He was known in and around the town of Ghent for
walking into any restaurant of his choosing, ordering anything for steak
to lobsters and walking out without paying.
BRUSSELS
(AP) — He was an unrepentant gastronomic freeloader, from lobster right
up to the after-dinner brandy, always enjoying the bounty to
the fullest.
Titus Clarysse
was infamous in and around the northern Belgian town of Ghent for
walking into any restaurant of his choosing, ordering whatever his tummy
and palate craved and walking out without paying.
"Curse him? Maybe. But kill him? That makes no sense," said Tim Joiris, head of the Ghent region restaurant and hotel federation.
Two
days after the 35-year-old Clarysse was found dead in his apartment,
investigators on Thursday were looking for suspects in what spokeswoman Annemie Sirlippens called "a case of murder or manslaughter."
Newspapers
reported Clarysse was stabbed — a detail police would not confirm — on
Monday night. There was no immediate indication of the motive and
Sirlippens refused to provide more details.
Clarysse's gastronomic past, though, was the stuff of lore.
"We
are talking about 100 incidents spread over several convictions,"
Sirlippens said, and at least a half-decade of gastronomic and
financial excess.
Joiris
knows, since he had enough restaurant owners complain. "It was trouble
for everyone. And what's worse, for long nobody knew how really to deal
with it."
Restaurants
in Ghent, a medieval university town with gabled fronts and terraces on
cobblestones, attract an international and varied clientele.
"In the end, we knew his face, but you know, on a busy terrace in summer, full of people, he knew how to blend in," Joiris said.
Several
convictions did not stop him and tales of freeloaders being forced to
do the dishes "are a myth," Joiris said. "He did it all, the grand
restaurants, the terraces. He really tried them all."
Clarysse was called a "tafelschuimer" — someone who takes everything, even the crumbs, off the table.
De
Standaard newspaper reported he was living on municipal welfare and
often seemed to have the wrong kind of friends. It was unclear whether
his death was linked to his freeloading.
"We are not talking about an aggressive guy. He was just happy-go-lucky about it," Joiris said. And Clarysse never held back.
"He was asking for it all — the whole menu," Joiris said, chuckling in remembrance.
"He would sit and wait after the meal — another beer, a brandy."
Source: www.sfgate.com
Source: www.sfgate.com
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