Joop Wilhelmus

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Joop Wilhelmus
Born(1943-01-07)January 7, 1943
DiedSeptember 9, 1994(1994-09-09) (aged 51)
Dordrecht
Occupation(s)Pornographer, entrepreneur
Years active1968–1987
Known forChick, Lolita
Criminal chargeChild sexual abuse (incest)
Criminal penaltyImprisonment for 4 years
Criminal statusConvicted in 1992, released in 1994
ChildrenFour

Johannes Cornelis Christiaan "Joop" Wilhelmus (7 January 1943

entrepreneur, known for co-founding and publishing pornographic magazine Chick, founding and publishing child pornography magazine Lolita, and for pedophile advocacy
.

Personal life

Wilhelmus received an upbringing based on radical left principles.[4] He was a teacher and started his career by publishing Provo-like journals. [5][6] Wilhelmus advocated complete sexual freedom, and became a well-known advocate of free sexual morality. [7][2][8] Together with Peter Johannes Muller (of Candy magazine), Wilhelmus broke the taboo of sexuality in the Netherlands.[7] Wilhelmus also aggressively attacked women's shelters for abused women, and published the confidential addresses of these shelters.[9] Wilhelmus started sex shops and a 'stimulus society' in a cellar in Utrecht that allowed couples to engage in partner swapping.[6][3] Wilhelmus was married and had four children; three daughters and one son. [3][10][11] Wilhelmus' wife shared his philosophy regarding adult and child sexuality.[12]

Chick

Chick, self-styled "sex magazine for the worker",[13] was an explicit sex journal that started in 1968.[6] Chick was founded by Wilhelmus, its editor-in-chief, and Jan Wenderhold, its sales manager.[4] It also published dating personals that were about sex and not about love.[5] Chick's initial print run of 5,000 rose to 18,000 by the second half of 1968,[6] and according to Wilhelmus, the magazine's circulation was 140,000 in 1971.[3] In the seventies, Wilhelmus argued in Chick that sex with children was part of the sexual liberation.[14] In 1970, the publication of Chick resulted in the Dutch "Chick-arrest" by the Supreme Court of the Netherlands, which in turn led to the new Dutch moral law of 1971 that no longer criminally sanctioned pornography.[15] After a conflict between founders Wilhelmus and Wenderhold, two versions of Chick co-existed, Chick/Dordrecht and Chick/Amsterdam,[4] until Wenderhold eventually bought the Dordrecht version.

Lolita

Wilhelmus was also the founder and publisher of child pornography magazine Lolita.[16][17][18][19] Lolita was first published circa 1970. Besides pornography it also featured a contact service for its readers through classified ads.[20][16] Wilhelmus encouraged readers to provide new child pornography images so as to ensure his magazine's survival.[21][16] A gift magazine was given in exchange for each new child photograph,[20] and the sum of $350 was offered in the magazine if Wilhelmus could take the photographs himself.[16] While Wilhelmus was arrested for publishing Lolita in January 1971, he was released immediately after the interrogation,[17] and was never prosecuted for publishing the magazine.[17] In 1973, he gave a lecture at a Roman Catholic training institute for working girls in Rotterdam, at the invitation of the school board,[22] and Lex van Naerssen of Utrecht University invited Wilhelmus as a visiting scholar, which led to parliamentary questions in the Dutch House of Representatives.[23] In June 1975, Wilhelmus partook in a TV broadcast of the NCRV-program Hier en Nu, where he explained how normal sex with children was to him.[24] In 1986, the PSI subcommittee of the U.S. Senate Committee on Governmental Affairs called Lolita "the most notorious of the foreign commercial child pornography publications".[20] The magazine reached issue 55 in 1984,[20][25] and was eventually closed down by Dutch authorities in 1987,[19][16] seventeen years after its conception.[25] According to Wilhelmus, at the peak of its popularity, Lolita's circulation was 25,000.[26] Lolita became an almost universal brand name for child pornography.[25][16] In an interview with the VPRO, Dik Brummel of the NVSH declared that he had bought some issues of Lolita and considered them to be "historical documents".[27]

Later years and death

Wilhelmus became a millionaire,[3][12] but as "one of the most successful"[21] and "one of the most notorious"[1] publishers of child pornography, he ran into great opposition when the social climate started changing and he became more and more isolated.[3] The Dutch authorities arrested him every time he tried to leave the country.[28] In 1992, Wilhelmus was sentenced to four years' imprisonment for having sex with his then twelve-year-old daughter.[24] Wilhelmus claimed to be innocent,[11] and his oldest daughter started a petition to free her father and asked a doctor to examine the daughter who was supposedly abused.[11] This doctor issued a medical certificate that stated the daughter could not have had sexual intercourse[10] and that her hymen was intact.[23] Two years later, Wilhelmus was released early because of good behavior.[3] The night after his release, Wilhelmus drowned in the water of the Voorstraathaven in downtown Dordrecht.[24][3] According to the police, his death was neither suicide nor murder, but Wilhelmus was drunk and his death an accident.[3]

See also

References

  1. ^ .
  2. ^ a b "Joop Wilhelmus (51) overleden" [Joop Wilhelmus (51) Deceased]. NRC Handelsblad (in Dutch). 10 September 1994. Retrieved 21 December 2014.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i Vermaat, Adri (14 September 1994). "Ex-pornokoning Joop Wilhelmus raakte steeds meer geïsoleerd tot het doek viel" [Former Porn King Joop Wilhelmus Became Increasingly Isolated Until the Curtain Fell]. Trouw (in Dutch). Archived from the original on 24 July 2013. Retrieved 21 December 2014.
  4. ^ .
  5. ^ .
  6. ^ .
  7. ^ a b Aarts, Milco (26 May 2001). "Pornokoning wil taboe op seks" [Porn King Wants Taboo on Seks]. De Telegraaf (in Dutch). Amsterdam. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 21 December 2014.
  8. ^ "Dordrecht, oudste stad van Holland" [Dordrecht, Oldest City of Holland] (in Dutch). RTV Rijnmond. 1 June 2011. Archived from the original on 21 March 2015. Retrieved 21 December 2014.
  9. ^ Pollmann, Tessel (26 January 1980). "'Wij zijn nu op straat niet meer dan een lijf met een gat'; over agressie en de grenzen van de vrije menningsuiting" ['On the Streets We Are Now Nothing More than a Body with a Hole'; About Aggression and the Limits of Free Speech]. Vrij Nederland (in Dutch).
  10. ^ a b "De dubieuze zaak Joop W." [The dubious case Joop W.]. Nieuwmens (in Dutch). 17. NVSH. Summer 1993.
  11. ^ a b c Wilhelmus, Joop (October 1993). "Brief vanuit de gevangenis" [Letter from prison]. Nieuwmens (in Dutch). 17. Dik Brummel, Yvonne van Santen, W. Smith (Editors). NVSH.
  12. ^ a b John Lindsay and Laurence Barnett (Directors) (1973). The Porn Brokers (Documentary). Elmside Films.
  13. .
  14. from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 21 December 2014.
  15. ^ Dutch Senate (2 July 1985). "Dutch Senate referencing the Chick-arrest" (in Dutch). Staten-Generaal Digitaal. Archived from the original on 21 December 2014. Retrieved 21 December 2014.
  16. ^ .
  17. ^ a b c Beetstra, Tjalling (2009). Van kwaad tot erger. De sociale constructie van satanisch ritueel misbruik in de Verenigde Staten en Nederland [From Bad to Worse. The Social Construction of Satanic Ritual Abuse in the United States and the Netherlands] (Thesis) (in Dutch). Datawyse/Universitaire Pers Maastricht.
  18. .
  19. ^ .
  20. ^ a b c d "XII. Quality and Content of Foreign Child Pornography" (PDF). Child Pornography and Pedophillia (Report). Washington, D.C.: Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations of the Committee on Governmental Affairs. 9 October 1986. pp. 42–43. Archived (PDF) from the original on 27 April 2015. Retrieved 21 December 2014.
  21. ^ .
  22. ^ "De zaak Wilhelmus, deel één" [The Case Wilhelmus, Part One]. Sekstant (in Dutch) (10). NVSH. October 1973.
  23. ^ a b Eikelenboom, Siem (2012). "De eenzame dood van Chick-uitgever Joop Wilhemus" [The Lonely Death of Chick Publisher Joop Wilhemus]. Koud Bloed (in Dutch) (17). Nieuw Amsterdam.
  24. ^ .
  25. ^ .
  26. ^ De Ruijter, F.G. (15 December 1984). "Seksbaron J. Wilhelmus: Amerika grootste producent kinderporno" [Sex Baron J. Wilhelmus: America Is the Greatest Producer of Child Pornography]. NRC Handelsblad (in Dutch).
  27. ^ Brummel, Dik (7 October 1996). "Stenen des Aanstoots". VPRO (Interview). Interviewed by Sarah Verroen. Archived from the original on 11 January 2015. Retrieved 21 December 2014.
  28. ^ Volkman, Ernest; Rosenberg, Howard (2 June 1985). "Shame of the Nation". Family Weekly. TimesDaily. p. 6. Retrieved 21 December 2014.

External links