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Alexander Pichushkin

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Russian serial killer Not to be confused with Alexander Pushkin.

In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming customs, the patronymic is Yuryevich and the family name is Pichushkin.
Alexander Pichushkin
Александр Пичушкин
Pichushkin in 2007
BornAlexander Yuryevich Pichushkin
(1974-04-09) 9 April 1974 (age 50)
Mytishchi, Moscow Oblast, Russian SFSR, USSR
Other namesThe Bitsa Park Maniac
The Chessboard Killer
Criminal penaltyLife imprisonment
Details
Victims49–60
Span of crimes27 July 1992 – 14 June 2006
CountryRussia
Date apprehended16 June 2006

Alexander Yuryevich Pichushkin (Russian: Алекса́ндр Ю́рьевич Пичу́шкин; born 9 April 1974), also known as the Chessboard Killer (Убийца с шахматной доской) and the Bitsa Park Maniac (Битцевский маньяк), is a Russian serial killer who is believed to have killed at least forty-nine people, and possibly as many as sixty, between 1992 and 2006. Pichushkin was active in Moscow's Bitsa Park, where a number of the victims' bodies were found. In 2007 he was sentenced to life imprisonment.

Early life

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Pichushkin was born on 9 April 1974 in Mytishchi, Moscow Oblast, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union, and grew up on 2 Khersonskaya Street in Moscow proper. He lived there with his mother Natalia Elmouradovna, his younger half-sister, her husband, and their son in a two-bedroom apartment on the fifth floor. Their apartment building was a six-minute walk from the north end of Bitsa Park.

Pichushkin is remembered to have been an initially sociable child. However, this changed following an incident in which Pichushkin fell backwards off a swing, which then struck him in the forehead as it swung back. Experts speculated that this event damaged the frontal cortex of Pichushkin's brain; such damage is known to produce poor impulse regulation and a tendency towards aggression. Since Pichushkin was still a child, the damage would have been more severe, as a child's forehead provides only a fraction of the protection for the brain compared to an adult's. Following this accident, Pichushkin frequently became hostile and impulsive.

Due to his behaviour, Pichushkin's mother decided to transfer him from the mainstream school he had been attending to one for children with learning disabilities. Prior to this transfer, children from the mainstream school were known to have physically and verbally bullied Pichushkin, referring to him as "that retard". This abuse served to intensify Pichushkin's anger. Upon reaching early adolescence, his maternal grandfather recognized that Pichushkin was highly intelligent and felt that his innate talents were being wasted, as he wasn't involved in any activities at home and the school he was enrolled in focused more on overcoming disability than on promoting achievement.

Pichushkin moved into his grandfather's home and was encouraged to pursue intellectual pursuits outside of school. The deepest of these interests was chess. Pichushkin was taught how to play, and after demonstrating his ability was introduced to the exhibition games against elderly men who played publicly in Bitsa Park. An outstanding chess player, Pichushkin found a channel for his aggression when dominating the chessboard in all of his games. However, he continued to be bullied by mainstream school children and suffered an emotional blow when, toward the end of his adolescence, his grandfather died. Pichushkin was left to return to his mother's home, after which he enrolled as a student.

According to reports, the death of his grandfather greatly affected Pichushkin. In an effort to both dull the pain of the loss as well as to calm his severe aggressive tendencies, he began to consume large quantities of vodka. He continued to play chess both at home and in Bitsa Park, now joining the other men in drinking vodka, though unlike them he could play without being greatly affected by the alcohol. It was at this time that Pichushkin began to develop a more sinister hobby that, at the time, remained unknown to anyone: whenever he knew he was going to come into contact with children, he would take a video camera along and proceed to threaten them. On one occasion that has since been made public, he held a young child by one leg, upside down, and said to the camera: "You are in my power now... I am going to drop you from the window... and you will fall fifteen meters to your death..." He then watched these videos repeatedly to reaffirm his power. However, by 1992, this practice had become insufficient to satisfy his urges.

Murders

Russian media have speculated that Pichushkin was motivated, in part, by a macabre competition with another notorious Russian serial killer, Andrei Chikatilo, who was convicted of killing fifty-two children and young women over a twelve-year period. Pichushkin has said his aim was to kill sixty-four people, the number of squares on a chessboard. He later recanted this statement, saying that he would have continued killing indefinitely had he not been stopped.

First victim (July 1992)

Pichushkin's first murder occurred on 27 July 1992, when he was aged 18. Pichushkin arranged to meet his classmate, Mikhail Odïtchuk, in Bitsa Park to jointly hatch a plan to kill sixty-four people. However, when they arrived at the meeting point, Odïtchuk changed his mind and told Pichushkin that he no longer wanted to take action. Feeling teased by his best friend, Pichushkin strangled him and threw his body in a sewer entrance at Bitsa Park, then returned to his mother's apartment a short distance away. The body was never found.

After Odïtchuk's disappearance, Moscow police opened an investigation. Witness testimony provided to the police stated that Odïtchuk was last seen with Pichushkin, walking in the direction of the park. Pichushkin was arrested at his mother's home on 30 July and taken to Moscow police station for questioning. When asked about his schedule on the day of Odïtchuk's disappearance, Pichushkin confirmed having met with Odïtchuk but claimed to have left him unharmed in the park. With no evidence tying him to the disappearance, Pichushkin was released.

Pichushkin ceased killing for several years until 1996 when Russia placed a moratorium on the death penalty. This reignited Pichushkin's interest in killing.

"The sewers period" (May 2001–September 2005)

On 17 May 2001, Pichushkin was in Bitsa Park playing chess with a 52-year-old man named Yevgeny Pronin. At the end of their game, Pichushkin invited Pronin to take a walk with him, claiming it was the anniversary of his dog's death and that he wanted to visit the grave in Bitsa Park. Pronin accompanied him to an isolated area in Bitsa Park, whereupon Pichushkin pulled out a bottle of vodka and offered him a drink. The men made a toast to the dog, after which Pichushkin struck Pronin in the head with the bottle. Once Pronin was dead, Pichushkin threw his body into a nearby well.

Between May 2001 and September 2005, Pichushkin attacked thirty-six victims; three of his victims survived their injuries. Pichushkin would approach his victim in Bitsa Park (the vast majority of them elderly homeless people), offer to share a drink of vodka, and then kill them—typically by striking the back of their skull with a hammer or a bottle, although he was also alleged to have pushed his victims into the sewage canal to drown. Occasionally, he would then "sign" the corpse by impaling the victim's skull with sticks or an empty vodka bottle.

"The open period" (October 2005–June 2006)

From October 2005 to his final murder in 2006, Pichushkin's modus operandi changed. He would kill his victims by repeated blows to the head with a hammer, and would then push a vodka bottle into the gaping wound in their skulls. He would always attack from behind in order to take the victim by surprise and avoid spilling blood on his clothes. Ten of his victims lived in the same four-building complex where he lived—four from 2 Khersonskaya; two from 4 Khersonskaya, next door; three from 6; and one from 8.

Arrest

In June 2006, Pichushkin offered to go for a walk with his 36-year-old coworker, Marina Moskalyova. Though she was reportedly suspicious of him, Moskalyova agreed to go. Before she left, she wrote a note to her son letting him know she was with Pichushkin and left his phone number. Pichushkin was aware of the note but was undeterred.

Moskalyova's body was discovered in Bitsa Park on 14 June 2006, complete with Pichushkin's trademark injuries. A Moscow Metro ticket found in her possession led authorities to review surveillance tape footage from the metro system, where she was filmed, just hours before her death, walking on a platform accompanied by Pichushkin.

Once apprehended, Pichushkin led police officers to the scenes of many of his crimes in Bitsa Park and demonstrated a keen recollection of how the murders were committed. He was filmed reenacting his crimes in great detail, a process which is a regular part of Russian criminal investigation. Pichushkin also revealed that some of the murders he committed were not done using his preferred method (hammer blows to the back of the head), but by throwing his victims down into the sewer lines beneath Bitsa Park (although one of his victims did survive this ordeal).

Pichushkin claimed that deciding whether his victims should live or die made him feel like God. "In all cases I killed for only one reason. I killed in order to live, because when you kill, you want to live," he once said. "For me, life without murder is like life without food for you. I felt like the father of all these people, since it was me who opened the door for them to another world."

Trial and imprisonment

Pichushkin was convicted on 24 October 2007 of forty-nine murders and three attempted murders. He asked a Russian court to add an additional eleven victims to his body count, bringing his claimed death toll to sixty, and three surviving victims. During his trial, Pichushkin was housed in a glass cage for his own protection.

Upon conviction, Judge Vladimir Usov sentenced Pichushkin to life imprisonment, with the first fifteen years to be spent in solitary confinement. Pichushkin appealed his sentencing, claiming it was "too harsh" and asking for a reduction to twenty-five years. As of 2017, Pichushkin was spending his days in solitary confinement at the Arctic penal colony "Polar Owl".

In popular culture

Books

  • Harrington, Roger (2018). Alexander Pichushkin: The Shocking True Story of The Chessboard Killer. Amazon Digital Services LLC. ISBN 9781983033735.
  • Kepler, Lars (2018). The Sandman. Penguin Random House LLC. ISBN 9780525433057.

Music

  • The Finnish death metal band Torture Killer made a studio album Sewers dedicated to Pichushkin.
  • One of the tracks of Norwegian death/thrash metal band Exeloume ("The Bitsa Maniac") is dedicated to Pichushkin.
  • Australian post-punk band The Walk On By recorded the song "Alexander" for their 2011 album Euro Trash, an unhinged first-person narrative, imagining Pichushkin's perspective. The song has also been played live on a number of occasions in Australia and Europe and is a fan favourite.

Television

  • Serial killers: Chessboard Killer (2009). The first series of the Discovery documentary is focused on the case of Alexander Pichushkin.

Podcasts

  • My Favorite Murder covered Pichushkin's case in its 23rd episode titled "Making a Twenty-Thirderer".
  • And That's Why We Drink did a two-part episode about Pichushkin titled "The Chess Board Killer".
  • "The Chessboard Killer" Alexander Pichushkin. A two-part episode of the Serial Killers on Spotify.

See also

References

  1. "Der Schachbrett-Mörder: Lebenslang im härtesten StrafRusslands" Archived 2020-01-05 at the Wayback Machine. FOCUS TV Reportage, 15.11.2019
  2. ^ "The Chessboard Killer". 1 May 2009. Archived from the original on 17 November 2019. Retrieved 16 November 2019.
  3. ^ "Russia's Worst Serial Killer on Trial". ABC News. 12 February 2009. Archived from the original on 21 September 2013. Retrieved 20 May 2022.
  4. Yan, Xiao-hong; Qiu, Ke; Gao, Yan; Ren, Jianjun; Cheng, Danni; Pang, Wendu; Song, Yao; Yang, Wen; Yu, Rong; Zhao, Yu (March 2020). "Growing Skull Fracture of Temporal Bone in Adults: A Case Report and Literature Review". Ear, Nose, & Throat Journal. 99 (10): 654–657. doi:10.1177/0145561320914774. PMID 32207331. Retrieved 6 November 2020.
  5. "'Chessboard killer' revels in death". CNN. Associated Press. 9 October 2007. Archived from the original on 15 December 2007. Retrieved 10 April 2009.
  6. "Russian suspected of 62 murders". BBC News Online. 1 August 2007. Archived from the original on 28 December 2008. Retrieved 10 April 2009.
  7. "Russia 'chessboard killer' guilty". BBC News Online. 24 October 2007. Archived from the original on 25 April 2009. Retrieved 10 April 2009.
  8. "Russian chess player on trial for 49 alleged murders". News.com.au. Agence France-Presse. 14 September 2007. Archived from the original on 4 July 2009. Retrieved 10 April 2009.
  9. ^ "Transcript of "The Chessboard Killer" ..." Happy Scribe. Retrieved 24 April 2022.
  10. ^ Finn, Peter (25 October 2007). "Russian Is Found Guilty In String of 48 Slayings". The Washington Post. p. A20.
  11. ^ Lowe, Christian (24 October 2007). "Russian 'chessboard killer' convicted of 48 murders". Reuters. Archived from the original on 26 October 2007. Retrieved 10 April 2009.
  12. "Serial Killer in Moscow killed 52 people". Dailymotion. Russia Today. 12 November 2007. Retrieved 10 April 2009.
  13. "Serial killer on trial: Moscow's grandmaster of murder". The Independent. London. 14 September 2007. Archived from the original on 29 September 2017. Retrieved 19 September 2017.
  14. "Serial Killers". TV Shows. WIN TV. 19 May 2010. Archived from the original on 19 May 2010. Retrieved 29 August 2017.
  15. "Chinese drifter among 7 of the world's worst serial killers". South China Morning Post. 28 October 2018. Archived from the original on 28 October 2018. Retrieved 28 October 2018.
  16. Chua-Eoan, Howard (12 September 2007). "The Grandmaster of Murder?". Time. Archived from the original on 23 January 2009. Retrieved 10 April 2009.
  17. ^ Bukharbayeva, Bagila (24 October 2007). "Russian Convicted of 48 Murders". Chicago Tribune. derkeiler.com. AP. Archived from the original on 14 April 2016. Retrieved 2 April 2016.
  18. Sweeney, Conor (9 October 2007). "Russian serial killer says murder is like love". Reuters. Archived from the original on 26 January 2009. Retrieved 10 April 2009.
  19. "Russia's "chessboard killer": Punishment too harsh". Reuters. 2 November 2007. Archived from the original on 20 May 2022. Retrieved 20 May 2022.
  20. Stewart, Will (19 June 2017). "Notorious 'chessboard killer' reveals murdering his 49 victims was 'like sex'". mirror. Archived from the original on 14 January 2020. Retrieved 14 January 2020.
  21. "My Favorite Murder with Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark". Spotify.

External links

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