165:("The woman is my fate"). Auervaara - now called Karnas - continued his deception and was charged with manslaughter after one of his victims had committed suicide. In 1956 he was sentenced to forced labour as a dangerous criminal, but he was only charged with attempted betrayal. According to criminologist Timo Kautto, the events that had led to suicide were seen by the court as so grave that Auervaara had to serve his sentence in isolation. The court viewed Auervaara as a danger to public safety.
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Parvilahti kept the content of this document to himself, but mentions having wondered how bad
Auervaara's handwriting and grasp of the Finnish grammar was, even though he had made successful contacts by exchanging letters. In return for the writing work, Auervaara cleaned Parvilahti's cell and gave him cigars and flower bouquets. According to Parvilahti, the bouquets came from women Auervaara had deceived, who "could not forget their charmer - as the love of a woman is forgiving!"
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own, or playing a hotel piano where he claimed the hotel entrance hall and piano belonged to a mansion he owned. He was sentenced for deceiving twenty women. Of the women who responded to his announcements, Auervaara chose those who he thought were the wealthiest and easiest to deceive as his victims. Many of his victims had an academic education. The trials related to the event caused great public attention in the press in the 1940s and the 1950s.
150:"one of those vain and delusional psychopaths, whose stamina and abilities are not enough to satisfy their need of advertising themselves, but who instead in their attempt to seek the shortest road to expansion, turn to crime and whose mythomania comes more from a need to advertise themselves than a real need for monetary value."
205:, Auervaara often played a sort of inexperienced, timid boy to the women and told them he was shy and afraid of women. This way Auervaara appealed to the women's sense of affection and pretended to throw himself at their mercy. Auervaara's way of deception was a natural talent, which he refined through experience.
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After
Auervaara was released from prison in 1959 he took back his original surname Jansson and finally married for real. Although Auervaara at this point apparently tried to change his manners for real, he was arrested again for deception in marriage in spring 1964. On 27 May 1964 Auervaara was found
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Auervaara sought women as his victims with newspaper announcements and tried to steal everything he could from them. He strengthened his contacts with staged photographs. Auervaara would for example have his picture taken in a pilot's uniform, in front of some unknown person's car claiming it was his
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On his way to mental health examination, Auervaara escaped to Sweden, where he continued his deception. He was soon caught again and was sent to prison, where he attempted to escape three times, failing each time. After serving his punishment he was sent back to
Finland, where he had to serve his
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in his cell, he was often asked to write applications and other documents for other prisoners, which he always declined. However, he mentions having agreed to write out the defence document
Auervaara had designed for himself: he was interested to see how the charming conman would defend himself.
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in autumn 1944. According to
Parvilahti, Auervaara was a "diminutive, rather worthless-looking man", so "in regard of his appearance, it is hard to believe he achieved such success with the ladies". On the other hand, according to Parvilahti, Auervaara was "constantly happy and had his way with
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for the first time already at the age of 16. In 1935 he changed his surname from
Jansson to Auervaara and started his career as conman, deceiving women. In his deception he used multiple false names. He was sent to prison multiple times, for a total of 26 years.
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himself. He is thought to have hanged himself because he was afraid of going to prison again. Some people think that other criminals, embittered towards
Auervaara, killed him and staged the death as a suicide.
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unit of the police published his photograph and an announcement asking his victims to report themselves in the country's largest newspapers. Later, the justice psychiatrist diagnosed
Auervaara as a
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218:, which is about a conman chasing the money of old virgins and widows. At the time Waltari wrote the play Auervaara was however relatively unknown. However, in his memoirs
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Auervaara himself views himself as the inspiration of
Waltari's play. Auervaara goes so far as to deny being so heartless as Waltari portrays him as.
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has become a term used occasionally in reports of crimes where women are tricked into promises of marriage. It has also further led to the word
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and as a psychopath, his emotional life was underdeveloped. The deputy prison psychiatrist said in his statement in 1956 that
Auervaara was
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words". He mentions having made only one exception in his behaviour with Auervaara: as he, unlike other prisoners, had access to a
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because of his bad manners, where he escaped from multiple times. After turning to petty crime Jansson was sent to
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has composed, written and recorded a song "Gabriel" about the event. Auervaara was the butt of jokes also in some
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370:. Tänään kymmeneltä 31 March 1998. Published on YLE Elävä arkisto 2 November 2010. Accessed on 26 November 2013.
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Mitättömän näköisestä miehestä tuli Suomen tunnetuin hurmuri – Huijasi naisilta jopa lakanat ja tyynynpäälliset
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factory serviceman Johannes Jansson and his wife Anna Karlsson. In his youth he worked as a bellboy at the
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53:. He became famous by cheating money from women he met through newspaper announcements, by
252:"Oon herrasmies ja milloinkaan en naisiin kajoa / ja Auervaaran asteelle en koskaan vajoa"
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94:. After finishing elementary school, he was sent to the Kotiniemi schooling facility in
244:"Oli mulla ennen heilakin, mut enää ole ei / Minulta jo ennen sotia sen Auervaara vei"
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remaining sentence. He later changed his name and published a memoir book called
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in the incarceration cell of the criminal unit of the Helsinki police having
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When free from prison, Auervaara spent much of his time in the archipelago.
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152:(O. Keyriläinen, deputy prison psychiatrist of the Turku Country Prison)
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Mitä yhteistä on Auervaaralla, Aino Kassisella ja Elias Simojoella?
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Auervaara has been seen as the inspiration of the 1945 play
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Auervaara became a celebrity in January 1945, when the
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Soukola, Timo: "Auervaara, Ruben Oskar (1906–1964)",
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Auervaara spent 26 years of life in various prisons.
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Noita palaa näyttämölle: Mika Waltari parrasvaloissa
142:. Auervaara was a skilled actor, but he had poor
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274:) also has a line that can be heard either as
513:Amorin pojat - sumutusta tositarkoituksella
459:, p. 16–17. Helsinki: Musiikki Fazer, 1967.
278:("when the spring mist brings danger") or
65:, meaning a deceptive charming trickster.
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350:"Auervaara" napsii naisen toisensa perään
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282:("when the spring brings Auervaaras").
197:According to the doctor general of the
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258:'s Finnish translation of the Swedish
199:psychiatric prison hospital of Finland
16:Finnish conman and thief (1906–1964)
383:, pp. 19–20. Helsinki: Otava, 1957.
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324:, volume 1, pp 443–444. Helsinki:
55:pretending to intend to marry them
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117:that he had met Auervaara at the
23:Ruben Oskar Auervaara in uniform.
480:Auervaara: Aurinko- ja kevätmies
501:Mainio seuramies ja psykopaatti
412:. Accessed on 12 November 2016.
396:, p. 177. Helsinki: WSOY, 2014.
544:Suicides by hanging in Finland
529:20th-century Finnish criminals
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438:, p. 193. Porvoo: WSOY, 1998.
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248:"Missä, milloin ja miten vaan"
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425:, Yle Turku 28 October 2010.
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57:. His surname has become an
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584:Pejorative terms for people
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190:(being, doing or making an
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326:Finnish Literature Society
280:"kun kevät Auervaarat tuo"
276:"kun kevätauer vaarat tuo"
214:("Gabriel, come back") by
482:. Helsinki: Edita, 1999.
322:Suomen kansallisbiografia
79:was born in Turku to the
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457:Reino Helismaan lauluja
182:In the press, the word
534:Finnish male criminals
211:Gabriel, tule takaisin
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136:criminal investigation
119:Helsinki County Prison
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515:, Ylen Elävä arkisto.
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40:Erik Kristian Jansson
28:Ruben Oskar Auervaara
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475:. Hämeenlinna, 1953.
473:Nainen oli kohtaloni
455:Kärki, Toivo (ed.):
368:Auervaaran muotokuva
34:, from 1952 to 1959
221:Nainen on kohtaloni
163:Nainen on kohtaloni
77:Ruben Oskar Jansson
36:Risto Oskari Karnas
539:Finnish fraudsters
379:Parvilahti, Unto:
113:tells in his book
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410:MTV Uutiset
271:Sol och vĂĄr
228:Veikko Lavi
184:"auervaara"
123:Katajanokka
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523:Categories
466:Literature
298:References
260:Eurovision
238:, such as
178:Reputation
140:psychopath
128:typewriter
265:Kevätauer
201:, docent
192:auervaara
72:Biography
328:, 2003.
286:See also
96:Vilppula
61:in the
44:Finnish
32:Jansson
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232:cuplés
171:hanged
100:prison
81:Rettig
47:conman
262:song
88:]
51:thief
484:ISBN
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49:and
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