Dyonathan Celestrino | |
---|---|
Born | January 5th, 1992 Rio Brilhante, Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil |
Other names | "The Cross Maniac" "DOG HELL 666" |
Conviction(s) | Murder x3 |
Criminal penalty | 3 years |
Details | |
Victims | 3 |
Span of crimes | July 2 – October 3, 2008 |
Country | Brazil |
State(s) | Mato Grosso do Sul |
Date apprehended | October 9, 2008 |
Imprisoned at | Campo Grande Penal Institution, Campo Grande, Mato Grosso do Sul |
Dyonathan Celestrino (born January 5th, 1992), known as The Cross Maniac (Portuguese: Maníaco da Cruz) and by his Orkut handle, DOG HELL 666, is a Brazilian serial killer who committed three ritualistic murders in Rio Brilhante from July to October 2008, when he was still a teenager. Due to the high probability of him posing a future danger to society, he remains incarcerated.
Murders
In 2008, Celestrino, a neo-paganist goth, decided to kill those whom he perceived as "not following God's precepts." Along with his religious motivations, he was both inspired and challenged by Fransisco de Assis Pereira, another Brazilian serial killer. Celestrino intended to surpass Pereira’s ‘record’. He would pick his victims at random and bring them to an isolated area at knifepoint. Firstly, he would ask them if they believed in God. If they answered ‘yes’, he would proceed to ask them various sexually-related questions, such as what age they lost their virginity, how many partners they had, and their sexual preference. If he considered them impure, he would proceed to kill them, typically by asphyxiation. After murdering his respective victim, Celestrino would partially undress them, spread their arms and cross the legs at ankle height to resemble a cross.
Victims
Catalino Gardena, 33, killed on July 2 - a bricklayer and neighbor of Celestrino. Celestrino claimed that Gardena "deserved to die" because he was an alcoholic and a homosexual. He was found in a vacant lot. He was asphyxiated with a plastic bag and stabbed in the chest. The word INRI was written on a piece of paper nearby, standing for Jesus, King of the Jews.
Letícia Neves de Oliveira, 22, killed on August 24 - a lesbian gas station attendant. Found half-naked on a grave in a cemetery. Celestrino manually asphyxiated her.
Gleice Kelly da Silva, 13, killed on October 3 - a drug user. Found half-naked at an abandoned construction site. Celestrino had left a handwritten note next to the body which read “Corpse of Thor” in English, and “until next Hell” in Portuguese, although he later clarified he meant winter instead of Hell. All of his murders were committed during the Brazilian winter. If he wasn’t arrested, he had intent to stop the murders after killing Da Silva and start again after next year’s Yule.
Investigation
After the murder of Da Silva, a special unit was formed to investigate her and the two previous murders, which were linked via a similar modus operandi. As part of the investigation procedures, officers interviewed Celestrino as he was Gardena's neighbor, but he was later identified as the murderer and arrested after he commented on an Orkut post commemorating Gleice. He commented “Dead people can’t receive Screeps, you sickos!" Screeps were the equivalent of replies on Orkut. After he posted this comment, police decided to search Gleice’s phone and saw multiple calls from one same number. Both the Orkut account and the phone number were identified as Celestrino’s, and he was arrested on October 9th, 2008.
In Celestrino’s room, police found the blouse of Gleice, necklaces and jewelry belonging to Gleice and Letícia, newspapers about his own case, and a picture of Fransisco de Assis Pereira in the middle of an otherwise innocent poster board. Police also found a piece of paper with 3 names, 1 word beside each. “Catalino - Dead, Letícia - Dead, Carla - Saved”. Carla was one of the people who ‘passed’ his interview, and she was able to give police more details about Celestrino and his interview before his arrest.
In the aftermath of his arrest, investigator Maria de Lourdes Souza Cano issued a press statement commending her colleagues' work effort in capturing the criminal. She also claimed that Celestrino had apparently planned to commit a fourth murder, and he admitted to wanting to surpass Fransisco de Assis Pereira in notoriety, stating he “liked Pereira because of how many women he killed”.
Trial and imprisonment
Soon after his arrest, Celestrino was ordered to undergo a psychiatric evaluation. The results from the evaluation concluded that he had an antisocial personality disorder and chronic psychopathy, due to which he was prescribed medication. He was then transferred to the Unei de Ponta Porã, where he soon gained further notoriety for assaulting prison guards and having occasional outbursts.
Under Brazilian law, Celestrino was scheduled to be released in 2013 at the age of 21, but as he was deemed incapable of living a normal life, his sentence was extended indefinitely. While awaiting the final decision in his case, Celestrino managed to escape prison and flee to Horqueta, Paraguay with the help of his mother and his aunt on March 3, but was arrested only a month later on April 27 after a Brazilian salesman residing at the same hotel recognized him. 2 fake Facebook accounts were made of him after the news of his escape, one of the accounts threatening the town of Dourados.
Residents of the town nicknamed him ‘Johnny’, and 2 of his friends described him as a flirt. Celestrino even tried to make advances on a 15-year-old sister of one of these friends. Messages to her from him show that he tried to get her to go out drinking with him. Police also found a diary of his, the most notable excerpt which reads ‘In life and death, I am a serial killer’, and a miniature Portuguese-Spanish dictionary with strange drawings of his scrawled on the back pages. He also gave an exclusive interview in Paraguay after people found out who he was, and he made a deliberate lie, explaining he was a hitman hired to kill these people and execute the crimes in the way he did.
After his escape from Unei de Ponta Porã, he was transferred to the Campo Grande Penal Institution, and as of August 2022, Celestrino remains incarcerated. He is described as a good inmate, is currently studying for a degree in environmental resource management and receives regular visits from family members, and weekly calls with his mother. He has attempted to appeal various convictions from various charges committed in prison, most of which have been unsuccessful.
See also
References
- ^ Isabela Sanchez (March 11, 2019). "Juíza diz que presídio ainda é melhor lugar para "Maníaco da Cruz"" [Judge says prison is still the best place for the 'Cross Maniac']. Campo Grande News (in Portuguese). Archived from the original on August 31, 2022.
- ^ Mariana Moreira (July 27, 2022). "Caso de Maníaco da Cruz desafia leis penitenciárias há 9 anos" [Cross Maniac case defies penitentiary laws for 9 years]. Correio do Estado (in Portuguese). Archived from the original on August 31, 2022.
- ^ Rafael Oliveira (July 10, 2022). "Não entregou TCC, é comportado e recebe visita: saiba como é a vida do 'Maníaco da Cruz', no Instituto Penal há 9 anos" [Didn't do TCC, behaves well and receives visitors: learn about the life of the 'Cross Maniac', at the Penal Institution for 9 years]. Caçula FM 96.9 (in Portuguese). Archived from the original on August 31, 2022.
- "AGEPEN: SURTO DE MANÍACO DA CRUZ REFORÇA NECESSIDADE DE TRANSFERÊNCIA" [AGEPEN: OUTBREAK OF THE CROSS MANIAC REINFORCES NEED FOR TRANSFER]. Cidade FM (in Portuguese). Archived from the original on August 31, 2022.
- Silvia Frias (February 3, 2021). "Preso sem prazo para ser solto, Maníaco da Cruz recorre de condenação de 15 dias" [Detained with no deadline to be released, Cross Maniac appeals 15-day conviction]. Campo Grande News (in Portuguese). Archived from the original on August 31, 2022.
- 1992 births
- 21st-century Brazilian criminals
- Brazilian murderers of children
- Brazilian people convicted of murder
- Brazilian serial killers
- Crimes involving Satanism or the occult
- Lesbophobic violence
- Living people
- Minors convicted of murder
- People convicted of murder by Brazil
- People with antisocial personality disorder
- People from Rio Brilhante, Mato Grosso do Sul
- Violence against gay men
- Violence against women in Brazil
- Violence against LGBTQ people in Brazil
- Juvenile serial killers
- Sexual violence against LGBTQ people