Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

Russian policeman gets life for murdering at least 22 women

-

A retired Russian policeman was jailed for life Wednesday for raping and murdering 22 women after he claimed he wanted to cleanse his Siberian hometown of prostitutes.

Mikhail Popkov, who worked as a police officer at the time of most of the murders, raped and stabbed the women late at night in the city of Angarsk after offering to give them lifts in his police car, investigators said.

"Investigators managed to gather evidence implicating Popkov in 22 murders and two attempted murders of women," the Investigative Committee said in a statement after his sentencing.

The victims' bodies were found dumped in woods, on the roadside and in a cemetery.

A further two women managed to survive Popkov's attacks but suffered serious injuries.

The victims included a teacher and a shop assistant as well as several prostitutes, Russian media reported.

- Self-styled 'cleaner' -

Popkov described himself as a "cleaner" who was purging the city of prostitutes, Rossiya 1 television reported.

"He drove out on the streets of the city at night looking for women. He either offered (his victims) a lift or the women flagged him down for a ride... Then the crime was committed, almost always according to the same scenario," prosecutor Olga Muzykova told Rossiya 1.

"By calling himself a cleaner, he was trying to justify himself," she added. "He was an ordinary serial killer."

The wave of murders took place over six years, from 1994 to 2000, spreading fear among the city's residents, before suddenly ending.

Investigators had suspected a policeman was behind the crime because of the way the killer carefully covered up his tracks.

Popkov was caught after investigators reexamined the case and carried out DNA testing of residents, focusing on those who drove a car make whose tracks had been found at crime scenes.

The murderer had taken part in investigating some of the crimes he has been convicted, said Komsomolskaya Pravda daily, citing his former colleagues.

Popkov, who retired from the police force in 1998, was arrested in 2012 in the far eastern city of Vladivostok where he had gone to buy a car.

Popkov will serve his sentence in a special prison colony for former law enforcers.

A retired Russian policeman was jailed for life Wednesday for raping and murdering 22 women after he claimed he wanted to cleanse his Siberian hometown of prostitutes.

Mikhail Popkov, who worked as a police officer at the time of most of the murders, raped and stabbed the women late at night in the city of Angarsk after offering to give them lifts in his police car, investigators said.

“Investigators managed to gather evidence implicating Popkov in 22 murders and two attempted murders of women,” the Investigative Committee said in a statement after his sentencing.

The victims’ bodies were found dumped in woods, on the roadside and in a cemetery.

A further two women managed to survive Popkov’s attacks but suffered serious injuries.

The victims included a teacher and a shop assistant as well as several prostitutes, Russian media reported.

– Self-styled ‘cleaner’ –

Popkov described himself as a “cleaner” who was purging the city of prostitutes, Rossiya 1 television reported.

“He drove out on the streets of the city at night looking for women. He either offered (his victims) a lift or the women flagged him down for a ride… Then the crime was committed, almost always according to the same scenario,” prosecutor Olga Muzykova told Rossiya 1.

“By calling himself a cleaner, he was trying to justify himself,” she added. “He was an ordinary serial killer.”

The wave of murders took place over six years, from 1994 to 2000, spreading fear among the city’s residents, before suddenly ending.

Investigators had suspected a policeman was behind the crime because of the way the killer carefully covered up his tracks.

Popkov was caught after investigators reexamined the case and carried out DNA testing of residents, focusing on those who drove a car make whose tracks had been found at crime scenes.

The murderer had taken part in investigating some of the crimes he has been convicted, said Komsomolskaya Pravda daily, citing his former colleagues.

Popkov, who retired from the police force in 1998, was arrested in 2012 in the far eastern city of Vladivostok where he had gone to buy a car.

Popkov will serve his sentence in a special prison colony for former law enforcers.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

You may also like:

Tech & Science

Like Europe, Canada is looking to attract top US scientists who may want to evade Trump's crackdown on universities and research institutions. 

Business

BioAlberta’s CEO reflects on regulatory hurdles, investor gaps, and the leadership needed to turn scientific breakthroughs into commercial success.

Tech & Science

A fundamental disconnect: organisations are being compromised by issues that represent basic cyber hygiene failures rather than advanced persistent threats.

Social Media

Elon Musk's X Corp. has filed a lawsuit challenging a New York state law.