Killed 55 female serial killer, sentenced for second time to life

Siberian police, known as Russia's largest serial killer of the modern era, have been given a second life sentence. Mikhail Popkov, 53, killed 55 women and a policeman near Irkutsk. The women Peskov killed were victims to whom he offered his ride in his car late nights. [...]
Siberian police, known as Russia's largest serial killer of the modern era, have been given a second life sentence.
Mikhail Popkov, 53, killed 55 women and a policeman near Irkutsk.
The women Peskov killed were victims to whom he offered his ride in his car late nights.
At least 10 of them were first raped and then killed. On three occasions he had committed crimes during his duty by police car.
Popkov was captured in 2012 after his car was identified through DNA.
Victims were all women between the ages of 16 and 40, while only one of them was male, police officer. Murders occurred between 1992 and 2007.
Popkov had killed the victims around the city of Angarsk, near Irkutski, with a axe and a hammer, while their troops had thrown them into the woods, in the streets, and in a local cemetery.
The death toll exceeds 48 killed by “chess killer” Alexander Pukushkin and 52 killed by Andrei Chikatilo during the Soviet era broadcast Kosova Preris.
Popkov has declared that the purpose of the killing was “cleansing” Angarsk's of immoral women, but that was an unverth because he had seduced all sorts of women with his car.
Siberian police, known as Russia's largest serial killer of the modern era, have been given a second life sentence.
Mikhail Popkov, 53, killed 55 women and a policeman near Irkutsk.
The women Peskov killed were victims to whom he offered his ride in his car late nights.
At least 10 of them were first raped and then killed. On three occasions he had committed crimes during his duty by police car.
Popkov was captured in 2012 after his car was identified through DNA.
Victims were all women between the ages of 16 and 40, while only one of them was male, police officer. Murders occurred between 1992 and 2007.
Popkov had killed the victims around the city of Angarsk, near Irkutski, with a axe and a hammer, while their troops had thrown them into the woods, in the streets, and in a local cemetery.
The death toll exceeds 48 killed by “chess killer” Alexander Pukushkin and 52 killed by Andrei Chikatilo during the Soviet era broadcast Kosova Preris.
Popkov has declared that the purpose of the killing was “cleansing” Angarsk's of immoral women, but that was an unverth because he had seduced all sorts of women with his car.












