Clark Rockefeller


Christian Karl Gerhartsreiter was born February 21, 1961 and is a German con artist who went by the alias Clark Rockefeller. He kidnapped his daughter, Reigh Storrow Mills Boss, on July 27, 2008, and was apprehended on August 2, 2008. Through fingerprint analysis, the FBI has confirmed that he is Christian Karl Gerhartsreiter of Bergen, Upper Bavaria in Germany. Alexander Gerhartsreiter, who lives in Bergen, identified Rockefeller as his brother, stating that they are the sons of Simon and Irmgard Gerhartsreiter, a painter and homemaker.

Reportedly Gerhartsreiter came to the United States as a West German foreign exchange student in 1979. Although his family states that Christian Gerhartsreiter was born February 21, 1961, he maintains that he was born February 29, 1960. Rockefeller also told Boston police that his mother is Ann Carter, an American child actress of the 1940s, which Carter has denied.

On August 15, 2008 the FBI, the Massachusetts State Police, the Boston Police Department, and the Suffolk County District Attorney announced confirmation of the true identity of the individual who has used the aliases Clark Rockefeller, Chris C. Crowe, Chris Chichester, Charles Smith, and Chip Smith, among others. According to their report individual’s true name is Christian Karl Gerhartsreiter. Gerhartsreiter was conclusively identified by means of forensic examinations conducted by the FBI Laboratory in Quantico, Virginia.

When Gerhartsreiter, using the name Clark Rockefeller, was arrested, his fingerprint impressions were taken by FBI agents in Baltimore and by Boston Police when he was returned to Massachusetts. Those fingerprints were compared to latent fingerprints lifted from a variety of sources. They match a latent print lifted from a wine glass in Boston collected at the time of the search for “Rockefeller” and his daughter earlier in the month. Those fingerprints also match a latent print developed from a document in Gerhartsreiter’s immigration file from the early 1980s.

Although there were no fingerprint cards or inked impressions in the immigration file, an FBI laboratory was able to develop latent print impressions from a document in that file, which had been provided by the Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Gerhartsreiter first married Amy Jersild Duhnke in 1981 in Madison, Wisconsin, allegedly so he could obtain his green card. Duhnke filed for divorce in 1992 and, according to the divorce papers, claimed that Gerhartsreiter left her the day after the wedding.

Gerhartsreiter went to great lengths to conceal his true identity from his wife Sandra Boss. He repeatedly told her she should file her tax return as a single person, and later in their marriage, when his wife’s firm required that a certified public accountant do her taxes, he found an accountant for her. After their divorce, Boss learned that he had told their accountant he was her brother so that the accountant would continue filing single tax returns for her.

The Charges

In 2007, Gerhartsreiter lost custody of his daughter, Reigh, by Sandra Boss, whom he married in a Quaker ceremony that had no legal status. The child was born as Reigh Storrow Mills Rockefeller, but her mother had the child’s surname changed after her reported divorce from Gerhartsreiter, in part because he refused to provide proof of his identity. During the case, Boss, a high-earning McKinsey senior executive who had graduated from Stanford University and Harvard Business School, accused him of lying about being a member of the famous Rockefeller family. Members of the Rockefeller family have also denied any relation to the man. Boss later testified at his trial in June 2009 that Gerhartsreiter agreed to give her custody of Reigh following the divorce. She testified that he also agreed to supervised visits three times a year with Reigh in return for an $800,000 settlement, two cars, her engagement ring and a dress he gave her. Boss moved with Reigh to London, where she obtained a position, following the divorce.

Boss testified Gerhartsreiter was charming and she believed the stories he told her at the beginning of their relationship but he later became emotionally abusive and there was a “lot of anger and yelling” in their household. Even though she earned the family income, she testified that he had complete control of their finances and other aspects of her day to day life. She hired a private investigator to investigate him in 2006 and discovered that he was not who he claimed to be, though she did not learn his real name at that time. She said he was unpleasant to live with, but did not think he was delusional.

Prior to the divorce, Gerhartsreiter had lived in Cornish, New Hampshire with Boss and their child where he used his supposed family ties to bolster his reputation, telling friends and neighbors that he was a wealthy Yale graduate who owned a business in Canada.

Gerhartsreiter, under the name Clark Rockefeller, was also a member of Boston’s ultra-exclusive Algonquin Club where he spent much of his time making additional connections and infiltrating high society. He resigned as one of the Club’s Directors in April 2008.

Alleged abduction and search

Authorities allege that on July 27, 2008 Gerhartsreiter abducted his daughter at about 12:45 p.m. in a black sport utility vehicle. Boston police searched the area of the incident without success, and Massachusetts State Police issued an Amber Alert just before 5 p.m. Later that night police issued a warrant for Gerhartsreiter’s arrest. He currently faces charges of custodial kidnapping, assault and battery, and assault with a deadly weapon—the sport utility vehicle.

Boston police said the father, daughter, and a social worker were in Boston’s Back Bay neighborhood at the intersection of Marlborough and Arlington streets, traveling on foot from the Four Seasons Hotel Boston to the Boston Common when the sport utility vehicle drove up. Rockefeller allegedly grabbed Reigh, pushed the social worker aside, and jumped into the vehicle, which then sped off. The social worker, who police said works for an independent agency, grabbed onto the vehicle and was dragged a short distance before letting go. He was treated for minor injuries at Massachusetts General Hospital and released. The sport utility vehicle was believed to be driven by a friend of Gerhartsreiter’s.

Police searched the immediate area and Logan International Airport that day. The same day police received calls reporting sightings of Reigh in Dedham, Hyde Park, and even New York’s Grand Central Station. Police reported they followed up on all leads, but had nothing solid by the end of the day.

Apprehension

On August 3, 2008 Gerhartsreiter was arrested in Baltimore, Maryland on charges of kidnapping and assault and battery after a week-long search. He had recently purchased an apartment there for about $450,000 under the name Charles “Chip” Smith.

With the help of the owner of a local marina where Gerhartsreiter had apparently kept a catamaran for the past nine years, FBI agents were able to lure him out of the apartment with a telephone call telling him the boat was taking on water. He was arrested as he left the apartment briefly before Reigh was safely recovered by authorities from inside.

Held without bail

On October 2, 2008, at a hearing requested by defense attorney Stephen Hrones, bail was revoked. Hrones had requested the hearing in order to seek a reduction from the $50 million cash bail under which the defendant had previously been held. Instead, the judge ordered the defendant to be held without bail.

On February 13, 2009, Gerhartsreiter’s attorneys filed notice that they intended to use an insanity defense for him.

The Trial

During the trial, conducted in Boston in May and June 2009, Gerhartsreiter’s defense team told jurors that Gerhartsreiter believed his daughter had communicated with him telepathically from London, begging him to rescue her.

Two defense experts testified that they have diagnosed Gerhartsreiter with delusional disorder, grandiose type, and narcissistic personality disorder. One of the defense experts, Dr. Keith Ablow, testified that Gerhartsreiter told him that his father had been emotionally abusive during his childhood.

Dr. James Chu, a psychiatrist for the prosecution, testified that he had diagnosed Gerhartsreiter with a “‘mixed personality disorder’, with narcissistic and anti-social traits” but felt that Gerhartsreiter had exaggerated his symptoms of mental illness and was capable of knowing right from wrong, particularly since he allegedly meticulously planned the details of the abduction well in advance.

Gerhartsreiter did not take the witness stand. Closing arguments concluded on June 8, 2009, and on June 12, 2009, the jury found Gerhartsreiter guilty of the charge of parental kidnapping and assault and battery with a dangerous weapon. He was found not guilty of the charge of assault and battery and of using a false name.

The judge sentenced him to four to five years in state prison on the kidnapping count and a concurrent two to three years on the assault charge.

Source – Wikipedia.org