She Killed So Many People, She Lost Count — Then ‘Satan in a Skirt’ Stunned Cops During Interrogation

tvOTV/YouTube Irina Gaidamachuk

tvOTV/YouTube

Irina Gaidamachuk


NEED TO KNOW

  • For eight long years, elderly women in Russia were being preyed upon by a sadistic killer

  • The women were bludgeoned to death with an axe or hammer

  • The killer stole the women's lives and whatever meager savings the women had in their homes


For eight years, starting in 2002 or so, elderly women in the Russia's Sverdlovsk Oblast were being singled out and found brutally murdered in their homes.

The women – 17 in total – were found in pools of blood with their skulls bashed in from an axe or hammer, the outlet KP reports.

They were all robbed, of very little money, and in three instances, their homes were set ablaze to hide evidence of the slaughter that had taken place inside, authorities said.

For years, authorities searched for a suspect, whom they believed was a man, with no success.

Then, in 2010, a bombshell arrived.

The terrifying killer police were looking for was not a man, but a woman, Irina Gaidamachuk, who became known as Russia’s most notorious female serial killer, The Times reports.

“How could someone kill a frail and defenseless old lady in such a savage way?” said Elena Golovenkina, whose mother was killed in 2002 when Gaidamachuk repeatedly struck her over the head with a statue of Vladimir Lenin, according to The Times.

Arrested in 2010 at age 39, when one of her victims managed to flee, the married mother of two from Krasnoufimsk in Sverdlovsk Oblast — nearly 800 miles east of Moscow —told police she bludgeoned the women to death while robbing them.

“She’s an exceptionally brutal woman,” said one detective who worked on the case, according to The Times. “I was convinced we were dealing with a man. After all, how could a woman smash a head with 24 blows?

“For a while, when witnesses began talking about a woman, we even suspected a man dressed up as a woman,” the detective said.

“She said she’d lost count of how many people she’d killed after the 10th murder. She’s very coldblooded but also charming and even attractive. She even tried flirting during our questioning.”

Gaidamachuk usually gained her victims’ trust by posing as a social worker, according to 66.ru.

“The accused looks for elderly women, finds a way to get into their apartment, drinks tea in their kitchen or asks for water,” the prosecutor said in 2012, 66.ru reported. “After that, when the victim turns away, she strikes them on the head several times with a blunt object. She covers their head with one or more pillows. She takes only money, leaving gold and valuables. All the crimes have the same style and the same scenario."

In one instance, when Gaidamachuk was unable to find any money to rob, she allegedly stayed overnight with one of her dead victims, covering the elderly woman’s battered face with a pillow, according to The Times.

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Gaidamchuk allegedly used the money she stole to buy alcohol, according to RGRU.

Convicted of 17 counts of murder and one count of attempted murder, in June 2012 she was sentenced to 20 years in prison.

Most of the crimes were committed in Krasnoufimsk, though she committed similar ones in Yekaterinburg, Serov, Achit, and Druzhinino, according to Tass, Russia’s news agency.

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Victims’ loved ones wished justice had come sooner.

“It’s scandalous that it took eight years to catch the (killer),” Golovenkina said, The Times reports.

Read the original article on People

Russia sentences activist who helped Ukrainians flee war to 22 years in prison

LONDON (Reuters) -A Russian activist who helped collect humanitarian aid for Ukraine and evacuate Ukrainians from the war zone was sentenced on Friday to 22 years in prison by a Moscow military court, the RIA state news agency reported.

Nadezhda Rossinskaya, also known as Nadin Geisler, ran a group called "Army of Beauties", which said it had assisted some 25,000 people in Russian-controlled parts of Ukraine in 2022-23, according to a report last year in The Moscow Times.

Authorities arrested Geisler in February 2024 and later charged her with treason and aiding terrorist activities over a post they said she made on Instagram calling for donations to Ukraine's Azov Battalion.

Geisler denied any wrongdoing, and her lawyer said she was not the author of the post, according to a trial transcript compiled by Mediazona, an independent Russian outlet.

Prosecutors had requested 27 years for Geisler, who is in her late 20s. Mediazona reported that she had asked the court to imprison her for 27 years and one day, so that her prison term could surpass that of Darya Trepova, a Russian woman jailed for delivering a bomb that killed a pro-war blogger in 2023.

Trepova's sentence, handed down last year, was the longest given to any woman in modern Russian history.

Prosecutions for terrorism, espionage and cooperation with a foreign state have risen sharply in Russia since the start of the full-scale war in Ukraine over three years ago. Pervy Otdel, a Russian lawyers' association, says 359 people were convicted of such crimes in 2024.

(Reporting by Lucy PapachristouEditing by Frances Kerry)

Woman charged with murder in missing Rolex case

A 69-year-old-woman has been charged with murdering another woman who was found fatally stabbed in her home in Camden, north London, on 13 June.

The Metropolitan Police has previously said 69-year-old Jennifer Abbot's death may have been linked to a missing Rolex watch.

Nancy Pexton, of Gloucester Place, Westminster is due to appear later at Highbury Corner Magistrates' Court.

This breaking news story is being updated and more details will be published shortly. Please refresh the page for the fullest version.

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Couple jailed for attempting to kill stepmother

Two police mugshots show a man and a woman. The man has short black hair and a moustache. The woman has straight black hair.
Wasif Hussain, 21, and Nabela Tabassum, 19, were sentenced to 15 years and nine years respectively [West Midlands Police]

A young married couple have been jailed for attempting to kill the husband's stepmother in an attack that saw them wearing animal masks as they stabbed her and hit her with a hammer.

Wasif Hussain, 21, and Nabela Tabassum, 19, wore giraffe masks during the "frenzied attack" at Arifa Nazmin's home in Kings Norton on 29 January 2024, West Midlands Police said.

They then fled Birmingham, however they were tracked down and arrested in Bolton the following day.

The husband and wife had denied attempted murder, but were found guilty and were jailed for 15 years and nine years respectively at Birmingham Crown Court on Friday.

The court heard Hussain struck Ms Nazmin's head with a hammer before he strangled and stabbed her while his wife held her down - much of which was captured on a CCTV camera inside the family home.

Ms Nazmin complained to Tabassum's parents that she did not help around the house, which increased the couple's "resentment and anger" towards her, the court was told.

They planned to "burn the body", but Ms Nazmin was able to lock herself in a room and call the police after she was attacked.

A plastic mask in the shape of a giraffe
The couple wore giraffe masks as they carried out the attack [West Midlands Police]

In a victim impact statement, which was read in part to the court, Ms Nazmin said: "I still panic when the door is knocked, I can feel the fear in my body.

"I'm terrified they have returned to finish me off.

"I will live with this for the rest of my life."

The sentencing hearing was told the attack took place within weeks of Tabassum moving into Hussain's family home.

Prosecutor Rob Forrest told the court: "This was a planned attempt to kill Ms Nazmin in her own home.

"That attack took place against a background of broken-down familial relations."

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