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Mytishchi Neo-Nazis Admit To Series Of Murders, Assaults

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  • Mytishchi Neo-Nazis Admit To Series Of Murders, Assaults

    MYTISHCHI NEO-NAZIS ADMIT TO SERIES OF MURDERS, ASSAULTS

    Union of Councils for Jews in the Former Soviet Union, DC
    May 17 2007

    Three 16-year-old neo-Nazis from the Moscow suburb of Mytishchi have
    admitted to five murders and assaults after turning themselves in
    to police, according to a May 16, 2007 report in the national daily
    Moskovsky Komsomolets. As the paper originally reported on April 24,
    the youths turned themselves in after finding out that investigators
    had determined their identities as the prime suspects in the murder
    earlier that month of a Krygyz man. Police at the time announced
    that the three suspects may be behind a series of other murders
    and assaults.

    According to the latest article, the suspects have confessed to the
    following additional crimes. In late February, they began to comb
    the streets of Mytishchi and the suburban trains connecting it and
    other suburbs to Moscow, searching for non-Russians to kill. Their
    first victim, a citizen of Tajikistan, was beaten almost to death by
    the gang, who attacked him with an axe, a hammer, and bottles. This
    same MO was repeated on a suburban train shortly afterwards, when
    screaming the neo-Nazi slogan "Glory to Russia!", the youths attacked
    two Tajik men, again nearly killing them.

    On March 12, the youths spent several hours wandering the streets
    without successfully finding their victim. They were resting on a
    park bench when a dark-skinned man walked by. Thinking he was from
    the Caucasus, the youths beat him to death (it turned out that he
    was an ethnic Russian).

    In early April, the youths attacked an Armenian couple, beating
    the husband and stabbing the wife. Fortunately, both survived. The
    final act of violence that the youths are currently accused of is
    the mid-April murder of a Kyrgyz man.

    Prosecutors told Moskovsky Komsomolets that other attacks may yet be
    attributed to the youths, and that, in view of their youth and the
    fact that they turned themselves in, the murderous gang are facing
    at most ten years in prison if they are convicted.
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