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Thread: Serial Killer Thread

  1. #46
    penalty boxed user Maccabee Ridah's Avatar
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    Sickest muthafucka eva:

    Andrei Chikatilo



    Andrei Romanovich Chikatilo (Russian: Андрей Романович Чикати́ло) (October 16, 1936 – February 14, 1994) was a notorious Russian serial killer, nicknamed the Butcher of Rostov, The Red Ripper or The Rostov Ripper. He was convicted of the murders of 52 women and children mostly in the Russian SFSR between 1978 and 1990 (some victims were murdered in the Ukrainian SSR and in the Uzbek SSR).

    Early life

    Andrei Chikatilo was born in the village of Yablochnoye, Ukraine. When the Soviet Union entered World War II, his father was called to the army. Chikatilo had to share a bed with his mother. He was a chronic bed wetter, and his mother beat and humiliated him for each offense.

    The war years were traumatic ones for Chikatilo. During the Ukrainian famine, Stalin forced Ukranian farmers to hand in their entire crop for statewide distribution. Mass starvation ran rampant throughout the Ukraine, and incidents of cannibalism soared. Chikatilo's mother told him that his older brother Stepan had been kidnapped and cannibalized by starving neighbors; It has never been independently established whether this actually happened.[1] During the war, Chikatilo witnessed some of the effects of German bombing raids, which both frightened and excited him.[2] In 1949, Chikatilo's father, who had been captured, returned home; Instead of being rewarded for his war service, he was branded a traitor for surrendering to the Germans.[3] As he grew older, Chikatilo learned he suffered from chronic impotence, worsening his social awkwardness and deep-seated anger. [4]

    Chikatilo was a good student, and set his sights on Moscow State University, where he hoped to achieve a law degree. Chikatilo failed the entrance exam, however. After finishing his mandatory military service in 1960, he moved to Rodionovo-Nesvetayevsky and worked as a telephone engineer. Chikatilo's only sexual experience in adolescence was when he, aged 18, jumped on a 13-year-old girl (his sister's friend) and wrestled her to the ground, ejaculating as the girl struggled in his grasp.[5]

    In 1963, Chikatilo married a woman that his younger sister introduced him to. The couple had a son and daughter. Chikatilo later claimed that his marital sex life was minimal and that he would ejaculate on his wife and push the semen inside her with his fingers. In 1965, their daughter Luda was born. A year later, they had a son named Yura. In 1971, Chikatilo completed a degree in Russian literature by a correspondence course and tried a career as a teacher in Novoshakhtinsk. His career ended after several complaints of child molestation, however.[6] He eventually took a job as a clerk for a factory.

    Beginning of the murders

    In 1978, Chikatilo moved to Shakhty, a small coal-mining town near Rostov-on-Don, where he committed his first documented murder. On 22 December, he lured a nine-year-old girl to an old house (which he had purchased in secret) and attempted to rape her but failed to achieve an erection. When the girl struggled, he stabbed her to death. He ejaculated in the process of knifing the child. From then on Chikatilo was only able to achieve sexual arousal and orgasm through stabbing and slashing women and children to death. Despite evidence linking Chikatilo to the girl's death, a young man, Alexsandr Kravchenko, was arrested, tried and confessed under torture. He was executed for the crime.

    He did not murder again until 1982, but in that year he killed several times. Chikatilo established a pattern of approaching runaways and young vagrants at bus or railway stations, enticing them to a nearby forest, and killing them. In 1983, his murdering did not begin until June, but he murdered four victims before September. His victims were all women and children. The adult females were often prostitutes or homeless women who could be lured with promises of alcohol or money. Chikatilo would typically attempt intercourse with his adult female victims, but he would usually be unable to get an erection, which would send him into a murderous fury, particularly if the woman mocked his impotence. He would achieve orgasm only when he stabbed the victim to death. His child victims were of both sexes; Chikatilo would lure them to secluded areas by promising them toys or candy.

    Six bodies (out of 14) had been uncovered by 1983. A Moscow police team, headed by Major Mikhail Fetisov, was sent to Rostov-on-Don to direct the investigation. Fetisov centered the investigations around Shakhty and assigned a specialist forensic analyst, Victor Burakov, to head the investigation. The police effort concentrated on mentally ill citizens in the area and known sex offenders, slowly working through all that were known and eliminating them from the inquiry. A number of young men confessed to the murders, although they were usually mentally handicapped youths who had admitted to the crimes only under prolonged and often brutal interrogation. One under-age homosexual suspect committed suicide in his detention cell. In 1984, another 15 murders took place. The police took to additional patrols and posted plain-clothes men at many public transport stops.

    Arrest and release

    Chikatilo was identified behaving suspiciously at a Rostov bus station. He was arrested and held. It was found he was under investigation for minor theft at one of his former employers, which gave the investigators the legal right to hold him for a prolonged period of time. Chikatilo's dubious background was uncovered but provided insufficient evidence to convict him of the murders. He was found guilty on other matters and sentenced to one year in prison. He was freed in December 1984 after serving three months.

    Later murders and the manhunt

    Chikatilo found new work in Novocherkassk and kept a low profile. He did not kill again until August 1985, when he murdered two women in separate incidents. He is not known to have killed again until May 1987 when, on a business trip to Revda in Ukraine, he killed a young boy. He killed again in Zaporozhye in July and in Leningrad in September.

    The moribund police investigation was revived in mid-1985 when Issa Kostoyev was appointed to take over the case. The known murders around Rostov were carefully re-investigated and there was another round of questioning of known sex offenders. In December 1985, the police renewed the patrolling of railway stations around Rostov. Chikatilo followed the investigation carefully, and for over two years he kept his desires under control. The police also took the step of consulting a psychiatrist, the first such consultation in a serial killer investigation in that country.

    In 1988 Chikatilo resumed killing, generally keeping his activities far from the Rostov area. He murdered a woman in Krasny-Sulin in April and went on to kill another eight people that year, including two victims in Shakhty. Again there was a long lapse before Chikatilo resumed killing, murdering seven boys and two women between January and November 1990.

    The discovery of more victims led a massive operation by the police. A part of the operation involved a large number of the force patrolling train and bus stations as well as other public places around Rostov area. Major bus and train stations were patrolled by the police force wearing uniforms. Smaller and less busy stations were patrolled by undercover agents. The idea behind this was as follows: the police were hoping that after seeing numerous police force at large train and bus stations, the serial killer would rather attempt to find a victim at a smaller station, where the presence of police was not apparent. The operation also involved a large number of young female agents dressed like prostitutes or homeless people. They kept wandering aimlessly in and around stations as well as traveling extensively along the routes where dead bodies were found.

    On 6 November, Chikatilo killed and mutilated Sveta Korostik. While leaving the crime scene, he was stopped by an undercover policeman who was patrolling the Leskhoz train station and saw Chikatilo approaching from the woods. According to the policeman, he looked suspicious. The only reason for someone to go into the woods at that time of year was to gather wild mushrooms (a popular pastime in Russia). However, Chikatilo was not dressed like a typical forest hiker. He was wearing rather formal attire. Moreover, he had a nylon sports-bag, which was not suitable for carrying mushrooms. Secondly, his clothing was dirty and he had what looked like smeared blood stains on his cheek and ear. The policeman stopped Chikatilo and checked his papers. Having no formal reason for arrest, the policeman let him go. Had the policeman checked Chikatilo's bag, he would have found the amputated breasts of Sveta Korostik. When the policeman came back to his office, he filed a formal routine report, indicating the name of the person he stopped at the train station. Shortly after the encounter, the police found two dead bodies, 30 feet apart, near the train station Leskhoz. It was determined that one of the victims was killed around the date of the police report filed about this suspicious man near the Leskhoz station. It was the second time Chikatilo was indirectly associated with a murder of a child (the first one was in 1978, when a witness reported seeing a man whose description matched Chikatilo with a girl who was later found dead).

    Final arrest and Chikatilo's confession

    Even after the incident, the police still didn't have enough evidence for arrest and prosecution. However, Chikatilo was put on 24/7 watch by the police. He was constantly followed and videotaped by undercover agents. On 20 November 1990, Chikatilo left his house with a one gallon flask for beer (at that time, one could hardly buy bottled beer in the Soviet Union; one could only buy beer from a mobile beer station or café selling beer by volume; but even this type of beer was hard to find). Chikatilo kept wandering around the city with the flask. He kept attempting to make contact with children he met on his way. Finally, he entered a small cafe where he bought 300ml of beer (the police force wondered why anyone would wander around the city for several hours just to buy 300ml of beer). The fact that he kept approaching children triggered the decision by the police force to arrest him when he exited the cafe.

    Again, the police had 10 days to either charge Chikatilo with murders or to let him go. Upon arrest, the police uncovered another piece of evidence against Chikatilo. One of his last victims was a physically strong (although mentally challenged) 16 year old boy. At the crime scene, the police had found numerous signs of physical struggle between the victim and his murderer. One of Chikatilo’s fingers had a relatively fresh wound. Medical examiners concluded the wound was, in fact, from a human bite. In fact, his finger bone was broken. Chikatilo never sought medical attention for the wound.

    The strategy chosen by the police force to make him confess was somewhat unusual for the police at that time. One of the chief interrogators kept telling Chikatilo that they all believed he was a very sick man and needed medical help. This gave Chikatilo hope that if he confessed, he wouldn't be prosecuted by reason of insanity. Finally a psychiatrist was invited to "help" Chikatilo (involvement of a psychiatrist during investigation was something the police had never done before). The psychiatrist was very sympathetic to Chikatilo's mental problems. After a very long conversation, Chikatilo confessed to the murders. Again, confession was not enough to prosecute him. Interrogators still needed hard evidence. Chikatilo volunteered to provide evidence – he showed buried bodies that the police hadn't discovered yet. That was it: police had enough evidence to put him on trial. Between November 30 and December 5, Chikatilo confessed to and described 56 murders. Three of the victims had been buried and could not be found or identified, so Chikatilo was not charged with these crimes. The number of crimes Chikatilo confessed to shocked the police, who had listed only 36 killings in their investigation. A number of victims had not been linked to the others because they were murdered far from Chikatilo's other hunting grounds, while others were not linked because they were buried and not found until Chikatilo led the police to their shallow graves.That was enough evidence to put him on trial.

    Imprisonment

    Special precautions had to be taken while keeping Chikatilo in prison. Violent and especially sexual crimes against children are "taboo" in the Russian underworld. Prisoners accused of raping and/or killing children in Russian prisons are "cast down" (опущены) to "untouchable" (опущенный) status, abused, and sometimes killed by their cell mates. The problem was complicated by the fact that some of the relatives of Chikatilo's victims worked in the prison system. There was a high probability of Chikatilo being killed in his cell before his trial.

    While in his cell, Chikatilo was put under 24/7 video surveillance. While the suspect often acted bizarrely in front of his investigators, his behavior inside the cell (when he thought nobody was watching) was absolutely normal. He ate and slept well. He exercised every morning. He extensively read books and newspapers. Chikatilo also spent a lot of time writing letters and complaints to his family, government officials, and the mass media.

    Trial and execution


    The Soviet Union collapsed in 1991. Chikatilo's trial was the first major event of post-Soviet Russia. He went to trial on April 14, 1992. Despite his odd and disruptive behavior in court, he was judged fit to stand trial. During the trial he was kept in an iron cage in the center of the courtroom; it was constructed for his own protection from the relatives of his victims. The trial had a very disturbing atmosphere. The relatives kept shouting threats and insults to Chikatilo, demanding the authorities to release him so that they could execute him on their own. There were many incidents of relatives fainting when the names of the victims were mentioned. The police guards inside the court room had to suppress what looked like an emerging riot several times. When offered to speak, he gave a two hour speech in which he explained himself as a man robbed of his genitals. He claimed to be condemned to a life of sexual frustration. Chikatilo's insane behavior in the courtroom was believed by many to be an act. If found insane, he would be placed in a psychiatric hospital. If proven sane, he faced execution. Chikatilo made many ludicrous statements, on some occasions, he announced he was pregnant or was being radiated. Twice, he dropped his pants and exposed his genitals, shouting that he was not a homosexual. On the last day of the trial, he broke into song and had to be removed from the courtroom. When offered a final opportunity to speak, he remained mute.

    The trial ended in July and sentencing was postponed until October 15 when he was found guilty of 52 of the 53 murders and sentenced to death for each offense. When given a chance to speak, Chikatilo delivered a rambling speech, blaming the regime, certain political leaders, his impotence (even removing his trousers at one point) and defending himself by pointing to his childhood experiences in the notorious famine which took place in Ukraine in the 1930s. (However, it should be noted that Chikatilo's birth in 1936 occurred after the Ukrainian famine, which occurred in 1932–1933.) At one point he claimed that he had done a favor to society by cleansing it of "worthless people" (many of Chikatilo's victims were young prostitutes, alcoholics, and run-away teenagers).

    On 14 February 1994 after Russian President Boris Yeltsin refused a last ditch appeal by Chikatilo for clemency, Chikatilo was taken to a soundproofed room in Rostov prison and executed by a single gunshot behind the right ear.

  2. #47
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    i remember watchin somethin on that guy.

  3. #48
    penalty boxed user Maccabee Ridah's Avatar
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    ^^ Citizen X!!!

    It's a movie bout him..

    P.E.A.C.E.

  4. #49
    The ABBOTT Dokuro's Avatar
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    went to the woods, spent time alone, meditated under a waterfall climb to the highest peak of the mountain; now I'm back, enlightened, fully trained, to be the greatest Jackass the Corp has ever seen. all hail Me, you fucking Skruds.


  5. #50
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    nah...that doesnt qualify as a serial killer. fail.

  6. #51
    BANG, BANG! Killa BB's Avatar
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    For the crazy chicks category...
    One of the bitches who started it all...



    Anna Marie Hahn
    "Arsenic Anna"
    Born: July 7, 1906
    Executed: Hamilton County December 7, 1938

    The first woman to die in the electric chair in Ohio and America's first female serial killer to die in the chair. She was executed for the murder of 73-year-old Jacob Wagner of Cincinnati in 1937. Hahn, an immigrant from Bavaria, was suspected in numerous other poisoning deaths.

    As a teenager, Hahn gave birth to an illegitimate son (the father was purportedly a Viennese physician). Her family shipped her off to America in 1929. She married Philip Hahn of Cincinnati a year later.

    Hahn began poisoning and robbing elderly men and women in the city's German community to support her gambling habit. Enest Kohler, who died on May 6, 1933, was believed to be her first victim. Hahn had befriended him shortly before his death; he left her a house in his will.
    Her next victim, Albert Palmer, 72, also died soon after she began caring for him. Prior to Parker's death, she signed an I.O.U. for $1,000 that she borrowed from him, but after his death the document was either discarded or simply "disappeared."
    Jacob Wagner died on June 3, 1937 leaving $17,000 cash to his "beloved niece" Hahn. She soon began caring for 67-year-old George Gsellman, also of Cincinnati. For her service before his death July 6, 1937, she received $15,000.
    Georg Obendoerfer was the last to die, on August 1, 1937, after he traveled to Colorado Springs with Hahn and her 12-year-old son. Police in Colorado said Obendoerfer, a cobbler, "died in agony just after Mrs. Hahn had bent over his deathbed inquiring his name, professing she did not know the man." Her son testified at her trial that he, his mother, and Obendoerfer traveled to Colorado by train from Cincinnati together and that Obendoerfer began getting sick en route.
    George Heis was one of the very few who survived Hahn's ministrations, having ordered her from his home. By then, however, Heis was partially paralyzed from Hahn's previous murder attempts.
    After Obendoerfer died, an autopsy revealed high levels of arsenic in his body. Police became suspicious of the spate of deaths around Hahn. Exhumations of two of her previous clients revealed that they had been poisoned.

    Hahn was convicted after a sensational four-week trial in November 1937 and sentenced to death in Ohio's electric chair, an execution that was carried out on December 7, 1938.

    http://i.imgur.com/GdghXmu.jpg

  7. #52
    aka Orion Zemo RADIOACTIVE MAN's Avatar
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    sick bitch...keep em coming yo
    and good looking out on that nicky

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