zaterdag 30 december 2017
dinsdag 28 november 2017
zondag 11 juni 2017
donderdag 16 maart 2017
zondag 19 februari 2017
This is the infamous little drawing by the hand of the winemaker’s wife, Luca Hulst. A ”situation sketch” that is part of a court record of a session presided by judge W.E Elzinga, Nov 5th 2007. Hulst was ”sworn in” as a crown witness, and testified about an “assault”.
For two years she kept quiet about it. Didn’t tell her friends, her children, nor her parents. Until the record was published in 2009. Which brought about a short circuit in the Maastricht courthouse, and in the Apostelhoeve’s inner circle. What was the case? Mrs. Hulst never set foot in the court building. The judge wrote a story in the category fiction.
Someone at the Bisschopsingel 53 Police Station had a great idea months earlier: wouldn’t the notable winemaker’s wife be the ideal person to lay down a reliable crown witness testimony of an ”assault”? Whoever put the question, Luca Hulst-Nijsten said yes. She didn’t have to sign. She only had to nod her head.
First person narrator in that testimony is officer Jan Ten Brink and he formalized it in 39-page police file 2006145758. Which later would be used as the basis for the Nov. 5th court session. As we know now, the court room, besides judge, DA and clerk, was empty, but the documents spell out quite accurately what happened there, though the devil was in the details.
Elzinga “interrupted” proceedings to “reflect on further action”. Here she switched over to private mode. She got on the phone with fellow judge and colleague at the Law Faculty, Malva Driessen – whose name had surfaced as accuser in the case – asking for some input to produce a believable court record.
That resulted in this scribble about a situation that never happened. It seems as if Hulst is saying: ”if I do this minimalistic thingy that says absolutely nothing, they can’t hold it against me”. She drew it sometime later that week, at her kitchen table.



