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Sergey Golovkin

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Sergey Golovkin
Born
Sergey Aleksandrovich Golovkin

(1959-11-26)26 November 1959
Died2 August 1996(1996-08-02) (aged 36)
Moscow, Russia
Cause of deathExecuted
Other namesThe Fisher, The Udav (Boinae)
Conviction(s)Murder
Criminal penaltyDeath(Execution by shooting)
Details
Victims11-13+
CountrySoviet Union, Russia

Sergey Aleksandrovich Golovkin (Russian: Серге́й Александрович Головкин; 26 November 1959 – 2 August 1996) was a Soviet-Russian serial killer, convicted for the killing of 11 people in the Moscow area between 1986 and 1992.[1] Golovkin, also known as The Fisher and The Boa, tortured, raped and killed young boys in his garage basement and the forests outside Moscow.

Golovkin was the last person to be executed in Russia before the abolition of capital punishment.[2]

Background

Sergey Aleksandrovich Golovkin was born on 26 November, 1959, in Moscow, Soviet Union. His father was an alcoholic, and his parents divorced in 1988.[2] Golovkin was born with a birth defect in his sternum, often suffering from bronchitis and indigestion. In school, Golovkin was considered a loner, and his male classmates noted how he had no interest in girls. He was known to have suffered from enuresis, afraid that his classmates would smell his urine. Golovkin was a classmate of Armen Grigoryan, the future front-man of Krematorij.[3] When Golovkin was 13-years-old he began to show sadistic tendencies, including catching a cat in the street and bringing it home, where he hanged it.

In 1982, Golovkin graduated from the Timiryazev Agricultural Academy. He began working at a racetrack, then as a livestock expert at a stud in Moscow. For achievements in horse breeding development, Golovkin was awarded a silver medal at a VDNKh trade show in 1989.

In 1984, Golovkin committed his first known crime, when he attempted to rape and murder a young boy.

Murders

Moscow Oblast killings

In April 1986, Golovkin committed his first murder, near the Katuar railway station in Nekrasov, Moscow Oblast, just outside of Moscow. He met 15-year-old Andrey Pavlov, who Golovkin then threatened with a knife and dragged into the forest. Pavlov was raped, strangled to death and Golovkin performed necrophilia on the body.

The following July Golovkin committed his second murder, abducting 12-year-old Andrey Gulyaev from a summer camp near Odintsovo, Moscow Oblast. Gulyaev was also threatened with a knife, taken to the forest, raped and strangled, then Golovkin dismembered the body.

Garage murders

In 1988, Golovkin purchased a beige-colored VAZ-2103 car, which he stored in his garage where he began constructing a basement, originally to be used as a workshop, however he realized it could be used as a dungeon to commit his sexual crimes. From August 1990, Golovkin killed eight boys aged 10 to 15-years-old, on two occasions torturing two boys at the same time.[2] In September 1992, Golovkin raped and killed three boys who he had lured into his garage, offering to commit theft from a warehouse. The last of them Golovkin tortured and raped for 12 hours and then hung up before went to work.[1]

Arrest and conviction

On October 5, 1992, three weeks after the last killings, the bodies of the last three victims were found by mushroom pickers. On October 19, 1992, Golovkin was detained under suspicion by the police, but during the interrogation he behaved calmly and denied guilt. Investigator Kostarёv Bakin decided to let Golovkin go, instead setting up secret surveillance on him, but a policeman violating the order put Golovkin in solitary confinement for the night. In the morning Golovkin was asked for questioning, and admitted to the last three murders to Kostarёvu. The next day police searched Golovkin's garage, discovering a baby bath with a burnt layer of skin and blood, clothes, and body parts. Golovkin then confessed to a total of 11 murders, revealing where he had disposed of the bodies of his victims.

Golovkin was found to be sane but schizophrenic, and on 19 October 1994, Golovkin was sentenced to death.

On 2 August 1996, Golovkin was the last person to be executed by Russia before the abolition of capital punishment.[2]

References