Wednesday 20 June 2012

'Forest Boy' hoaxer had troubled life, friend says

A friend of 'Forest Boy', the Dutch man who hoaxed German authorities for nine months, has shed new light on the troubled background that may have led to his elaborate deceit, in an interview with NBC News.

By Carol Grisanti, NBC News

Robin van Helsum, the 'Forest Boy' who hoaxed German authorities for nine months with a fantasy about living rough in woods, was running away from a troubled background and financial concerns, his friend told NBC News.

Ray van Ravensberg, Robin's childhood friend, shed new light on the Dutchman whose story - and supposed mystery identity - flummoxed police in Berlin and attracted headlines around the world.?


Van Helsum's scam was exposed last week after he was identified by his step-mother in The Netherlands following the distribution of a police photograph.?

Van Ravensberg said?Robin, who ran away from home in Hengelo,?a Dutch town near the border with Germany last September,?came from a broken home, did not get along with his step mother and fought constantly with his father, who was very strict.

"He started to stop with school and stop with work and the only thing he did was sitting on the computer and yeah, just screwing around."

'Forest Boy' mystery solved: Man admits lies over identity

Van Ravensberg said Robin moved out of the house and went for "room training"- a Dutch program where teenagers with problems at home, are put into a government care program and live with groups of people their own age from similar backgrounds - a type of youth hostel.

But then Robin got into more trouble, becoming a loner, spending hours on the computer and argued with the owners of the hostel because he could no longer pay his bills.

"His life was really complicated," van Ravensberg said as he struggled to explain his friend. "He doesn?t have anything like I do- he doesn?t have parents who will cover [him] if [he's] in financial debt, like I do. [My parents] will help me, I can talk to them."

Van Ravensberg went on to explain that a young woman? who Robin dated a few times, perhaps for some financial help, became pregnant.

"First she said she was a few weeks pregnant but she was already pregnant for a longer period of time and he didnt want to have the child and she wanted to keep it."

That might have been the turning point for Robin. Shortly afterwards, he ran away determined to escape and start a new life somewhere, somehow.

'Forest boy' mystery: Stumped German police release photo

Van Ravensberg said Robin is really smart and proved it by staying nine months in Germany without getting caught.

When he arrived in Germany, Robin told the police his name was Ray and he was a 17 yr-old orphan - that?s all he could remember.

The 'Forest Boy' was convincing. The Germans were intrigued by his story and provided him with care. The fantasy about living rough for five years in the German forests was so heart-rending that his became an international sensation. No one thought he could have made it up. But he did.

Van Ravensberg defended his old friend. "It started with his own life. He already had complications and it became more and more- financial, girlfriend, child and yeah his bucket was way too full."

"He just wanted to have a new bucket."

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