Austrian couple married and divorced 12 times in 40 years—Here’s why

Austrian couple married and divorced 12 times in 40 years—Here's why

Decades-long pension exploitation leads to fraud investigation

In a stunning case of legal manipulation, an Austrian couple has been accused of orchestrating an elaborate pension fraud scheme through repeated marriages and divorces, spanning over four decades.

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According to Newsweek, witnesses, such as family members and neighbors, claim that the couple never really separated, maintaining a happy and seemingly “model” marriage while continuing to live together during this time, despite the apparently turbulent legal background.

The Austrian woman faces allegations of pension fraud after reportedly collecting multiple widow’s pensions despite being remarried. According to German newspaper Bild, the 73-year-old received over $342,000 in widow’s benefits following her first husband’s death in 1981.

Despite remarrying in 1982—a move that typically ends widow’s pensions—she instead received a $28,405 “severance payment.”

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In April, an Austrian court deemed these payments unjustified, prompting a formal fraud investigation last week. The case, centered in Graz, has sparked intense legal and ethical debates.

An Austrian couple, married and divorced 12 times over 43 years, is now facing a fraud investigation, local media reports. The case centers on a woman who repeatedly regained her widow’s pension after divorcing her husband, a long-haul truck driver whose job often kept him away from home.

The couple’s first divorce occurred in 1988, following six years of marriage, citing strain from the husband’s frequent absences. After the divorce, the woman’s widow’s pension was reinstated. When they remarried, she lost the benefit but received a £27,000 compensation payout.

This cycle of marriage, divorce, and pension claims continued for decades. Each marriage lasted about three years on average, with the woman attending 13 weddings—12 of them to the same man.

Suspicion arose after the couple sued the pension fund when her widow’s pension was denied following their latest divorce in May 2022. Austria’s Supreme Court dismissed their case in March 2023, ruling that their repeated divorces were a deliberate scheme to exploit pension benefits. Witnesses also testified that their relationship had remained intact throughout the years.

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Last week, the Styrian State Police Directorate launched a formal fraud investigation, with a trial expected soon. Authorities have refused to recognize their latest divorce, maintaining the couple is still legally married.

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