Anatoly Onoprienko
The Terminator
On April 16, 1996, police arrested Anatoly Onoprienko, a
37-year-old former forestry student, sailor and mental hospital outpatient,
putting an end to the Ukraine's worst killing spree. Anatoly, a native of
Zhitomir, was arrested atn his girlfriend's house where he had a 12-gauge
shotgun matching the one used in the 40 murders. He also had jewelry and video
equipment belonging to some of his victims. While in custody Comrade O.
immediately confessed to eight killings between 1989 to 1995. At first he denied
other charges, but soon admitted to being the maniac dubbed, "The Terminator"
who tallied up to 52 victims in a six-year killing spree.
Onoprienko's rampage began in 1989, when he and accomplice Serhiy Rogozin robbed
and killed nine people. The former sailor resumed the killings in late 1995,
murdering 43 people in less than six months before police arrested him in April
1996.
On March, 1996, a manhunt was launched across western Ukraine after eight
families were brutally murdered in their homes. Most of the victims were in
remote villages in the Lvov region near the border of Poland. His blood lust
climaxed with a three-month rampage in which he killed more than 40 people in
the Ukranian villages of Bratkovichi and Busk. Panic was so widespread in the
two villages that an army division was mobilized and armed personnel carriers
patrolled the streets. Trying to put a stop to the killings, police imposed a
security cordon around Bratkovichi. Undaunted, "The Terminator" moved to nearby
villages where he continued his serial killings.
The killings followed a set pattern. "The Terminator" chose isolated houses in
the outskirts of villages. He would enter the houses before dawn, round up the
family and shoot them all -- including children -- close range with a 12-gauge
shotgun. Then he would torch the place and kill whoever crossed his path during
his murderous outbursts. He often stole valuables from his victims and sometimes
scattered family photographs about the floor. Police arrested Citizen O. in his
girlfriend's apartment in April, 1996, after a nationwide manhunt.
On November 23, 1998, the trial of Nasty O. began in the city of Zhytomyr, 90
miles west of Kiev. The accused claimed he felt like a robot driven for years by
a dark force, and argued he should not be tried until authorities determine the
source of this force. A former forestry student, sailor and soldier, Mr. O
claimed his mother died when he was four and his father and brother gave him to
an orphanage at seven, and that he had heard voices telling him to do the
murders. Dressed in running shoes, an oversized jacket, a knitted hat, and
hadcuffs, Onoprienko sat calmly inside an iron cage surrounded by police exuding
arrogance and boredom.
Hundreds of people huddled in coats and fur hats in the unheated courtroom were
angered by his behaviour. "Let us tear him apart," shouted a pensioner at the
back of the court just before the hearing started, her voice trembling with
emotion. "He does not deserve to be shot. He needs to die a slow and agonizing
death."
In previous interviews Nasty O has rambled endlessly about the CIA and Interpol,
unknown powers and future revelations. Psychiatrists, however, ruled him fit to
stand trial. "I perceive it all as a kind of experiment," he said. "There can be
no answer in this experiment to what you're trying to learn."
Sitting in his cell the Ukranian serial killer that came to be knowsn as the
Terminator told Reuters and a regional newspaper: "I have never regretted
anything and I don't regret anything now." In the bizarre and emotional
hour-long interview he added that cosmic forces planned to destroy humanity and
replace it with "bio-robots." With the guards sitting in a row on a green couch
just a foot away, Onoprienko looked his interviewers in the eye and spoke in an
intense, rapid voice, at times almost fierce, of his early discovery of special
telepathic powers.
Claiming hypnotic powers and saying he had information "nobody, not even the
president" had access to, he said he had received "permission" to kill, but did
not explain what drove him to destroy his victims. "I love all people and I
loved those I killed. I looked those children I murdered in the eyes and knew
that it had to be done," he said. "For you it's 52 murders, but for me that's
the norm." He said he would have been prepared to kill his own son.
While in court, he had very little to say. Asked if he would like to make a
statement he shrugged his shoulders, slowly sauntered to the microphone and
said: "No, nothing." Informed of his legal right to object to the court's
proceedings, he growled: "This is your law, I consider myself a hostage." Asked
to state his nationality, he said: "None." When Judge Dmitry Lipsky said this
was impossible, Onoprienko rolled his eyes and replied: "Well, according to law
enforcement officers, I'm Ukrainian."
Though Onoprienko has remained completely silent during court hearings , when it
comes to the media he's a veritable gadfly. The daily Fakty newspaper published
an long interview with Citizen O from his jail cell in the central town of
Zhytomyr in which the 39-year-old terminator was quoted as saying: "Naturally, I
would prefer the death penalty. I have absolutely no interest in relations with
people. I have betrayed them." The misunderstood killer added that he was shaken
by people's indifference to his crimes. As he slaughtered his victims in one
village, "people screamed so loudly that they could be heard in neighboring
villages. But nobody came to help them. Everybody went into hiding, like mice."
On February 12, 1999, a Ukrainian court ruled that Anatoli Onoprienko was
mentally competent and could be held responsible for his crimes. The regional
court in Zhytomyr said that Onoprienko "does not suffer any psychiatric
diseases, is conscious of and is in control of the actions he commits, and does
not require any extra psychiatric examination." With the latest psychiatric
examination showing Onoprienko mentally healthy, he will most likely be
convicted and sentenced to death. But he will not be executed because Ukraine
has pledged as a member of the Council of Europe to suspend capital punishment
and eventually ban it.
Dressed in the same track suit and drab duffel coat he has worn throughout the
more than three months of hearings, Anatoly Onoprienko, 39, sat impassively in a
metal cage at the front of the provincial courtroom and refused to speak at the
end of his trial. Onoprienko's co-defendant Sergei Rogozin, accused of helping
in the first nine murders, did speak and proclaimed his innocence.
But while the start of the trial attracted hordes of angry spectators,
prosecutor Yuri Ignatenko made his demand for the death sentence on March 3,
199, before a practically empty chamber. And the half-filled court consisted
mainly of other judges attached to the court and their staff, whose main emotion
was relief at the end of the ordeal. "Thank goodness that's over!" said a
secretary leaving the hearing.
"My defendant was from the age of four deprived of motherly love, and the
absence of care which is necessary for the formation of a real man,"
Onoprienko's lawyer Ruslan Moshkovsky told the court. Ignatenko said an
examination of Onoprienko's mental health during the investigation had
overturned an independent diagnosis of schizophrenia made before his arrest, and
a further test ordered by the court confirmed his current mental health.
"Onoprienko's statements about mental seizures, being spied on, voices, and the
influence of higher powers...are a simulation of mental illness and a reaction
to the situation he is in," Ignatenko said. The prosecutor added that O's
motives lay in his own violent nature, unchecked due to what he said was the
incompetence of the police force. "In every society there have been and are
people who due to their innate natures can kill, and there are those who will
never do that," he added.
Two weeks after sentencing, Nasty O. granted an interview to Mark Franchetti, a
writer for the London Times:
It took the Ukrainian guard a full two minutes to unlock the heavy metal door to
Anatoly Onoprienko's small cell. Even the toughest guards on death row at the
19th-century prison in Zhitomir, 80 miles west of Kiev, are wary of Onoprienko
and take no risks. Peering through a narrow opening in the door, one of them
shouted at him to stand up and face the wall with his hands behind his back.
Anatoly Ivanuik, the prison's deputy governor, searched the outer corridor
meticulously before giving the order for the last bolt to be released. Slowly
the door opened. Onoprienko, who once proposed to his girlfriend with a ring he
had chopped from the finger of one of his victims a few hours earlier, was ready
to grant an audience.
Three years after his arrest, following the largest manhunt ever mounted in
Ukraine, Onoprienko showed no remorse as he described wiping out entire families
in cold blood, battering children and raping a woman after shooting her in the
face.Still defiant, Citizen O takes pride in what he calls the "professionalism"
of his crimes. Clearly relishing his notoriety, he often stared at me, trying to
make me avert my eyes while insisting that he was a good-natured person and a
sensitive music-lover.
"The first time I killed, I shot down a deer in the woods," he said, in a flat
monotone, as if reading from his curriculum vitae. "I was in my early twenties
and I recall feeling very upset when I saw it dead. I couldn't explain why I had
done it, and I felt sorry for it. I never had that feeling again."
"To me killing people is like ripping up a duvet," he said, his piercing blue
eyes fixed on mine. "Men, women, old people, children, they are all the same. I
have never felt sorry for those I killed. No love, no hatred, just blind
indifference. I don't see them as individuals, but just as masses."
Onoprienko's crimes have caused such revulsion in Ukraine, however, that the
Ukranian president is considering temporarily lifting a moratorium on capital
punishment that was imposed on Marcxh, 1997, in accordance with the rules of the
Council of Europe, to execute him. The alternative, to commute the serial
killer's sentence to 20 years in jail, would outrage most Ukrainians.
On one occasion he confronted a young girl who was huddled on her bed, praying.
She had seen him kill both her parents. "Seconds before I smashed her head, I
ordered her to show me where they kept their money," he said. "She looked at me
with an angry, defiant stare and said, 'No, I won't.' That strength was
incredible. But I felt nothing."
He blew the doors off homes on the edges of villages, gunning down adults and
battering children with metal objects. He stole money, jewellery, stereo
equipment and other items before burning down the houses.
"He is driven by extreme cruelty," said Dmitri Lipski, the judge who sentenced
him, poring over photographs of Onoprienko's crimes. "He doesn't care about
anything - only about himself. He is egocentric and has a very high opinion of
himself."
A manhunt involving 2,000 police and more than 3,000 troops eventually led to
Onoprienko's arrest in April 1996 at his girlfriend's house near the Polish
border following an anonymous tip-off. Investigators fear his tally of victims
may be higher than 52, as there was a long gap between murders when he roamed
illegally around several European countries.
"To me it was like hunting. Hunting people down," mused Onoprienko with a wry
smile as he handed me his autograph scribbled on the back of a magazine.
"I would be sitting, bored, with nothing to do. And then suddenly this idea
would get into my head. I would do everything to get it out of my mind, but I
couldn't. It was stronger than me. So I would get in the car or catch a train
and go out to kill."
Onoprienko's first victims were a couple, standing by their Lada car on a
motorway: "I just shot them. It's not that it gave me pleasure, but I felt this
urge. From then on, it was almost like some game from outer space."
He said he had derived no pleasure from the act of killing. "Corpses are ugly,"
he said with distaste. "They stink and send out bad vibes. Once I killed five
people and then sat in the car with their bodies for two hours not knowing what
to do with them. The smell was unbearable."
Some experts view the fact that he grew up without parents and was given up to
an orphanage by his elder brother as a clue to his destruction of entire
families. Strangely, his most vicious spree coincided with the time when he
moved in with the woman he intended to marry and with her children - towards
whom, she claimed, he was always very loving.
Onoprienko, however, claimed he was possessed. "I'm not a maniac," he said,
without a hint of self-doubt. "If I were, I would have thrown myself onto you
and killed you right here. No, it's not that simple. I have been taken over by a
higher force, something telepathic or cosmic, which drove me.
"For instance, I wanted to kill my brother's first wife, because I hated her. I
really wanted to kill her, but I couldn't because I had not received the order.
I waited for it all the time, but it did not come.
"I am like a rabbit in a laboratory. A part of an experiment to prove that man
is capable of murdering and learning to live with his crimes. To show that I can
cope, that I can stand anything, forget everything."
Onoprienko was adamant last week that he would not appeal to Kuchma to commute
his sentence. Instead, he insisted that he should be executed. Suddenly
animated, his speech quickened. "If I am ever let out, I will start killing
again," he said. "But this time it will be worse, 10 times worse. The urge is
there.
"Seize this chance because I am being groomed to serve Satan. After what I have
learnt out there, I have no competitors in my field. And if I am not killed I
will escape from this jail and the first thing I'll do is find Kuchma and hang
him from a tree by his testicles."
It was time to leave.