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    • Image courtesy of parool.nl

      parool.nl

      • In 1983 Amsterdam, friends Willem Holleeder, Cor van Hout, Jan Boellard, Martin Erkamps, and Frans Meijer kidnap Heineken owner Freddy Heineken in an attempt to obtain a high ransom for his return. Heineken is released by the police and the Willem and Cor flee to Paris and go into hiding.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kidnapping_Freddy_Heineken
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  2. Freddy Heineken, chairman of the board of directors and CEO of the brewing company Heineken International and one of the richest people in the Netherlands, and his driver Ab Doderer, were kidnapped on 9 November 1983 in Amsterdam.

  3. Sep 28, 2019 · When gunmen seized Freddy Heineken and his chauffeur outside the brewery's Amsterdam headquarters it sparked a global manhunt for the missing billionaire, his kidnappers and the $11 million...

  4. Dec 20, 2023 · The kidnapping of billionaire beer magnate Freddy Heineken 40 years ago is less well-known in the UK than those cases, but in the Netherlands it is a crime that is the equivalent of the Great Train Robbery – so audacious that it has inspired books, films and TV dramas.

  5. Nov 30, 2018 · It was on Nov. 30, 1983, three weeks after he had disappeared, that police discovered the beer tycoon and his driver, Ab Doderer, in concrete cells in an otherwise empty warehouse in Amsterdam. By then the kidnappers had made their getaway, but only after securing a ransom payment of more than $10 million. The trouble for Heineken started on ...

  6. Jul 4, 2019 · Holleeder, now 61, achieved notoriety in the 1980s for the kidnapping of beer tycoon Freddy Heineken. He then became a big crime boss and has been convicted after a lengthy and expensive trial in...

  7. Jul 4, 2019 · Holleeder, now 61, achieved notoriety in the 1980s for the kidnapping of beer tycoon Freddy Heineken. He then became a big crime boss and has been convicted after a lengthy and expensive trial in...

  8. Jul 7, 2021 · His reporting on the 1983 kidnapping of beer magnate Freddy Heineken for the newspaper De Telegraaf propelled him into the nation's consciousness.