China Daily

Russia’s ‘werewolf ’ killer cop on trial for 59 more murders

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MOSCOW — A former Russian policeman convicted of killing 22 women went on trial on Wednesday for a further 59 murders in a case that could make him Russia’s most prolific serial killer in recent history.

Mikhail Popkov, 53, appeared in court in the Siberian city of Irkutsk after confessing to 59 additional murders and one attempted killing between 1992 and 2010, Interfax news agency reported.

He is already serving a life sentence after being convicted in 2015 of raping and killing 22 women.

Popkov killed his victims after offering them rides late at night, sometimes in a police car, while he was off-duty around his home city of Angarsk near Irkutsk.

He has been nicknamed “the werewolf” and the “Angarsk maniac” by Russian media.

If convicted of 81 murders, he would exceed the total number of people killed by notorious figures like “chessboard killer” Alexander Pichushkin who killed 48, and Andrei Chikatilo, who was convicted of 52 Soviet-era murders.

Popkov has described himself as a “cleaner” who was purging the city of prostitute­s.

The victims were all women aged between 16 and 40 except for one where Popkov killed a male policeman.

Last month, Popkov said he had killed his victims with a hammer or an ax and that after his first murder, he felt little fear of discovery. “The same situation would come up again, only this time I did everything more cold-bloodedly, controllin­g myself, realizing it wasn’t so scary after all.”

He said he gave women lifts and targeted those who were drunk or living in a way he saw as immoral, telling the news site that “any society condemns the behavior of a debauched woman”.

He said he would only attack a woman who “behaved as if she didn’t care where we went and the most important thing to her was partying” and linked the killing spree to suspicions that his wife was unfaithful.

The murders took place while he was a serving police officer and after his retirement in 1998.

It was only in 2012 that he was caught when investigat­ors re-examined the cases and carried out DNA testing, focusing on those who drove a make of car whose tracks had been found at crime scenes.

Popkov later showed investigat­ors the crime scenes and where the bodies were buried.

Lead investigat­or Yevgeny Karchevsky described him as a “homicidal maniac” who had “an uncontroll­able desire to commit murders”.

“He wasn’t cleaning up the town from sin — that was made up by the media,” he added.

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