Volodymyr Nikityuk
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Negligent homicide
15 years imprisonment (2008)
Life imprisonment (2025)
Volodymyr Nikityuk | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1970 (age 55–56) |
| Other names | "The Oleksandriia Maniac" |
| Convictions | Murder x3 Negligent homicide |
| Criminal penalty | 9 years imprisonment (1991) 15 years imprisonment (2008) Life imprisonment (2025) |
| Details | |
| Victims | 4–6 |
Span of crimes | 1991–2016 |
| Country | Soviet Union, later Ukraine |
| States | Volyn, Kirovohrad |
Date apprehended | For the final time on 16 August 2016 |
Volodymyr Nikityuk (Ukrainian: Володимир Никитюк; born 1970), is a Soviet–Ukrainian serial killer who committed at least three murders and one negligent homicide between 1991 and 2016 in Volyn and Kirovohrad Oblasts out of apparent religious mania. He was suspected in two additional murders, but was acquitted due to a lack of evidence.
The criminal case caused a public outcry due to the severity of the crimes, the religious motivations, and the long length from the beginning of the trial until its conclusion. After almost ten years, Nikityuk was convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment.
Religious conversion and early release
Volodymyr Nikityuk was born in 1970 in Volodymyr-Volynskyi, Volyn Oblast. He had a sister. In the mid-1970s, his family moved to the village of Dolgonosy, where Nikityuk spent his childhood and youth. There, he was regarded negatively by everyone around him due to his apparent mental illness and hooliganistic activities.[1] Among the latter was his cruelty to animals, attacking people for seemingly no reason, and setting fire to barns and houses of fellow villagers.[2]
In 1991, Nikityuk got into a quarrel with a neighbor, after which he set fire to a neighbor's room in a dormitory. Unbeknownst to him, the fire caused a girl residing in the room to suffer from severe injuries, from which she eventually succumbed to in the hospital.[2] Nikityuk was tried, convicted of negligent homicide, and sentenced to 9 years imprisonment.[2]
After serving his sentence in full, he returned to Dolgonosy, where he continued to terrorize the locals. According to local residents, he would walk down the street, spot a goat or a chicken, and then pounce on them and simply gut them with a knife.[3] At the end of 2000, he was suspected of robbing a local pharmacy, whose medicines were later found in the river, but no conclusive evidence of his involvement in the crime was found.[3]
In 2001, Nikityuk murdered 16-year-old Ruslana Knyzh from the village of Liublynets.[3] He waited for the girl, who was studying in the city and had come home for the holidays, at the railway station, then attacked and beat her, inflicting severe traumatic injuries. The trial lasted seven years because while serving his original sentence, Nikityuk became fascinated with studying the Ukrainian criminal code and managed to delay the criminal case by filing numerous complaints and petitions.[3] In 2008, he was found guilty and sentenced to 15 years imprisonment.[2]
While serving his sentence at the Petrovskaya Maximum Security Penal Colony No. 49 in the Kirovohrad Oblast, Nikityuk visited psychologist Sergei Botarenko and attended religious services regardless of denomination or creed.[4] At the same time, he constantly wrote something in his notebook, where he made notes and worshipped various Pagan gods such as Svarog, Dazhbog and Perun. Aside from celebrating pagan religious holidays, Nikityuk also told others that he believed in a "living god", but never explained what he meant by that.[2]
In February 2016, Nikityuk was granted early release following the passage of the Savchenko Law.[5] However, instead of returning home, he decided to stay in Kirovohrad, where he was sheltered by a Pentecostal group. Not long after, a series of murders and disappearances involving children and teenagers began.[2]
Serial murders
Suspected victims
In regards to all the confirmed and suspected murders, Nikityuk targeted children and teenagers as victims, always on a Pagan holiday. The first suspected murder took place on the evening 1 May 2016, during the Easter celebrations or what coincidentally was also Zhivin Day according to the Pagan calendar.[4] On that date, 15-year-old Sofia Buts went to a disco in her home village of Pantaivka, where she was last seen near a local store saying goodbye to her friends at around 10 PM. When she failed to return on the following day, her parents reported her as missing and a search operation was initiated to locate her. Despite the combined efforts of the local police, volunteers and villagers who combed through the nearby forests and bodies of water, they were unable to locate Buts initially.[2]
Her skeletal remains were found five months later on 22 October 2016 in the nearby forest, when mushroom pickers accidentally stumbled upon her skull.[6] A more in-depth search led to the recovery of other bones and half-decayed articles of clothing, which were positively identified as belonging to Buts by her relatives.[6] This was confirmed on 13 January 2017, when DNA concluded that the remains were indeed those of Buts. After this discovery, relatives and villagers stated that they had seen the bones near a passageway close to a trail when they searched for the girl back in May 2016, suggesting that the remains were purposefully moved there.[7]
Another suspected victim was 12-year-old Ilya Makarov, who went missing on 22 May 2016 in the city of Oleksandriia, during the celebration of the Translation of the Relics of Saint Nicholas from Myra to Bari, or, alternatively, Yarilin Day according to the Pagan calendar.[4] On the day of his disappearance, the boy left home and was going to play with friends in the courtyard of a neighboring apartment building, but he never made it there.[2] Makarov was last seen alive near the Secondary School No. 8.
When he did not return home, his parents contacted the police, who immediately began searching for him with the help of volunteers. As with the Buts case, searchers combed through the nearby woodlands, abandoned buildings, basements, attics, and the riverbank, but no trace of Makarov was ever found. His ultimate fate is unknown, but according to investigators, he fell victim to the so-called "Oleksandriia Maniac".[4]
Confirmed victims
Nikityuk's first confirmed murder took place on the night of 6–7 July 2016, during the celebrations for Kupala Night. The victim was 21-year-old Daria Ozarko, who lived in Oleksandriia with her grandmother while he mother worked abroad. On the night of her death, she, along with her friend Alla and her boyfriend, went to a local beach to attend a party. Around midnight, her two companions went off to dance, leaving her alone.[2]
When they returned, Ozarko was gone, so Alla attempted to call her, only to hear her cellphone ringing from some nearby bushes.[3] Alla and her boyfriend followed the sound, whereupon they found the body of Ozarko. An autopsy concluded that she had been beaten to such a severe degree that the killer had fractured her skull in several places.[4] Since there were no signs of sexual assault or missing valuables, investigators were unable to determine a motive for the murder.[3]
The second confirmed victim was 13-year-old Stanislav Boiko, a resident of Oleksandriia who disappeared on 1 August 2016 after telling his parents he was going for a walk. On the following morning – during the celebration of Prophet Elijah's Day or the Festival of Perun – the boy's completely naked corpse was found floating in the Inhulets river by two fishermen.[4] An autopsy concluded that, similarly to Ozarko, he had beaten so severely that he suffered extensive trauma to the brain, multiple fractures, and was evidently strangled with a rope. The coroner determined that when the perpetrator threw Boiko into the river, the victim was still alive, but quickly succumbed to his injuries.[2]