Nikolay Shubin

Nikolay Shubin
Born Nikolay Pavlovich Shubin
1956
Tbilisi, Georgian SSR
Other names "The Cemetery Director"
"Valre Bomzh"
"The Chess Player"
Conviction(s) Murder
Criminal penalty Compulsory treatment
Details
Victims 13
Span of crimes
2004–2006
Country Russia
State(s) Lipetsk
Date apprehended
October 2006

Nikolay Pavlovich Shubin (Russian: Николай Павловичborn Шубин; 1956 in Tbilisi, Georgian SSR), known as the "The Cemetery Director", is a Georgian-born Russian serial killer, who killed 13 homeless and single people between 2004 and 2006 in the city of Lipetsk.

Biography

Shubin was born in Tbilisi.[1] In 1976, Shubin was hospitalized in the Voronezh Regional Clinical Psychoneurogical Dispensary with a diagnosis of neurasthenia.

Shubin was arrested in October 2006, after policemen detained him in connection with the disappearance of a local pensioner named Mescheryakov. He had disappeared after going to the park to play a game of chess with Shubin. At the interrogation, Shubin immediately confessed to the murder and showed where he buried the body. During the investigation, he began to talk about another murder committed by him. Every week, he reported on his previous killings, and showed the locations where the bodies were buried. Shubin always disoriented his victims with a strong blow to the head, then bound their hands and feet with wire, and finally strangling them a striker, which he always carried with him. He did not express any shame from his crimes and told about them proudly and very confidently.[2] Shubin called himself the "Cemetery Director". The motive for the murders was simple - a quarrel or a loss at a game in chess.[3]

During the investigation, Shubin was examined, and was diagnozed with a continuous type of paranoid schizophrenia. Because of this court, the court found him unfit to stand trial and sentenced him to compulsory treatment.

References

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