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Andrei Romanovich Chikatilo, conocido como el Carnicero de Rostov, aterrorizó Rusia con una serie de crímenes brutales. Descubre su macabra historia, el perfil psicológico de uno de los asesinos en serie más temidos, su captura y el impacto que dejó en la criminología moderna.

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#Crimen #TrueCrime #AsesinoSerial #HistoriaCriminal #Investigacion

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Transcripción
00:00Once again, you've caught me absorbed in my own affairs.
00:21Here I am sitting in my favorite chair, in my favorite office,
00:25contemplating my collection of virtual brains.
00:28How wonderful! I have quite a few, more than a hundred.
00:33I have all types, all features, all cubic capacities.
00:39Some are bigger, others are rougher.
00:43Some are almost smooth, very smooth.
00:48They are exact replicas of immortal brains.
00:53There are benevolent minds that have benefited humanity.
00:56Here I have, for example, a replica of Mozart's brain. How big!
01:01Here I have another brain, exactly, exactly like what Beethoven's should be.
01:09I have Einstein's brain.
01:11This is the white side of my office.
01:14But come in, come in this way.
01:15Look, look at that wall.
01:17There I have the most terrible brains of humanity.
01:21That is the exact replica of Ivan IV's brain, the Tafil.
01:25Ivan Grosnick.
01:27The relentless.
01:29The terrible one.
01:31First Tsar of all the Russians.
01:33And next to it I placed the brain of Andrei Romanovich.
01:37The one everyone knew as Chikatilo.
01:51And Chikatilo himself, before being executed, requested that his brain be removed from his body.
01:58He made a very curious request.
02:04Before receiving the coup de grace, he said that his brain was to be destined for study.
02:11That he was destined for science.
02:13So that no one like him would ever appear again, be reborn.
02:19And believe me, there were many psychiatric institutes that made huge offers to acquire Chikatilo's brain.
02:26The Japanese insisted a lot.
02:29All Russian psychiatric institutions wanted Chikatilo's brain.
02:33And why did they want that brain?
02:34Because no one like him had ever been seen before.
02:40In the ranking of psycho-killers, Andrei Romanovich Chikatilo undoubtedly occupies a preeminent place.
02:47It was the most devastating, the cruelest, the bloodiest, the most terrible.
02:53He was known as the Beast of Rostov.
02:56He was also known as the Ripper.
02:58Others like the butcher.
03:02Between December 22, 1978, and November 6, 1990, it took the lives of 53 people.
03:11Without rhyme or reason.
03:16Children, girls, beggars, prostitutes, and vagrants died at their hands.
03:24People from here and there, of all classes and conditions, 53 fatalities.
03:32But it's not just that he killed them, but how he finished them off.
03:38A cruel story that we are now going to face.
03:42They are our passages of terror.
03:44Terror caused by humans.
03:46To understand the mentality and personality of these psycho-killers, we must delve into their biography.
03:59And Andrei's biography was not easy at all.
04:03Believe me, it wasn't easy at all.
04:05We are in the year 1936.
04:11In Stalin's Russia.
04:13That year, that autumn, purges were the order of the day.
04:19Thousands of officers in the Russian army, in the Soviet army, were being massacred.
04:24Famine had taken hold of many villages and cities in Russia, in eternal and sacred Russia.
04:30And in that October of 1936, in that context of horror and gloom, Andrei was born.
04:38In a remote village in faraway Ukraine.
04:44In his village, corpses were piled up.
04:47They could be counted by the hundreds.
04:48They say that the famine was so severe that a large part of the population had to resort to cannibalism.
04:59And the black legend of Andrei Romanevich tells us that his older brother fell victim to cannibals, his own companions, his own neighbors.
05:09He was not the only one who died in those circumstances.
05:14They also say that a cousin of his died as a victim of cannibals.
05:17Yes, cannibalism, in 20th century Europe.
05:21Cannibalism in Stalin's Russia.
05:25Famines and purges.
05:27And in that context, Andrei was born.
05:33Like so many Russian children, Andrei had no childhood.
05:39They were very hard years.
05:40In 1941, the USSR entered World War II.
05:48Attacked by Nazi Germany.
05:51Millions of Soviet soldiers went to the front.
05:54And among them, Andrei's father.
05:56Stalin did not want traitors in his ranks.
06:01He didn't want deserters.
06:03I thought that any Soviet soldier who was taken prisoner was because he had not fought enough.
06:09Because he had not given his life for Russia, for the Soviet Union.
06:13And consequently, any Soviet soldier who wanted to be a prisoner was a traitor to the motherland.
06:18And in that case, there was Andrei's father.
06:22Families who found themselves in this situation were marked for life.
06:28Thus, at just a few years old, 8 or 9 years old, Andrei had lost a brother, a victim of cannibalism.
06:38And his father had practically disappeared as well, being considered a traitor to the country.
06:43A very difficult childhood, dominated by economic hardship, hunger, and also being pointed at by the Soviet finger.
06:55Andrei grew up full of complexes.
06:59They say that his traumas caused him to continue urinating in bed until he was 12 years old.
07:07He wet himself until he was 12. They say it was a victim of fear, a strange, internal, inexplicable fear.
07:16He himself, in order to act strong, never admitted that he was extremely short-sighted.
07:24I had that myopia, but I didn't recognize it, I saw badly, very badly.
07:28It was only at the age of 30, when he turned 30, that he admitted, that he was given his first glasses.
07:34Until the age of 30, he went unrecognized as having myopia.
07:39Without change, to become strong, in front of the group of friends, in front of the group of classmates, of students, who were with him at school.
07:47He became, he became, a communist flamboyant.
07:52He avidly read TAPDA, the TAPDA newspaper.
07:56The Soviet communication agency.
07:59They say that their communism was sick.
08:04And so he grew up, a complicated teenager.
08:10Also marked by shyness.
08:12Extremely shy.
08:14Uidizo.
08:16He also turned his back on sex.
08:18It was very difficult for André to maintain relationships, friendly relationships, with the girls in his village, his town, his city.
08:31It was very difficult.
08:32Once upon a time, he had a love, his first love.
08:39The girl didn't seem to reciprocate.
08:42They say that in an attempt to get closer to her, in an attempt to hug her, she bottomed out in his pants.
08:49Only with the gesture of trying to hug her, she fell.
08:57The bride candidate fled, unfavored.
09:04André was broken inside.
09:06Some called him mentally retarded.
09:13But he refused to do all that.
09:15And he continued to cling to his political ideology.
09:21The time for military service has arrived.
09:24And in the military, his comrades began to mock him, they began to laugh at him.
09:30He felt this was very difficult, because he heard the little smiles, he heard the murmurings.
09:36His companions said that he was impotent.
09:40That was no good for making love to any girl.
09:44And André felt very bad, very distressed, because, he always thought, that in the end, those companions were only telling the truth.
09:55The days of military service are finally over.
10:00And his sister, very sorry for him, found him a girlfriend.
10:05It caused him a fix.
10:06He found him a rather unattractive girl, but well, after all, she was the daughter of a miner.
10:12And even if she didn't have a very good position, yes, at least she could be a wonderful housewife.
10:17They arranged the marriage, much to André's chagrin.
10:21They got married.
10:23They say that the first erection that Andre Romanievich had,
10:27He had her a week after getting married.
10:32And it was an erection that barely lasted three, four seconds.
10:36Still, they managed to have two children.
10:43But according to what the story goes, or according to what André's wife said,
10:47They had two children in two relationships they had.
10:51A tremendous life, right?
10:54A life that keeps moving forward.
10:56Until we found her in 1971.
11:00He is still full of complexes, full of shyness.
11:03It is very difficult for André to relate to the society around him.
11:08But he tries to prosper.
11:11And get a degree at the university.
11:14This diploma provides you with a state job.
11:18André will be a school teacher.
11:21It was the year 1971.
11:26And here the tragedy began to unfold for Andre Romanievich and his victims.
11:33In his class there were children who were not even teenagers.
11:37Boys and girls.
11:42André started to get a feeling.
11:46He had a fixation on girls.
11:50Girls under 12 years old.
11:56These were very difficult times for the USSR.
11:59We were in the middle of the Cold War.
12:01And the vicissitudes that the Russian people were going through were extreme.
12:05Therefore, it was not very difficult to obtain the services of any prostitute.
12:11Be a girl, be a teenager, be an adult.
12:14By a hair.
12:15A sandwich, a bottle of vodka, anything would do to get a woman's sexual favors.
12:23André, already very obsessed with child sex,
12:28They say that in the boarding school where he taught,
12:32I always tried to find the girls' rooms to observe them from a distance.
12:37While masturbating.
12:40It was something tremendously obsessive.
12:42In the end, he decided to buy a shack, a cabin on the outskirts of town.
12:47And he would take girls, teenagers, there to perform, well, not many sexual practices,
12:53because he was incapable.
12:54I couldn't get an erection.
12:56It was impossible.
12:59Yes, instead, I enjoyed watching them undress.
13:01Not even André himself could suspect what was about to happen.
13:08I couldn't even suspect it.
13:10André convinces a little nine-year-old girl to accompany him to his cabin.
13:26The great murderers, the terrible murderers of history,
13:32They have three favorite formulas for acting.
13:37A formula would give us, for the lightning, as the experts call it, the lightning.
13:42Compulsively, killers, psychokillers, attack their victims and destroy them in a few seconds.
13:50That would be the first formula, the compulsive one, the lightning bolt.
13:54The second, the ambush, adequately preparing the moment to act.
13:59The ambush of the victim.
14:01But André's was deception.
14:04It was the third formula, deception.
14:06He always had good words for his victims.
14:08He always had the means and the method to deceive them, to lead them to a distant place.
14:14and there he gives free rein to his turbulent and restless mind.
14:20His first victim was named Lena.
14:24And as I tell you, I was only nine years old.
14:30By deception he took her to that cabin.
14:33And there he began to grope her.
14:37But as I said, I couldn't get an erection.
14:41At one point during the struggle, André caused a wound.
14:45Blood flowed from that wound.
14:48And at that moment the most horrendous mechanism in André's brain was activated.
14:53That blood did cause the erection.
14:56Without further ado, André grabbed a knife with a huge blade.
15:05Thirty centimeters.
15:07And he began to stab the poor girl with it.
15:11Up to thirty stab wounds.
15:13It was a moment of great pleasure for him.
15:18The macabre parade had begun
15:20of one of the most terrible and cruel types
15:24that has given rise to the history of humanity.
15:27He was the first victim, but he would not be the last.
15:29André deposited the little girl's body in a nearby river.
15:35and let it carry him away with the current.
15:38He neglected a trail of blood.
15:41Two days later, when the police found the little girl's body,
15:45they began to investigate.
15:46And they arrived at André's cabin.
15:48And there they saw the trail of blood.
15:52They asked him, but he was a very normal guy.
15:54I had two children, I had a good job.
15:56But nothing suggested that it was suspicious,
15:58that he was a violent and bloodthirsty sexual murderer.
16:03And if that weren't enough, luck struck.
16:06She went out with André.
16:08And in the area they arrested another sexual murderer,
16:11to another rapist,
16:13and they put all the blame on him.
16:16So André had a narrow escape, but he did escape.
16:21The police made a mistake.
16:23Sooner or later they would regret it.
16:28Anyway, the arrival of the police,
16:30Well, André was a little overwhelmed.
16:32He was somewhat dismayed,
16:34and it took him a little while to commit his second murder.
16:38That would come in 1981.
16:41Lania would be his second victim.
16:49But he started to get a taste for it.
16:52He began to derive indescribable pleasure.
16:57No, he did not rape his victims.
16:59He didn't penetrate them, but he did ejaculate on them.
17:02Yes, I had that pleasure of blood.
17:04That morbid pleasure of blood.
17:06And if that were not enough,
17:12that cannibalism that had wreaked havoc on his family,
17:15began to take hold of him.
17:18And this is even more thunderous if possible.
17:21Because he started slashing his victims.
17:28Also, a strange habit took root in the soul of this mentally disturbed man.
17:34And he began to extract the eyes of his victims.
17:38He probably didn't want to be seen while he was acting.
17:42It was a custom that was maintained over the years.
17:46He gouged out the eyes of his poor victims.
17:51He was not satisfied with his eyes.
17:53Also, he would take out, extract the intestines, the organs.
17:58The sexual organs.
18:02And to top it all off,
18:04began to chew them.
18:06He started eating those intestines, those organs.
18:13He delighted in eating viscera.
18:18A more evil mind cannot be conceived.
18:22But it existed.
18:24Andrei Romanevich.
18:28The practices continued.
18:30In this second murder,
18:32Furthermore, he enjoyed it immensely.
18:34Because it felt like some kind of
18:37of a crazy forest guerrilla.
18:39He greatly admired those partisan stories.
18:41in the woods surviving on anything.
18:44And the legend of Andrei tells,
18:46that when he killed his second victim,
18:48he started dancing like crazy.
18:50Like a madman.
18:51He began to dance around his dismembered victim.
18:56It was the sublime moment for him.
18:57He felt powerful.
18:59That society that turned its back on him.
19:01That society that had denied him everything.
19:03Now I was watching him.
19:07His hands were acting.
19:09His hands made him feel like a god.
19:13Yeah, he's definitely gone crazy.
19:16The ritual crimes began.
19:19The method was exactly identical in all,
19:21but it baffled the police,
19:23because there was no pattern.
19:25There was no pattern to follow.
19:26They weren't just girls anymore.
19:28I tell you that vagabonds, beggars,
19:30people of ill repute, prostitutes.
19:32Of all kinds, of all classes, of all conditions,
19:35everyone was falling.
19:36In 1982,
19:41had already claimed 30 lives.
19:45André didn't want to stop anymore.
19:48Chikatilo,
19:49as he liked to call himself,
19:53I didn't want to stop.
19:55That was already too much.
19:56It was the ultimate for him.
19:57He had found meaning in his life.
19:59A life of crime and ruthlessness.
20:01The police got to work.
20:06Traces of semen were found in one of the victims.
20:10That semen was quickly analyzed.
20:15The semen was of type AB.
20:18That is, the murderer would have a blood
20:21of that blood type, AB.
20:24They began to investigate.
20:26They started searching.
20:27Rostov was a distant city,
20:32but populous.
20:34And there he had gotten a job as an inspector.
20:36And that gave him a lot of mobility.
20:38It could move several hundred kilometers
20:40around Rostov.
20:43That's why the police were even more puzzled,
20:45if possible.
20:46Because the crimes were happening
20:47and they were finding the victims
20:49widely spread out over a giant, enormous diameter.
20:52They had to search.
20:53Search among many candidates.
20:57And one fine day,
20:59at the central market in Rostov,
21:02they caught almost by chance
21:04to Andrei Romanovich.
21:06They arrested him
21:07and they found him in a briefcase
21:10a jar of Vaseline,
21:12a rope
21:12and a huge knife.
21:14They analyzed his blood.
21:18But it wasn't from group AB.
21:21He was from group A.
21:23Therefore,
21:24in principle,
21:25he was ruled out as a suspect
21:26because I tell you that there were hundreds,
21:28thousands of suspects in the area.
21:30Wanted,
21:31because that's what the psychiatrists determined,
21:34several facets,
21:35various profiles.
21:36Wanted
21:37people with mental disabilities.
21:40Because, of course,
21:41the crimes were so horrendous
21:42that surely a disturbed person
21:44was the cause
21:45of those massacres.
21:47But it was also sought
21:47to a normal man.
21:49A man who had
21:50a normal life,
21:51with a normal family,
21:51with a normal job.
21:53And it also began
21:55to investigate
21:55among all those
21:57that they possessed,
21:57that they had a car.
21:59A car of your own.
22:01A car that would allow them
22:02independence of movements.
22:03Of course Andrei
22:06it fit
22:07to this last profile.
22:08I had a car,
22:09He was a normal guy,
22:10a normal life,
22:11a comfortable life.
22:12But the blood type failed.
22:14Therefore,
22:15they left him alone.
22:17But the deaths continued.
22:21Finally,
22:22the Russians
22:23They decided to mobilize
22:24all its potential.
22:26It was already too much.
22:28They were already starting
22:28to recognize
22:29those ritual crimes.
22:30The society
22:31I was moved.
22:33The society
22:34was convulsed.
22:36It was spoken
22:36of the Ripper
22:37from Rostock.
22:38It was spoken
22:38from the butcher,
22:39of the beast
22:40from Rostock.
22:42Of course,
22:43that anyone
22:43of the three qualifiers
22:44was approaching
22:45to Andrei Romanowicz.
22:49To all this,
22:51the Japanese
22:51who were interested
22:52keenly for the case,
22:54they sent
22:54a medical report.
22:57In that report
22:58it was said
22:58that not necessarily
23:00blood type
23:02of semen
23:02it had to be reciprocated
23:03to the blood type
23:04of the blood.
23:07That is to say,
23:08that there was
23:09a casuistry,
23:10there was some data
23:12that they had demonstrated
23:14that one
23:15out of every 10,000
23:16could have
23:17that group shot.
23:20That,
23:20in principle,
23:21went unnoticed.
23:22Then it would be used
23:23and it was proven
23:24that indeed
23:24in the case
23:25by Andrei Romanowicz
23:25it was like that.
23:26the Russian authorities
23:31mobilize
23:32more than 600 police officers.
23:35Police officers,
23:35researchers,
23:36experts,
23:38forensics,
23:39all kinds,
23:40all the luck
23:40of professionals
23:41they move
23:42towards the area
23:43from Bostov.
23:44they want to find
23:46at any cost
23:47to that criminal
23:47and they are going to put
23:49all media
23:50available
23:50to find him.
23:52The Bostov area
23:52It is very wooded,
23:54there are many forests,
23:55therefore,
23:56they had to organize
23:57a great display.
23:58and they begin
24:02to be carried out
24:03that deployment.
24:04After
24:04from the interrogation
24:05whom they had subjected
24:06Andrei
24:06in that year
24:071984,
24:08this one went down
24:09a bit
24:10the intensity
24:11of their actions.
24:12Just
24:12killer
24:13to a couple of people.
24:15But they were
24:16all
24:16on the trail.
24:19Many police officers
24:19they moved
24:20around the area
24:20of the railway.
24:22There he had acted,
24:23there they had remained
24:23many of its
24:25poor victims.
24:27Sure
24:28that would fall
24:28sooner or later.
24:29There were police officers
24:30camouflaged
24:30of peasants
24:32who were looking for mushrooms.
24:33There were others
24:33camouflaged
24:34of box office hits
24:35at that station
24:36of railway.
24:37There was even
24:38female police officers
24:39who worked
24:41or did
24:42who worked
24:42of prostitutes
24:43to see if he could catch on
24:44attention
24:44of the criminal.
24:46Others
24:46they dressed up
24:47of vagabonds.
24:48You could see them
24:48through the wagons
24:49or erring
24:50around the area.
24:51Come on,
24:51that there were 600 troops
24:52of the Russian police
24:53searching in Bostov.
24:55Sooner or later
24:55Andrei
24:56would make a mistake,
24:57I would make a mistake
24:58and they would catch him.
25:02But still
25:03were going to happen
25:03many days.
25:06The chips
25:07of suspects
25:08they became
25:09they came to have
25:10the number
25:10of 26,500.
25:12There was
25:1326,500
25:14suspects.
25:17And between
25:17those 26,500
25:18wanted.
25:19Madness
25:20of the police
25:20It went to such an extreme
25:21that they arrived
25:22to review
25:22up to 500,000
25:24tokens.
25:25500,000
25:25Russians
25:26were investigated,
25:27looking for the criminal
25:29from Bostov.
25:34Finally
25:35we meet
25:35in November
25:36of the year
25:371990.
25:38November 6th.
25:40A sergeant
25:41of the police
25:42is doing
25:43your patrol
25:44nearby
25:45from a forest
25:45a forest
25:47that was close
25:48to the station
25:48of the railway.
25:50Curious
25:51had turned on
25:52a cigarette
25:52I was looking
25:53the forest
25:53and Curious
25:53contempla
25:54like a man
25:56dressed in a suit
25:57and with a tie
25:58comes out of that forest
26:00and leaves
26:01well, something stained
26:02somewhat disturbed
26:04somewhat nervous.
26:07The sergeant
26:07is approaching
26:08to that man
26:09and asks him
26:10the documentation.
26:14After
26:15find out
26:16the documentation
26:16and what was it
26:17a citizen
26:18unsuccessful
26:18from Bostov
26:19lets him go
26:20but take
26:20very good note
26:21of the name.
26:22The name
26:23Andrei
26:23Romanievich.
26:25Up to there
26:29nothing else
26:30that a suspicion
26:30I tell you
26:31that on that list
26:32of 26,500
26:33Andrei
26:34since 1984
26:34occupied the position
26:35number 90
26:36that is to say it was
26:37the suspect
26:38number 90
26:39but the 12th
26:42November
26:43is discovered
26:45the body
26:46of the last
26:47victim
26:47Andrei's
26:49horribly
26:51mutilated
26:51Sveda
26:53his name was
26:53and it's the 12th
26:56November
26:56quickly
26:58the specialists
27:00the forensics
27:00determine
27:01that Sveda
27:02has died
27:02within a period
27:03superior
27:04a week
27:04before
27:05and Sveda
27:06appeared
27:07in the area
27:07where precisely
27:08that sergeant
27:09had stopped
27:10Andrei
27:10quickly
27:14the sergeant
27:14take out the name
27:15seeks
27:15locates
27:16Andrei
27:16and the 20th
27:17November
27:17of the year
27:181990
27:19is arrested
27:20they submit him
27:25at all costs
27:26of tests
27:26they submit him
27:28at all costs
27:29of investigations
27:30of questions
27:31sessions
27:33endless
27:34finally
27:35Chikatilo
27:38crumbles
27:40first confess
27:42that you are passionate about
27:42pornographic films
27:44where children appear
27:44later states
27:47that the beggars
27:48they are souls
27:49neosabundas
27:50that should be eliminated
27:51the 26th
27:55crumbled
27:57altogether
27:57states
27:58that he is the author
27:59of those horrible ones
28:01massacres
28:01begins to give details
28:05describe the place
28:06of the facts
28:06describe how he did it
28:08the police
28:09Soviets
28:10horrified
28:11listen
28:12stupefied
28:13the narratives
28:15André even
28:17conceives the possibility
28:19let him live
28:21for having become
28:22into a celebrity
28:23everyone
28:23wants to know about him
28:24they leave him the same
28:25as a specimen
28:26curious
28:26to be investigated
28:27for science
28:28even
28:29think
28:30what is going to be
28:31someone famous
28:32that even
28:33they are going to give it to you
28:34like a pension
28:35as an accommodation
28:36for life
28:36while investigating him
28:38that it's going to be good
28:38treated by science
28:39and that's why
28:40collaborates
28:41collaborates in a way
28:41very determined
28:42and says
28:43where was this
28:44where was that
28:45how he mutilated
28:46that
28:46how he cut it
28:48the neck
28:48to the other
28:49he cut heads
28:50cut off limbs
28:52They say he chewed
28:53also the organs
28:54virile men
28:55chewed
28:57the uteruses
28:58he loved them
29:00the intestines
29:00I enjoyed it immensely
29:03putting the knife in
29:04in the body
29:04of their victims
29:05all that
29:06I told him
29:07to the police
29:08very tanned
29:09from the USSR
29:09and the judgment
29:13arrive
29:14it was something tremendous
29:16something that
29:17shocked
29:18to Russian society
29:19the relatives
29:20of the victims
29:21they crowded
29:22in the courts
29:22from Rostov
29:23Chikatilo
29:26was put in
29:28in a cage
29:29metal
29:29to protect him
29:31from the wounds
29:32reactions
29:32of the relatives
29:33everyone wanted
29:34finish him off
29:35were
29:36shaken
29:37they could not conceive
29:39that a criminal
29:40that a beast
29:40of that ilk
29:41would have been born
29:42among them
29:43always
29:44a rope
29:46of police officers
29:47and soldiers
29:47protected the cage
29:49metal
29:49by Chikatilo
29:50this also
29:51had shaved
29:52her hair
29:52and showed
29:53always very nervous
29:54as if very excited
29:55as if making it look
29:55that he was mentally ill
29:56psychiatrists
29:58they said
29:58no
29:59that was not
30:00a mentally ill person
30:01that he had done everything
30:03and conceived
30:03coldly
30:04that he had done it
30:06because that's how it is
30:06he felt powerful
30:07and it was the only way
30:08of feeling powerful
30:09but not
30:10by no means
30:11he was mentally ill
30:12hundreds of relatives
30:16they cried
30:17at the doors
30:17of the courts
30:18they asked
30:19they demanded justice
30:20they wanted a lynching
30:21popular
30:22at last
30:25in 1992
30:27sentence was handed down
30:29the beast of Rostov
30:32was sentenced
30:33to death
30:34and in Russia
30:37the death penalty
30:38besides
30:39it is done
30:40in a way
30:41very special
30:42was done
30:43in a way
30:43very special
30:44the condemned
30:45to death
30:46they expected
30:46a species
30:47hallway
30:47of corridor
30:48and they never knew
30:49on what date
30:50they were going to be brought to justice
30:51they never knew
30:52when
30:52were going to die
30:53the last interview
30:55what was done to him
30:56to this specimen
30:57It was in the summer
30:58from 1993
31:00the interview ended
31:02saying
31:02I ask my colleagues
31:04to my colleagues
31:05to my friends
31:05forgive me
31:06that's all
31:07excuse me
31:10the sentence
31:12was going to be executed
31:13it would be a coup de grace
31:14in the head
31:14but to all this
31:18he suggested
31:19that your brain
31:21was delivered
31:22to science
31:22so that no one
31:23like him
31:23to be born again
31:24I tell you that
31:25many institutions
31:26Russians
31:27all institutions
31:28Russian psychiatric hospitals
31:28they wanted that brain
31:29also the Japanese
31:31they came to bid very strongly
31:32to take over the property
31:33from that brain
31:34they wanted to study it
31:35always
31:36our protagonist
31:38tonight
31:39stated
31:40that a part
31:41from your brain
31:41I told him
31:42that I had to kill
31:43but the other part
31:44No
31:44the other part
31:45encouraged him
31:46to stop killing
31:47therefore there was
31:48two fragmented parts
31:49in your brain
31:50one with a posture
31:52and the other with another
31:52good and evil
31:53they debated
31:54good and evil
31:55constantly
31:56in the brain
31:56by Chikatilo
31:58in February 1994
32:02the executioner
32:04I was waiting for Chikatilo
32:06in a room
32:07in a cold room
32:08there he was led
32:09there was an order
32:11very clear
32:11that the shot
32:13that the shot
32:14will not harm
32:15the brain
32:16scientists
32:18they wanted the brain
32:19to study it
32:20to analyze it
32:20and finally
32:23the sentence
32:24it was fulfilled
32:25in February
32:27from 1994
32:28the criminal
32:30more terrible
32:31more bloodthirsty
32:32more cruel
32:33of history
32:34contemporary Russian
32:35was
32:36eliminated
32:36This is the story
32:47by Andrei Romanovich
32:48Chikatilo
32:49we will never know
32:51what was your last
32:52thought
32:52I wish
32:54God
32:54have forgiven him
32:55because what it is
32:57on earth
32:57I don't think so
32:58Yeah
33:02and
33:02Yo
33:03to
33:03and
33:03life
33:13and
33:13Yo
33:15and
33:18Yo
33:18Yo

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