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  1. Alexander Yuryevich Pichushkin (Russo: Алекса́ндр Ю́рьевич Пичу́шкин) (9 de abril de 1974) é um assassino em série de origem russa. [1] Ex-funcionário de supermercado, conhecido na mídia russa como "Maníaco do Parque Bitsa" ou "Assassino do tabuleiro de Xadrez".

  2. Os misteriosos assassinatos cometidos por Alexander “Sasha” Yuryevich Pichushkin, conhecido como o “Maníaco do Parque Bitsevsky”, chocaram a Rússia e o mundo. Investigado por mais de uma década, esse caso ganhou repercussão internacional devido à brutalidade dos crimes e ao infame tabuleiro de xadrez que o assassino usava para ...

  3. Alexander Pichushkin is a Russian serial killer who murdered at least forty-nine people in Bitsa Park between 1992 and 2006. He was inspired by chess, alcohol, and a macabre competition with Andrei Chikatilo.

    • Alexander Pichushkin’S First Kills
    • The Maniac of Bitsevsky Park
    • The Arrest and Trial of Alexander Pichushkin
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    Alexander Pichushkin killed his first victim in 1992 but killed only sporadically until 2001, when he began regularly targeting victims. According to him, his goal was to kill 64 people — the same as the number of squares on a chessboard. While he was only convicted of murdering 49 people, he claims that he achieved his goal and that he murdered so...

    In the late 1990s, the area around Bitsevsky Park became known as the hunting ground for a man the press called the “Maniac.” People would disappear into the woods in the park, into the tall birch trees just far enough away from the road that hiding behind them made one nearly invisible. By the spring of 2006, almost 50 people had vanished into the...

    After his arrest, Pichushkin happily confessed to his crimes, handing his diary over to police, and showing them his most prized possession, a chessboard on which he had kept track of his murder victims. It was disappointing, he told them, that he hadn’t completed it. Of the 64 squares, only 61 of them were filled in. As he aired his confession to ...

    Learn about the disturbing story of Alexander Pichushkin, who killed at least 49 people in a Moscow park and claimed to have reached 64 victims, the number of squares on a chessboard. Find out how he lured his victims with vodka, how he was arrested, and how he was sentenced to life in prison.

  4. 2 de abr. de 2014 · Russian serial killer Alexander Pichushkin, nicknamed "The Chessboard Killer," was caught in Moscow and convicted in 2007 of killing 48 people.

  5. O júri de um tribunal em Moscou considerou nesta quarta-feira Alexander Pichushkin culpado de 48 assassinatos e três tentativas de homicídio. O serial killer ficou conhecido como o "maníaco de...

  6. 24 de out. de 2007 · Alexander Pichushkin confessed to killing 63 people, mostly in a park, with the goal of marking all 64 squares on a chessboard. He was convicted of 48 murders and three attempted murders in 2007 and sentenced to life imprisonment.