My first post here, so be gentle. I recently found the following news item on the cover of an old Danish newspaper and became a little intrigued. The perpetrator sure sounds like he might have been inspired by certain 1888 events. Unfortunately, the rest of the article is missing, so I was wondering if any of the experts here might have more information to share(?) Would be appreciated. I suspect that the guy must have been a bit of a hot potato, publicity wise, at a time when the Soviets were busy telling US how decadent WE were ;-)
HEADLINE: He killed a woman a week. More than 50 victims before the police found the murderer, a high ranking city official.
For many months, the people of large Ukrainian city Kharkiv has lived in true horror. Practically every week, in hidden courtyards around the city, the police would find the body of a murdered woman, and each time the murder had been committed in exactly the same way. The killer had used a dagger and always left behind a typewritten note saying: "The Soviet criminal police is good, but I'm even cleverer, and no one will apprehend me."
The number of victims rose at an alarming rate. Thus, when 25 women had been found murdered in the course of the last three months, it was apparent that the city was dealing with a lust killer. (Continued on page 12)
SOURCE: Politiken Vol. 51 No. 254, Copenhagen, Saturday 15 June 1935.
CREDIT: POLITIKEN PRIVATE, Warszaw, Thursday.
HEADLINE: He killed a woman a week. More than 50 victims before the police found the murderer, a high ranking city official.
For many months, the people of large Ukrainian city Kharkiv has lived in true horror. Practically every week, in hidden courtyards around the city, the police would find the body of a murdered woman, and each time the murder had been committed in exactly the same way. The killer had used a dagger and always left behind a typewritten note saying: "The Soviet criminal police is good, but I'm even cleverer, and no one will apprehend me."
The number of victims rose at an alarming rate. Thus, when 25 women had been found murdered in the course of the last three months, it was apparent that the city was dealing with a lust killer. (Continued on page 12)
SOURCE: Politiken Vol. 51 No. 254, Copenhagen, Saturday 15 June 1935.
CREDIT: POLITIKEN PRIVATE, Warszaw, Thursday.
Comment