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Cold-blooded ‘ice-cream’ killer used a chainsaw

A woman known as the 'ice-cream killer' who murdered both her ex-husband and her boyfriend, dismembering them with a chainsaw and hiding their bodies in the basement of her ice-cream parlour in Vienna, has released a memoir.

Cold-blooded 'ice-cream' killer used a chainsaw
The ice-cream parlour where the murders were committed. Photo: APA

Known popularly as the Ice-Lady, Goidsargi Estibaliz Carranza Zabala was 36 when something in her snapped, and she shot and killed her ex-husband while he was sitting at his computer in 2008.

Holger Holz was her first victim.  He had refused to move out of their home after their divorce.

According to the memoir, she then used the sound of the ice-cream making machines in her ice-cream parlour to drown out the sounds of the chainsaw, as she cut off his head and dismembered his body, storing the body parts in flower pots in her basement.

Two years later, after apparently getting away with murder, Carranza also murdered her new boyfriend while he was sleeping.  Manfred Hinterberger was an ice-cream machine salesman some 20 years her senior, whom she described as drunk and abusive.

Before killing him, she took shooting lessons as well as a course in mixing concrete at a local hardware store. She shot him as he slept after a drunken argument in November 2010 with the same Beretta she had used to dispatch her first husband.

"He turned his face to the wall and started snoring… I was so angry. I had the gun under the mattress. I took it out, loaded and shot," the Spanish-Mexican Carranza told the court.

In the morning she "asked him to forgive me for what I had done". She then proceeded to dispose of the body.

Again, she used the chainsaw, with the body parts submerged in cement she mixed in large flower pots in the basement of Schleckeria — which is still serving ice-cream today in Wien-Meidling.

A third boyfriend got her pregnant in 2011, and she was looking forward to a happy future when workmen stumbled across the remains in the basement, and called the police.


Goidsargi Estibaliz Carranza Zabala. Photo: APA

Getting wind of her imminent arrest, Carranza high-tailed it across the Alps to Italy in a 480 km (300 mile) taxi ride, where she was arrested a few days later in the home of a street musician.

At her trial in 2012 chief prosecutor Petra Freh said Carranza's crimes were horrific and that she was a "highly dangerous woman ready to do anything".

A police psychiatrist at the trial said it was highly likely that she would kill again, if the opportunity arose.  

A psychiatric report commissioned by the court said that Carranza, now in a unit for the "mentally abnormal", was dangerous and was like a "princess… who just wants to be 'rescued' by a man".

The son she bore while in custody is now being cared for by her parents in Barcelona.

This week, she released a memoir entitled My Two Lives, The True Story of the Ice Lady, co-written with journalist Martina Prewein.  Any proceeds from the memoir will go to the families of her victims, according to the book's publisher.

"I killed two men, whom I once loved," Carranza writes in the book. "There is no way of glossing this over, I robbed two mothers of their sons. I believed I had to serve men, no matter how they behaved."

She said she had simply been unable to break up with her lover, Manfred Hinterberger.

"I couldn't say no. I couldn't do it, I couldn't get free of him."

She said she made them into "monsters and finally they made me a beast".

She is likely to remain in a secure facility for the criminally insane for the rest of her life.

For more on the story, including additional pictures, check out Murderpedia.

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CRIME

UPDATED: Vienna police investigating possible ‘threat’ to Donau Zentrum shopping centre

The Viennese police have confirmed they are investigating a possible - and unspecified - threat to the popular shopping centre in the city's 22nd district.

UPDATED: Vienna police investigating possible 'threat' to Donau Zentrum shopping centre

The Vienna police confirmed they are investigating a non-specified threat to the Donau Zentrum shopping centre, located in the Austrian capital’s 22nd district, a spokesperson told The Local. 

On Monday, pictures of an alleged internal document sent by the shopping centre to tenants circulated on social media and messaging apps. The document stated there was a “threat against the Westfield Donau Zentrum for April 30, 2024”. It stated that the authorities had been working to identify suspects since yesterday.

“The source of the threat is a photo circulating online”, the statement said without giving further details. “If we receive additional information or specifications, we will immediately inform you”, it added.

“There is currently no reason for you as an employee to worry as we are strictly following police guidelines”, the document said. It was signed by a manager of the shopping centre. The Local reached out to Donau Zentrum media representatives, who confirmed a threat against the centre.

“The Center Management of Westfield Donau Zentrum can confirm a threat against the center and is in ongoing communication with the relevant authorities. We are taking the situation seriously. The safety of everyone in the center is our top priority. After coordination with the authorities, the center will be open as usual today”, they said.

The Vienna police confirmed the veracity of the statement and added, “We are aware of the matter and are investigating,” they replied after an inquiry on their official social media channels. The Local reached out to the press office for further clarification but has not yet received a response.

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