![]() In the early 2000s, Alexander Pichushkin spent his evenings roaming a Moscow public park, asking people to drink with him at his dead dog’s grave. Once that whole World War thing was over and Petoit’s trial took priority, he was gullitoned for killing 26 people (and likely dozens more) and sent to the truly special hell for people who take advantage of Holocaust victims. He offered them safe passage out of the country in exchange for about half a million of today’s dollars, which was bad enough, but then he convinced them they needed “inoculations” for where they were going, which was the Seine River after he actually injected them with cyanide and then robbed them again. Marcel Petoit was a former mayor and respected doctor when he began his killing spree, first of people who just became inconvenient to him but then in an organized scheme to defraud Jews fleeing Nazi-occupied France. He killed as many as 40 men, and he was only caught after one of them escaped his home, bleeding profusely and screaming that kind old Herr Denke had attacked him with an ax. Lovett, killing vagrants who he met at church and offered a few days’ lodging and then turning their bodies into leather goods and jars of “pickled pork” that he sold in his shop during an economic depression that left his profit margins very thin indeed. Sure enough, his coverage of the murders riveted the public, but he was a little too good, including details that couldn’t possibly be known to anyone but the killer and leading police right to him. Knowing a vicious serial killer would sufficiently entrance readers, he raped, beat, and strangled at least three and possibly four elderly women and then wrote about it as if he hadn’t. It seems like there was plenty to journalism about in the mid 2000s, but Macedonian reporter Vlado Taneski was apparently hard up for a story. It’s not clear how that part played into the whole sorcery thing, but he was caught and executed after, you know, several dozen bodies were found in his backyard. ![]() ![]() We would simply dismiss our dream father’s exhortations of murder power, but Suradji took it seriously, killing 42 women and girls in Indonesia between 19 by ritually burying them up to their waists and strangling them. 15 Ahmad SuradjiĪhmad Suradji claimed that in 1986, his dead father came to him in a dream and told him that if he killed 70 women and drank their saliva, he would become an unstoppable sorcerer. It’s the ones you’ve never heard of that you have to watch out for - some of whom are, in fact, out right now. ![]() The Jeffrey Dahmers and Ted Bundys of the world have been booked and movied into the realm of near fiction, safely distanced from real life enough that it’s hard to imagine such monsters actually existing. ![]()
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