The Cleaners (serial killers)

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The Cleaners
Чистильщики
Years active2014-2015
TerritoryMoscow and Yaroslavl Oblasts, Russia
Membership
  • Pavel Voitov
  • Elena Lobacheva
  • Artur "Narcis" Narcissov
  • Maxim "Zakirka" Pavlov
  • Vladislav "Persik" Karataev
Activities

The Cleaners (Russian: Чистильщики, romanizedChistilshchiki) were a gang of Russian serial killers and neo-Nazis. Between 2014 and 2015, they killed more than 15 people in Moscow, the Moscow Oblast and the Yaroslavl Oblast. Their victims of choice were mainly homeless and alcoholics. On October 23, 2017, the Moscow City Court sentenced the member Pavel Voitov to life imprisonment, Elena Lobacheva to 13 years' imprisonment and Maxim Pavlov to 9 years and 6 months' imprisonment in a penal colony. Vladislav Karataev was sentenced to 16 years, and Artur Narcissov to 9 years and 6 months, which were to be served in a corrective labor colony.

Murders[edit]

The members met in far-right groups on the social media website VKontakte.[1] The leading role among the participants was taken by Pavel Voitov: he distributed roles, made decisions and actively led the activities of the gang. The motives for the killings was the desire to "clean the city", and "hatred of alcoholics and homeless people".[1][2] According to the investigators, they wanted to "contrast themselves with others and show their superiority".[3]

They committed murders with particular cruelty in different parts of Moscow, as well as the Moscow Oblast and the Yaroslavl Oblast, from July 2014 and February 2015.[4] Victims were found not far from the Belorussky railway tracks, sometimes in the Eastern Administrative District. The corpses were subsequently found in deserted places, where there are no surveillance cameras[2] (under bridges, near fences, garages, in abandoned hangars or on far-away glades in forest parks):[1]

  • one killed at the Belorussky station, with 44 knife wounds on the body;
  • one killed at the hippodrome, with 18 hammer blows and 51 stab wounds on the body;
  • one killed in Begovaya, with 35 stab wounds on the body;
  • one killed under the bridge near Workers' Village, with 46 stab wounds and 2 blows from a stone on the body;
  • two killed on Izmaylovsky Boulevard, one of them with 15 stab wounds and 10 blows from a hammer, and the other sustaining 13 stab wounds;
  • one killed next to Filevsky Park, with 48 stab wounds on the body;
  • one killed in Nagornaya, with 9 knife wounds on the body;
  • one killed in Odintsovo, with 50 stab wounds on the body;
  • one killed near Kurskaya, with 48 stab wounds and 6 blows from a hammer on the body;
  • one killed on Lilac Boulevard, with 84 stab wounds on the body;
  • one killed in Kuskovo, with 171 stab wounds and 5 hammer blows on the body;
  • two killed on Bryansky Post Street, with one sustaining 42 stab wounds and 2 hammer blows, and the other sustaining 35 stab wounds.

Members[edit]

The five members of the gang included: Pavel Voitov, Elena Lobacheva, Artur "Narcis" Narcissov, Maxim "Zakirka" Pavlov and Vladislav "Persik" Karataev. Lobacheva and Narcissov lived in Moscow. Lobacheva had grown up on the outskirts of Moscow near the Vykhno metro station, and after school she worked first as a courier, then as an assistant accountant. Before the murders she had a suspended sentence for a series of thefts. Narcissov worked in a warehouse, also as a courier. Karataev was born and lived in Pavlovo, 70 kilometres away from Nizhny Novgorod, with his father raising him. He previously had resided in a psychiatric hospital and had taken medication. The youngest of the "Cleaners", Maxim Pavlov, who at the time of the crimes was only 16, lived in Rostov, Yaroslavl Oblast.[1][5]

The leader of the gang Pavel Voitov was registered with his grandmother—a war veteran—in the Ruza District of the Moscow Oblast. During the investigation, Voitov claimed that he lived through robbing people, stealing mobile phones from passers-by. But the numerous cases listed by him, with the exception of one, were not confirmed, or at least there were not reports to the police from the victims.[5] From five to thirteen years old, he lived with his parents on Izmailovsky Boulevard, then, after his parents divorced, he spent some time in Riga with his father, where in 2012 he was sentenced to a year of imprisonment for the desecration of graves at a Jewish cemetery.[1][6] He wanted to be a soldier, so, together with Karataev and Pavlov, he tried to go to war against the rebels in the far-right Azov Battalion, but all three were instead deployed on the Russian-Ukrainian border, and then returned home to Moscow by bus.[1]

All of the members led a healthy lifestyle, and did not drink anything stronger than beer. Subsequent psychological examinations determined that all of the "Cleaners" were sane, with the exception of Karataev, who was recognized as partially sane.[6]

Investigation and arrest[edit]

In the fall of 2014, operatives paid attention to a similar style of murders in different parts of the city:[7] victims were tricked into visiting scarcely populated or deserted areas, mostly at night,[8] then hit with a hammer first and struck with dozens of knives afterwards,[1] the victims usually being heavily drunk or homeless, sometimes guest workers. Suspecting that all the crimes were committed by the same people, the investigators combined them into one case. But the investigation had no serious clues for a long time.[1] Suspicion fell on supporters of Nazi ideology, and relevant groups in social networks were actively studied, but no trace of crimes in the virtual space could be found.[5]

Subsequently, employees of the Main Department of the Sledkom and FSB were able to track the mobile phones in the areas where the killings occurred. Several of the same numbers pinged on communication towers near the crime scenes. Having researched the owners of the numbers, the FSB officers identified the suspects.[1] On February 15, 2015, Pavel Voitov and Artur Narcissov attacked a janitor in Vykhino, but he actively resisted. The criminals were forced to flee, and the janitor was able to testify and describe them.[5][9]

As a result, on February 19, 2015, the police, together with the FSB, detained 20-year-old Pavel Voitov and 25-year-old Elena Lobacheva—their place of residence was calculated from video cameras installed around the city. During the searches, six knives, an unregistered "Osa" pistol, clothes with the janitor's blood and a hammer were found inside their home.[5] After some time, the police arrested two other suspects—19-year-old Maxim Pavlov and 21-year-old Vladislav Karataev. A little later, 23-year-old Artur Narcissov was also detained. The detainees confessed at the first interrogation, including to the killings, even though the authorities hadn't suspected them of the murders.[1]

Trial[edit]

The investigation of the "Cleaners" criminal case ended in April 2017, after which the criminals were transferred to the Moscow City Court. Elena Lobacheva demanded that the jury convicted them, and this request was fulfilled.[n 1] From late May to mid-June 2017, the prosecutor read out the evidence of the prosecution in court. Analyzing each episode, he showed the jury photos from the murders. At the first sessions, some jurors turned away from the photographs, but until the end of the process they had to see hundreds of photos. For the entirety of the trial, only Lobacheva's mother came to visit from any of the defendants' relatives.[1]

On June 21, 2017, the jury found all five defendants in the case guilty and undeserving of leniency. The exception was Narcissov, whom the board unanimously found guilty of attempted murder, but was divided on the issue of leniency—6 were in favor and 6 were against.[3]

According to the accusation, Pavel Voitov committed 14 murders: five on his own, six with Lobacheva, five with Lobacheva only observing, two together with Karataev and Lobacheva, and two with Pavlov. Voitov and Narcissov committed an attempted murder. Pavlov, Karataev and Voitov also robbed two people, with one of the attacks resulting in Voitov killing the victim.[10]

On October 23, 2017, the Moscow City Court sentenced Pavel Voitov to life imprisonment, Elena Lobacheva to 13 years' imprisonment and Maxim Pavlov to 9 years and 6 months' imprisonment in a penal colony. Vladislav Karataev was sentenced to 16 years, and Artur Narcissov to 9 years and 6 months, which were to be served in a corrective labor colony.[11]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

Notes

  1. ^ The woman's right to a jury trial was confirmed by the Constitutional Court in February 2016.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Туровский, Даниил (20 October 2017). "Спокойно и с удовольствием: Кто такие «чистильщики» и почему они убивают бездомных и случайных прохожих" [Calm and happy: Who "The Cleaners" are and why they kill homeless people and passersby]. Meduza (in Russian). Archived from the original on 23 October 2017. Retrieved 24 October 2017.
  2. ^ a b McIntyre, Niamh (27 October 2017). "Bride of Chucky' serial killer who derived sexual pleasure from killing jailed". The Independent. Retrieved 8 December 2023.
  3. ^ a b Гуцул, Диана (21 June 2017). "Присяжные вынесли обвинительный вердикт по делу об убийствах бездомных" [Jury reaches guilty verdict in homeless killings case]. РАПСИ (in Russian). Archived from the original on 25 October 2017. Retrieved 24 October 2017.
  4. ^ "Мосгорсуд вынес приговор «чистильщикам», которые убивали бездомных и случайных прохожих" [Moscow City Court sentences "cleaners" who killed homeless people and bystanders]. Meduza (in Russian). Archived from the original on 23 October 2017. Retrieved 24 October 2017.
  5. ^ a b c d e Степовой, Богдан (11 May 2017). "Поклонников битцевского маньяка ждет пожизненный срок" [Fans of the Bittsevo maniac face a life sentence]. Izvestia (in Russian). Archived from the original on 28 October 2017. Retrieved 27 October 2017.
  6. ^ a b "Осквернители еврейского кладбища получили условные сроки" [Desecrators of Jewish cemetery received suspended sentences]. Delfi (in Russian). 15 March 2012. Archived from the original on 28 October 2017. Retrieved 28 October 2017.
  7. ^ Рогоза, Александр (19 June 2016). ""Банда чистильщиков": на счету прирожденных убийц уже 20 жертв" ["The Cleaners": the natural-born killers have already claimed 20 victims]. Komsomolskaya Pravda (in Russian). Archived from the original on 24 October 2017. Retrieved 24 October 2017.
  8. ^ "Суд вынес приговор убивавшим бездомных в Москве и области" [Court sentences those who killed homeless people in Moscow and Moscow Oblast]. Kommersant (in Russian). 23 October 2017. Archived from the original on 24 October 2017. Retrieved 24 October 2017.
  9. ^ Афанасьева, Юлия (24 October 2017). "Убивали как роботы: история самой московской кровавой банды уличных «чистильщиков»" [They killed like robots: the story of Moscow's bloodiest gang of street "cleaners"]. Moskovskij Komsomolets (in Russian). Archived from the original on 24 October 2017. Retrieved 25 October 2017.
  10. ^ "Убивавших бомжей и случайных прохожих в Москве "чистильщиков" признали виновными" [Those who killed homeless people and random passers-by in Moscow, "The Cleaners" were found guilty]. TV Rain (in Russian). Archived from the original on 25 October 2017. Retrieved 25 October 2017.
  11. ^ "Оглашен приговор пятерым участникам преступной группы, причастным к убийствам более 15 человек на территории Москвы и Московской области" [A verdict has been announced against five members of a criminal group involved in the murders of more than 15 people in Moscow and Moscow Oblast]. Investigative Committee of the Russian Federation (in Russian). Archived from the original on 23 October 2017. Retrieved 24 October 2017.

External links[edit]