A Russian court Monday sentenced Alexander Pichushkin, a
supermarket worker known as the "Bitsa Maniac," to life in prison
for murdering 48 people and attempting to murder three others.
Pichushkin, 33, pleaded guilty to 60 murders and three attempted
murders. In fact, he has claimed to have killed more people as part
of a bizarre fantasy of having a victim for each of the 64 squares
on a chessboard.
There is no death penalty in Russia and life in prison is the
severest punishment. The jury convicted Pichushkin of murder
Wednesday, saying he does not deserve leniency.
"The court bears in mind the extreme danger posed by the
criminal in the dock ... The court sentences Pichushkin to life in
jail in order to restore justice and prevent new crimes," said
Judge Vladimir Usov of the Moscow City Court.
The court also ordered compulsory therapy and psychiatric
monitoring. It was confirmed that Pichushkin has a mental disorder
but he is sane and cannot avoid criminal responsibility, Russian
media reported.
Pichushkin lured his victims to a park in Moscow by offering
them vodka and threw most of their bodies into a sewage pit after
they got drunk or were knocked out by him with a hammer or vodka
bottle, prosecutors said.
Pichushkin said that he killed one of his last victims in
February last year to show that he was still at large in response
to reports by Russian newspapers that the "Bitsa Maniac" had been
caught.
Pichushkin was arrested in June 2006 after a former colleague
left a note to her son, which said that she was going for a walk
with him, and was then found dead.
Before that, Russia's most notorious serial killer was Andrei
Chikatilo, who was convicted in 1992 of murdering 52 children and
young women over 12 years.
(Xinhua News Agency October 30, 2007)