A Moscow court yesterday began trying a supermarket porter who
prosecutors say murdered 49 people over a 14-year period, which
would make him Russia's worst serial killer in a decade.
His lawyer said 33-year-old Alexander Pichushkin had confessed to
most of the murders, but it was unclear how many. The jury must
decide whether or not he is of sound mind.
"My client understands that he is to blame for most of these
murders," Pichushkin's lawyer, Pavel Ivannikov, told reporters
outside the courtroom after a fifteen-minute hearing.
Pichushkin scowled as he was brought into Moscow City Court
under heavy guard for a preliminary hearing at which he opted to be
tried by a jury, instead of a panel of judges.
If convicted, Pichushkin - called the "Bitsevsky Maniac" by
Russian media after the Moscow park where many of the alleged
victims were killed - would be Russia's most deadly serial killer
since Andrei Chikatilo, convicted in 1992 of 52 murders.
Prosecutors say Pichushkin befriended many of his victims in
Bitsevsky park by inviting them to drink vodka with him, then
bludgeoned them to death with a hammer. Some of the victims had
fragments of glass pressed into their skulls.
Prosecutors also say Pichushkin confessed to the murders in
police custody. Russian media reported that for every person he
killed, he placed a coin on a chess board and that he had been
planning to cover all 64 squares on the board.
The trial was adjourned until September 13 to allow time for a
jury to be selected. It is expected to be lengthy, as it will hear
from at least 41 relatives of the alleged victims and a total of 98
other witnesses.
During the hearing, relatives of two of the alleged victims sat
just meters from Pichushkin.
The accused occasionally stretched his arms and stared out from
the glass enclosure where he was held, without displaying any
emotion. In a red and white checked shirt and jeans, he looked
older than his age, with grey peppering his dark hair.
Speaking quietly before the hearing, one middle-aged man,
Alexander Fyodorov, recalled his family's efforts to track down his
missing brother, who would be 47 this year. "I want Pichushkin to
sit in prison for the rest of his life," he said.
Although Russia has not formally abolished the death penalty, it
has been observing a moratorium on capital punishment.
(China Daily August 14, 2007)