SOVIET UNION (RUSSIA) When mutilated bodies of children and young women began appearing around Rostov-on-Don in the 1980s, Soviet authorities faced a terrifying enemy—one unlike anything modern Russia had seen before. His name would become synonymous with unspeakable horror: Andrei Romanovich Chikatilo.
Chikatilo was born in 1936 in war-torn Soviet Ukraine, during Stalin’s terror and a time of mass famine. According to his own accounts, his mother told him that his older brother had been kidnapped and eaten by starving villagers. Whether this was true or just a nightmarish tale, it planted in his mind an association between cruelty, death, and cannibalism.
From an early age, he suffered from impotence, which filled him with shame. Unable to form normal relationships, he developed sadistic tendencies—he enjoyed spying on girls, groping them, and later realized that witnessing pain and suffering aroused him.
As an adult, he worked as a teacher but was forced to leave the profession due to repeated accusations of sexual harassment against students. He was never prosecuted—such incidents were routinely covered up in the Soviet Union—allowing him to continue moving freely among children and vulnerable individuals.
His first murder occurred in 1978. He lured nine-year-old Yelena Zakotnova into an abandoned house, attempting to rape her. Unable to perform sexually due to his impotence, he instead stabbed the child to death. When he felt the warm blood on his hands, he experienced sexual arousal for the first time. This moment defined his future ritual of murder.
Over the next twelve years, he would kill at least 52 victims, though the real number may be higher. His modus operandi was always the same: he traveled across the Soviet Union, searching for lonely children, teenage girls, or young women. With his unremarkable appearance, he seemed harmless—like a caring father figure offering sweets, money, or job opportunities. Once he gained their trust, he led them into forests, abandoned train stations, or secluded areas.
Then, his blood-soaked ritual would begin: binding, torturing, and stabbing the victims dozens of times. He often bit off pieces of their flesh and gouged out their eyes, believing they captured his image. His climax did not come from intercourse but from brutality—he reached orgasm while inflicting pain and killing.
Reports of bodies with missing tongues, torn-out genitals, and multiple stab wounds sent shockwaves through the public. But the Soviet police were completely unprepared to handle a serial killer—official doctrine claimed that such criminals only existed in the decadent West. The result was chaotic investigations, the wrongful imprisonment of hundreds, and even executions of innocent people.
Meanwhile, Chikatilo continued his murders, slipping through the cracks of law enforcement. He was interrogated multiple times but always released. It wasn’t until 1990, when his suspicious behavior at a train station caught the attention of authorities, that he was finally arrested.
Chikatilo confessed to more than fifty murders, and his interrogations revealed horrifying details of his crimes. He coldly described how his victims screamed, begged for their lives, and how he enjoyed their suffering. In court, he acted like a madman—singing, mocking the victims’ families, and even inviting them to lunch.
He was sentenced to death and executed in 1994 with a single gunshot to the head.