale. “Is Daddy dead, As?” she asked, her voice trembling.
“No, but he’s been hurt pretty badly. He’s in the hospital. Mommy and Rich are fine. Come on, let’s go home.”
It wasn’t long before Sonja got a call from the hospital. Cor was out of surgery.
“Are you coming with me to see him?” she asked me. “We can leave the children with Mom. I don’t want to drive. I still feel pretty shaky.”
“I’ll drive,” I said. “I want to see him.”
We walked to the car, but halfway there, Sonja started trembling. I got into my car but she kept standing there.
“Get in,” I said.
“I can’t.”
I got out and walked over to her. “What’s the matter?”
“I’m scared. I keep seeing it, that man walking up to us, the sound of the glass breaking, the shooting. Cor covered in blood. I can’t get in,” she said.
“Come on, Son, you’ll have to. You better drive yourself now, right away. Otherwise you won’t do it ever again. Come on, now—you can do this!”
I opened the door and ordered her to get in. “You’re right,” she said. “I have no choice.”
At the hospital, we walked straight to Cor’s ward. Police stood guarding the door to his room. Cor was just waking up from surgery; the bullets had been removed from his body, and his lower jaw had been wired shut.
“Are you okay?” I asked.
Cor smiled faintly and stuck his thumb in the air. Speaking was prohibited this soon after jaw surgery, but he couldn’t have said anything anyway, not with the cops right outside the door.
He gestured about Richie.
“Rich is fine,” Sonja said. “It’s a miracle he wasn’t hit. You just get out of here.”
Rage flamed up in Cor’s eyes, and he made a gun gesture; he wanted revenge.
We wanted to know if Cor had any idea where this had come from, so we would know where we stood and what measures to take, if necessary. Sonja and I stood on either side of his bed, staring at him, waiting for an answer.
Cor looked both of us in the eye and shook his head repeatedly. He didn’t have a clue.
“I guess we’d better not sleep at home for a while,” Sonja said. Cor shook his head once again.
“Okay,” Sonja said.
We sat by Cor’s bed for a bit, but he was tired and his eyes kept falling shut.
“You get some sleep. We’ll be back later,” Sonja said.
When we got outside, we took a stroll so we could talk privately, away from the police. “Do you believe Cor really doesn’t know who’s behind this? Or is he just not telling us?” I asked Sonja, knowing full well that women in our situation are never told anything.
“No,” Sonja said. “In this case, that would be too dangerous. He actually doesn’t know—otherwise he’d tell us from what direction we should expect danger.”
“You don’t have a clue, either?” I asked.
“I don’t know, but I do have a feeling.”
“What is it?”
“Never mind. I can’t tell you when I don’t know for sure.”
“You know you can tell me anything, right?” I asked, slightly offended.
“Nah, leave it. I just don’t feel comfortable accusing someone just like that. Can we please change the subject now?”
“Sure,” I said.
“But I’m not going back home. I’m too scared. For all I know, they’ll come back,” Sonja said. “Can I stay at your place with the kids?”
“Of course—we’ll go get your stuff right now.”
Back at home, I sat down next to Sonja on the couch and finally took a good look at my sister. I noticed tiny feathers falling out of a hole in her coat. I put my finger in and picked out something hard. I was holding a bullet in my hand.
“Looks like you were hit after all,” I said.
“Really? See, I told you I have a sore back!”
“Let me have a look,” I said, and I lifted up her sweater. An abrasion caused by a grazing shot ran across her entire back.
“I can see why you were in pain,” I said. “You were hit. But it’s superficial.”
Sonja had been extremely lucky. When Cor ducked to shield her, he changed the bullet’s direction. The bullet had entered his body first and, after leaving it, had grazed her back. Cor’s body had slowed the bullet down enough that it came to a stop in the sleeve of Sonja’s coat.
Cor had quite literally caught the bullet for her.
“I could have been dead, Astrid,” Sonja said.
“You could all have been dead, Son,” I replied.
Just thinking about the danger my family had been in, I was engulfed by rage—what dirtbag did this? What cowardly dog of a man would shoot at a woman and a little kid?
Over time, Cor recovered, under the watchful eye of the police in the hallway. It was their duty to protect every citizen, but they weren’t too keen on this particular citizen, a notorious criminal who’d undoubtedly brought this upon himself. As for Cor, he wasn’t too keen on protection from the people who were once after him.
“These fuckers, they think it’s funny when I get scared shitless every time they cock their weapons,” he said, smiling.
As soon as he could, he left the hospital and vanished to France with Sonja, Richie, and Francis. Cor’s best friend and our brother, Willem, nicknamed Wim, went along with them, bringing his girlfriend, Maike.
For protection, Cor brought his friend Mo, an Afghani man he knew from prison, down to meet them. The two had kept in touch and because of the war in his homeland, Mo was used to violent situations. He came armed, ready to protect Cor and his family if necessary.
They made their first stop at Hotel Normandy in Paris. From there, they continued on their way south to the Hotel Les Roches in the village of Lavandou on the Côte d’Azur.
Cor and Wim discussed every possible motive for the attack over and over. Things between the two of them were becoming tense, and they’d gotten into an argument more than once.
After a few weeks, Wim and Maike came back to Amsterdam to find out what was going on.
A short time later, Wim brought back the message that Sam Klepper and John Mieremet, two seriously bad guys they knew from their crime circles, had been behind the murder attempt.
Cor found it hard to imagine. Why would they be after him? He wasn’t involved in any conflict with them.
But Wim thought it made sense. He reported that Klepper and Mieremet had demanded that Cor and Wim pay them a million Dutch guilders. The only way to resolve the conflict was to pay this amount.
The attack was over, but the danger hadn’t passed yet. It wouldn’t be passing, either, since Cor told Wim right away he didn’t intend to pay anything. He refused to be extorted. This enraged Wim, who said he’d been put under huge pressure in Amsterdam. He had to make sure the money got paid or what happened to Cor would happen to him. Wim claimed that not paying would initiate a war that would end in a bloodbath. Our families would be exterminated without hesitation, all because Cor wouldn’t pay up, because he wanted a war.
Cor still refused to pay. Wim thought he had no choice but to do so.
While this was going on, I flew to meet Sonja and Cor to pick up Francis so I could bring her back to school in Holland.
Sonja picked me up at the airport. “Are you tired?” I asked her.
“Why? Do I look that bad?”
“A little bit,” I said cautiously.
“I guess I do,” she said, and she filled me in about Klepper and Mieremet and the disagreement about paying up. “Now Cor and Wim won’t stop arguing. It’s keeping
me up at night.”
“Is Cor scared of what will happen if he doesn’t pay?” I asked.
“No,” Sonja said. “I wish he was. Cor says it’s pointless to give them the money, that they’re at war now anyway. He won’t let his wife and child be shot at like that. Wim claims Cor is to blame for all of it because he gets drunk so often and probably insulted someone.”
“And what is Cor saying?” I asked.
“He thinks Wim should be supporting him instead of giving in to those two like a wuss. They’re in a real fight this time.”
“So the shit has only just hit the fan?”
“I guess so,” Sonja said.
“I know it would be great if you paid up and that were the end of it, but I think Cor is right. Do you believe it will actually end once you pay? Klepper and Mieremet know that Cor knows it was them. There’s no question that they’ll just think he’s waiting for a chance to get back at them. They’ll want to stay ahead of Cor no matter what.”
“That’s what Cor keeps saying,” Sonja said. “He doesn’t understand why Wim’s pushing for the money.”
I could think of a reason, but I kept it to myself.
We drove to Le Lavandou’s harbor, where Cor and Mo were having drinks.
“Good to see you, Cor. That jaw of yours doesn’t look half bad,” I said.
“Come join us, Assie. Have something to eat. We’ve ordered already.”
After joking around a bit about his injuries, Cor said to the others, “Why don’t you guys take a stroll. Assie, you stay here for a minute.”
He looked worried. “Did Sonja tell you yet?”
“Yeah, we know who they are, and that you’re in an argument with Wim.”
“What do you think about all this?” he asked.
“I agree with you. Why should you be shot at, and have to pay on top of it? How does that make any sense? I don’t get Wim, though…nobody ever tells him what to do.”
“Yeah, he’s running to the other side a bit too quick for my liking. Make sure to keep a close eye on Francis when you get home. Keep her away from Wim if you can.”