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The Muppets Take Manhattan (1984)
ㅤㅤinformational guide on the academy maniacs
ⓘ This is purely an educational archive documenting the facts of the case and does not condone, glorify, or support any of these violent actions in any way.
Artyom Alexandrovich Anoufriev’s Biography
Artyom Alexandrovich Anoufriev entered the world on October 4, 1992, in Irkutsk, a major Siberian city in Russia known for its harsh winters and industrial character. From the outset, his family situation was fractured. Raised without a father figure present in the household, Artyom grew up under the primary influence of his mother, Nina Ivanovna Anoufrieva, who worked as an accountant in an insurance company.
Childhood accounts paint a picture of a boy who was intellectually capable but emotionally turbulent. He performed well academically in subjects like literature and English, participated in school competitions, and showed an early interest in music, taking lessons in guitar and double bass for about five years. He even played in a local music group that eventually disbanded when its organizer left the city. However, social integration proved challenging. From first grade onward, Artyom was often an outcast among his peers, a status that lingered until his later school years when classmates matured and became more accepting. Despite this eventual shift, his academic performance dipped in the 10th grade, and he graduated with merely satisfactory results.
His home life added layers of complexity. According to school administrators and later court testimonies, Nina exerted a profoundly negative influence. She reportedly instructed her son to harbor hatred toward others, frequently intervening in school matters by writing complaints against teachers for perceived psychological pressure or for noting poor grades only in diaries rather than more formally. This led to significant disruptions, including one physics teacher refusing to continue teaching a class that included Artyom. These dynamics contributed to a psychologically difficult upbringing, fostering resentment and isolation.
Post-graduation, Artyom enrolled at Irkutsk State Medical University while taking a job as an auxiliary worker at a local art museum. This period marked continued personal struggles. His mother later recounted an incident where he was beaten and possibly sexually assaulted by a group of Armenians, allegedly after provoking a conflict online by insulting someone’s family. A criminal case was opened but resolved through reconciliation, with the family receiving compensation. Artyom reportedly became more unbalanced afterward, deepening his sense of grievance against the world.
Artyom’s social world was narrow. He briefly associated with white power skinhead groups, earning the nickname “Fashik-Natsik” in some circles, and participated in the 2010 Russian March in Irkutsk. However, he found their ideology too passive and was not deeply embedded. His primary, and often only, close connection was with Nikita Lytkin. Their bond became all-consuming, with mutual dependency. Neighbors later reported hearing outbursts from his apartment—shouts of “I hate everybody!” accompanied by sounds of physical aggression against walls or objects—suggesting escalating inner turmoil in the months before the crimes.
Psychologically, Artyom was described as having a misanthropic worldview, influenced by online explorations of notorious criminals and extremist materials. He idolized figures like Alexander Pichushkin, creating online groups in his honor, and expressed sympathies for others involved in violent acts. This fed into a desire for notoriety and a belief that they could “decide who lives and dies.” Despite later claims during investigations and trial, forensic psychiatric evaluations deemed him sane and accountable though revisitations suggest he had symptoms of antisocial personality disorder.
Nikita Vakhtangovich Lytkin’s Biography
Nikita Vakhtangovich Lytkin was born on March 24, 1993, also in Irkutsk, making him slightly younger than Artyom. His family background mirrored Artyom’s in key painful ways: an absent father of Ossetian ethnicity who left early in Nikita’s childhood, returning sporadically only to disappoint further. This instability was compounded by tragedy in the family—Nikita had a younger half-brother who died by suicide after his mother’s death, adding to the father’s depression and erratic presence. The last contact with his father came when Nikita was 16, leaving lasting emotional scars.
Outwardly, young Nikita appeared quiet and calm, with exemplary early behavior. He excelled in elementary school, participated in creative contests, earned commendations, and enjoyed video games. However, social acceptance eluded him. In mathematics class from 2004, peers reportedly rejected him. A friendship with Artur Lysenko provided some adaptation but was one-sided, with Lysenko dominating. Meeting Artyom at Lysenko’s birthday party proved pivotal; depressed and isolated, Nikita confided in Artyom, who offered support. This friendship gradually supplanted others, as Artyom’s unfriendly demeanor rubbed off, leading Nikita to view prior relationships as superficial. Bullying intensified, earning him the mocking nickname “Jimbo” from The Simpsons. He struggled to assert himself, often yielding to offenders.
Educationally, Nikita’s path diverged negatively. He began skipping school in eighth grade, leading to expulsion after nine classes. Attempts at college—in energy and then construction—failed due to poor performance, conflicts, and a burglary incident where he stole from a bullying classmate’s home (his mother filed then withdrew a police report). He disengaged entirely from formal education.
Creatively, music became an outlet. With Artyom, he formed the punk rock band “Evil Gnomes” (Злые Гномы), releasing an album Black Streaks of Blood in 2008. They later created the noisegrind project “Dismembered PugachOva” (Расчленённая ПугачОва), known for deliberately offensive, violent, and shocking lyrics inspired by bands like Anal Cunt. Themes centered on hatred, violence, and extremism; one release was dedicated to a local violent gang. Few knew of this side, as Nikita showed no overt aggression publicly.
Family and personal life deteriorated. Early church attendance with his mother faded; he rejected it, abandoned other hobbies like painting and kickboxing for social media, and developed shame toward his mother, avoiding her. Psychologists noted developmental lags and advised more freedom, but his depression worsened, insomnia set in, and isolation deepened. Like Artyom, he explored extremist ideas and serial killer lore, finding resonance in misanthropy.
Influences to Commit Murder
The pair’s descent into violence stemmed from a toxic mix of personal failures, social isolation, online radicalization, and deliberate emulation of notorious killers. Both harbored profound misanthropy—hatred of humanity at large—exacerbated by family dysfunction, bullying, and perceived injustices. Artyom’s mother’s alleged teachings of hatred and his skinhead associations (though limited) contributed, as did Nikita’s dependency and shared echo chamber.
Key influences included exposure to serial killers via media. A 2007 TV program on Alexander Pichushkin (“Bitsa Park Maniac”) captivated them; Artyom created fan groups online. They mourned Andrei Chikatilo online and fixated on the Dnepropetrovsk maniacs (Igor Suprunyuk and Viktor Sayenko), known for brutal hammer attacks and recordings. Locally, sympathy for the “Blood Magic Gang” and leader Konstantin Shumkov was overt, with dedications in their music and online groups. A book resembling “Born to Hate” resonated with their psychological states.
Motives centered on notoriety, fame through infamy, thrill, and a god-like sense of power over the vulnerable (“deciding who lives and dies” — Artyom Anoufriev, 2011). They targeted the weak, drunk, or isolated, viewing attacks as “training” or entertainment. Skinhead ideology played a role but was secondary to pure hatred. Their music and online activity amplified these fantasies into action. Investigators noted a desire for attention, with the pair locked in mutual reinforcement—Artyom as ideological driver, Nikita as eager performer, though roles blurred in confessions.
2010-2011 Murders
Their crime spree in Irkutsk’s Akademgorodok (university district) ran from November 2010 to April 2011. They patrolled routes from public transport stops in evenings/nights when mothers worked, seeking vulnerable victims. Weapons included hammers (mallets), knives, baseball bats, air guns, and screwdrivers. Attacks were brutal, often from behind, involving repeated blows and post-mortem mutilation. They sometimes robbed victims and documented acts.
Early incidents included non-fatal attacks: November 14, 2010, on 18-year-old Anastasia Markovskaya (head smashed, she survived by pretending to be dead); November 24 on a 46-year-old woman (robbed). December 1 saw another failed attempt before they killed 12-year-old Danil Semyonov, a former school acquaintance. Nikita struck first with a mallet; Artyom continued with a bat. Nikita stabbed the temple. Initially ruled an accident, it was their first kill—“training.”
Subsequent murders: Olga Pirog (69, December 16, 2010); an unidentified homeless man (early 2011); Alexander Maximov; Roman Faizullin (March 10-11, 2011); and Alevtina Kuydina (63, April 3, 2011). In total, six murdered, nine injured. Attacks involved extreme violence—dozens of blows, stabbings, mutilations. They filmed Kuydina’s corpse desecration. Victims were often elderly, homeless, or children—chosen for weakness. Robberies provided minor gains (e.g., buying more weapons). The spree terrorized the community, with initial investigations missing connections.
The pair’s dynamic: joint planning, shared execution, post-crime discussions. They planned more attacks on arrest night. Confessions varied, with mutual blame-shifting, but evidence (videos, witness IDs, forensics) was damning.
Arrest
On April 5, 2011, suspicion fell after facial composites circulated. Nikita’s uncle Vladislav, visiting the home, found a camera with a tape showing Nikita mutilating Kuydina’s body. He alerted police. Both were arrested quickly. Artyom was calm, quoting Pichushkin dramatically.
"As one hero said, give me a glass of whiskey and a cigar—and you will learn so much new about this life that your hair will begin to move on your head."
Nikita admitted several crimes. They were calm initially, with plans foiled. The video spread, sealing the case. Extensive investigation followed, involving experiments and volumes of evidence.
Life After Arrest
Pre-trial detention was tense. Both in Irkutsk facilities, separated for safety. Trial (2012-2013) was lengthy, emotionally draining, with 49 case volumes. Witnesses fainted; Artyom showed cynicism then breakdowns, self-harm (neck and stomach cuts), and blame-shifting. Nikita was more withdrawn. Charges: murders, attempts, robberies, corpse abuse, extremism. Artyom partially confessed; Nikita mostly did but rejected extremism.
Sentencing on April 2, 2013: Artyom life imprisonment; Nikita 24 years (reduced to 20 on appeal in October 2013, considering age). Civil suits awarded compensation to victims (millions of rubles, unlikely paid). Appeals and complaints followed, with Artyom alleging mistreatment.
Post-sentencing, Artyom transferred to Ognenny Ostrov (strict regime), youngest inmate at the time. Interviews showed little remorse; he claimed writing a book, and studied law remotely. Nikita in Correctional Colony No. 7, Angarsk. He produced statements, faced psychiatric issues.
Attack on Victim B.
By 2015-2016, Nikita was serving his 20-year sentence in the Kemerovo Region. He had been moved to Federal Penitentiary Institution No. 41 (FKU IK-41), a correctional colony in the town of Yurga. Prison records and later court testimony painted a consistent picture of his behavior there: he was withdrawn, uncommunicative, and did not take part in any of the colony’s social, educational, or work activities. Officials placed him on a special preventive watch list because they saw him as someone at risk of suicide and possibly trying to escape. He kept to himself and had few if any real interactions with other inmates.
For medical reasons, Nikita was sent for treatment at another facility (IK-5) and then returned to IK-41. Medical staff recommended he stay in the medical unit of the colony. This placed him in a ward with other inmates receiving health care, including a disabled prisoner known in court documents only as Victim B. (to protect his identity). B. was older, physically weak, and moved around on crutches due to his disability. He posed no threat to anyone.
On the morning of May 31, 2016 (the events began late on May 30), Nikita carried out a premeditated and brutal attack. While both were in the medical unit’s administrative building, Nikita waited for B. to go to the toilet. He followed him in, armed with a metal scoop (sometimes described as a cleaning shovel or scoop used for maintenance). Approaching from behind, he began striking B. forcefully on the head with the sharp edge of the tool. He delivered at least eight powerful blows. B. was completely vulnerable, on crutches, unable to run or fight back effectively.
B. immediately felt intense pain, especially to the back and top of his head. He fell to the tiled floor near the toilet, screaming for help. Even after B. was down, Nikita continued hitting him—at least two or three more times while B. was seated on the floor. Blood poured from the wounds. Other convicts in the medical unit heard the cries and rushed into the toilet. They pulled Nikita away, stopping the assault before it could become fatal. Nikita dropped the scoop and walked away. B. received immediate medical help for multiple head wounds, including cuts to the parietal, parieto-occipital, and occipital regions. Forensic examination later classified the injuries as abrasions and wounds caused by a hard blunt object, but they did not cause lasting harm to his health.
Nikita’s stated motive, according to his own earlier statements during the investigation, was coldly calculated. He wanted to get a new criminal conviction—specifically for attempted murder—so that his overall sentence would increase and he could be transferred to a different prison. He hoped this would send him to a facility where he could be with his old accomplice Artyom Anoufriev. He picked B. precisely because B. looked sick, weak, and unable to resist. Nikita later admitted he felt completely indifferent to who the victim was; B. was simply the easiest target available. He chose the method—repeated blows to the head from above—because it reminded him of how he and Artyom had killed their first victim years earlier with a hammer. There was no personal quarrel, no argument, and no prior conflict between them.
When investigators and colony staff first questioned him right after the attack, Nikita openly confessed. He described following B. into the toilet, striking him at least six times from behind, then hitting him two more times while he was on the floor. He acknowledged seeing the blood and knowing what he was doing. He signed a voluntary confession written from his own words, with no signs of pressure.
At the later court trial (around 2017), however, Nikita changed his story. He pleaded not guilty to the full charge of attempted murder. He admitted he had hit B. with the shovel several times but claimed he never truly intended to kill him. According to his new version, he only wanted to create enough trouble to get moved to an isolated cell or a different facility for his own comfort. He said he planned to hit B. about five more times and then stop on purpose. He insisted he knew the injuries could not be fatal. He also tried to discredit his earlier confessions, claiming he had only given them out of fear of violence from other inmates while in pre-trial detention.
The court carefully examined all the evidence and rejected Nikita’s trial testimony as unreliable and self-serving. They found his original confessions, the detailed testimony of Victim B., statements from prison staff and witnesses, forensic reports on the injuries, and the overall circumstances far more credible. B.’s own account matched the physical evidence: he described the surprise attack from behind, the repeated blows while he was down, the fear for his life, and how other inmates pulled Nikita off him. The chief of Nikita’s detachment in the colony also testified that Nikita openly told him afterward that he chose B. because he was weaker and could not fight back, and that the goal was to get a life sentence or transfer to be near his accomplice. There was no evidence of any personal feud or provocation from B.
The court concluded that Nikita’s actions were a clear case of attempted murder committed out of hooligan motives. His behavior showed open contempt for public order, human dignity, and moral standards. It happened in a shared prison medical facility—a public space within the institution—and was done with cynicism and a desire to dominate a helpless person. The judge recognized some mitigating factors: Nikita’s partial admission of guilt (at least initially), his young age at the time, and his health conditions. But these did not outweigh the seriousness of the crime.
The Sentence for the 2016 Attack
On the basis of Part 3 of Article 30 and paragraph “i” of Part 2 of Article 105 of the Russian Criminal Code (attempted murder with hooligan motives), Nikita Lytkin was sentenced to 11 years of additional imprisonment. This was to be served in a special-regime penal colony. He also received one year of restriction of liberty after his main sentence, requiring regular check-ins with authorities, limits on changing residence, and restrictions on leaving the municipality without permission.
This new term was added to his existing 20-year sentence. The attack reinforced his reputation as a dangerous and unpredictable prisoner. It highlighted ongoing issues with his mental state, lack of remorse, and continued willingness to use extreme violence for personal gain—even years into his incarceration and far removed from the original street crimes in Irkutsk.
Nikita’s Death
On November 30, 2021, at age 28, Nikita Lytkin died by suicide in prison, slashing his wrists at Correctional Colony No. 7 in Angarsk. Discovered early December 1, he had served about 10 years. Reports cite neglect by guards. His death ended a sentence that might have seen release around 2031. It marked a tragic close to a life defined by isolation, violence, and unaddressed mental health struggles.
From Then On
Artyom remains imprisoned, serving life. The case highlighted flaws in early investigations, impacts of online radicalization, juvenile extremism, and societal neglect of troubled youth. It was notable as one of the first forensic resolutions of violent extremism in Irkutsk Oblast. Media coverage was intense, with podcasts, documentaries, and online discussions keeping it alive. Victims’ families sought justice and compensation; community fear lingered.
PHOTOS OF THE NEW BRAZILIAN PERP + explanation
A new attack occurred today (06/15) by a 14 year old boy named Kevin Andrade (photos of him below)
He was described as a shy boy who suffered a lot of bullying because his condition which affected his voice.
THE ATTACK
Kevin's father was a police officer, he had an shotgun stored at home for the family's safety against potential intruders; that is the gun was used in the massacre.
This morning, Kevin has taken his father's gun who had prepared the night before, put it in his backpack, and entered the school normally. During lunch time, Kevin got into one of the classrooms and shot five people; three were wounded and two were killed.
The attack occurred at Emef Alferes Tiradentes school.
The victims
Two siblings were killed. First was a 13 year old boy named Samuel, who was shot in the head and died instantly; he was the first person to be shot. Julia was the second and last to die; she died while trying to leave the room, having been shot twice in the back while running and then once in the neck.
Kevin's accounts (still active)
His last repost
"I just wanted everything to go back to the way it was before."
What happened in San Jose National High School today?
hi Tumblr this is for educational purposes only!!!!
Around 9 AM on June 22, 2026, an unnamed pair of students made an attack on their high school in Tacloban City
Because of how recent this case is, not much is known about the victims or the perpetrators, but I have decided to compile all the information I could find
Re: Perpetrators
The perpetrators were both enrolled into the school in the 9th and 10th grade. It's been speculated by investigators that the boys have been experiencing bullying since the 7th grade.
One teacher, who requested to stay anonymous, noted that one of the boys was socially withdrawn and kept to himself. He was also academically behind because he was held back a grade (He was supposed to be in the 10th, but failed to advance because of his grades)
They carried two firearms, a .98 revolver and a 9mm pistol, with the latter being from a police woman who is a relative of one of the perpetrators and is now in police custody.
Re: The Incident
The attacks started at around 9:20 am in the morning. One teacher reported that one of the suspects had begun shooting at a classroom window from the outside before entering the room.
On the other hand, Glenn Bazar, a teacher, told investigators that he was in the middle of teaching a lesson when one of perpetrators appeared outside of the classroom with a firearm. Bazar claims that he pointed the gun at him, and he immediately dropped to the ground for his safety.
2 people were found dead on the scene, while one died on the way to the hospital. Around 5 people were injured, and investigations are still underway.
how it feels liking the perps while im everything they hate
Bear in the Big Blue House (1997-2006)
<<- VoDkA- >>
Skins (2007) - Pilot episode.
keep calm and get sleazy
The Boston Marathon Bombing
ok guys.. dont hate this one. correct any mistakes pleaseeee..
Perpetrators: Tamerlan Tsarnaev and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev
Age at the time: 26 (Tamerlan) and 19 (Dzhokar)
Status: Dead (Tamerlan) and Alive (Dzhokhar)
Location: 117th Boston Marathon (specifically the finish line), Boston, Massachusetts.
Day of the Attack: April 15th, 2013.
Weapons: 2 Pressure Cooker Bombs.
Motive: Extremism
Punishment: Death Sentence (Dzhokar)
Charges: 30 counts (detailed later)
Tamerlan Anzorovich Tsarnaev (Тамерлан Царнаев) was born on October 21st, 1986 in an unknown area. Either in Russia or Kyrgyzstan. He didn't really have friends. He attended Cambridge Rindge and Latin School after coming to America. He attended Bunker Hill Community college from 2006-2008. He previously applied to University of Massachusetts Boston (UMASS Boston). He dropped out to pursue boxing. He was studying accounting and wanted to become an engineer. He attended a mosque, the Islamic Society of Boston mosque, and would be eventually removed after interrupting several prayers. He would continue going, but he would keep quiet to not be permanently banned. Tamerlan was no stranger to law enforcement. He was labelled an extremist by the police and he was put on a list alongside his mother. The FBI investigated him, which caused his application for citizenship to need extra reviews. He also was arrested for abusing his girlfriend. He visited Russia in 2012, where people say that is where he began to have more extreme values. Tamerlan did not drink or smoke and was a devoted Sunni Muslim.
Dzhokhar Anzorovich (Jahar) Tsarnaev (Джохар Царнаев) was born on July 22nd, 1993 in Dagestan, Russia. Dzhokar moved to America when he was around 9 years old. He was a wrestler during his time at the Cambridge Rindge and Latin School in Cambridge, Massachusetts. He also attended, in his youth, Community Charter School of Cambridge for his middle school education and Cambridgeport Elementary for his elementary education. He also attended School No 1 in Makhachkala, Russia. He graduated in 2011. He received a $2,500 scholarship. He was very into the idea of having a career and making a lot of money. Dzhokar was described as being like an angel. When he went off to college at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, he gained a pretty nice group of friends. He lived in a dorm at the time of the attacks. When the bombing happened and images of suspects were released, his friend attempted to call him to tell him a suspect looks like him and to be careful. Dzhokar was a pretty popular guy. He got a prom date, he had many friends, and he was well liked by those around him. In 2012, he gained legal citizenship. He could speak Russian, English, and Chechen. Some people around him claim his love of sports came from Tamerlan, since he was a boxer. Tamerlan was a big influence on Dzhokhar.
He began to struggle in school in college. He wasn't doing as well as he wanted to do and it was likely due to the change that college is in comparison to previous schooling. Dzhokhar was Muslim and would attend prayers with Tamerlan. Tamerlan was more devout, as Dzhokhar would still smoke cigarettes and he sold weed in his college years. His friends were all willing to testify in court that he isn't the type to do this kind of thing. Honestly, he is described super positively by every single person who knows him.
They were born to Anzor Tsarnaev and Zubeidat Tsarnaeva. The boys were of Chechen and Avar descent. They were raised in a Muslim household. Their family moved around pretty often. They spent some of their childhoods in Kyrgyzstan, and spent a year in Dagestan. The pair had 2 sisters who are named Ailina Tsarnaeva and Bella Tsarnaeva. Ailina was arrested for making a bomb threat against a woman in 2014. She received an aggravated harassment charge. She was also arrested for using a fake bill at a mall in 2010. Bella was arrested for drug possession in 2012.
The Tsarnaev family moved to the United States in 2002. Tamerlan moved later after living with his uncle when the family had moved. The family moved to Massachusetts, living on Norfolk Street in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
The 117th annual Boston marathon, April 15th, 2013:
9:00 a.m. Mobility Impaired Participants Start
9:17 a.m. Push-Rim Wheelchair Division Start
9:22 a.m. Handcycle Participants Start
9:32 a.m. Elite Women's Start
10:00 a.m. Elite Men's Start & Wave One
10:20 a.m Wave Two
10:40 a.m. Wave Three
5:00 p.m. Awards Ceremony
Fairmont Copley Plaza, Grand Ballroom,
138 St. James Avenue, Boston
7:30 p.m.-12:00 a.m. Post-Race Party* (21 and older only)
This was the day's schedule. The race began as normal. over 27,000 people ran that day. The Boston Marathon is a 26 mile long race.
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev and Tamerlan Tsarnaev first appeared around 2:38 pm. The brothers walked down Gloucester Street and turned the corner of Boylston Street. At 2:42, Tamerlan would split off from Dzhokhar. Dzhokhar would stand in front of the Back Bay social club, which is a bar and restaurant in Boston . I'll split this off.
TAMERLAN: tamerlan tsarnaev walks past the forum restaurant and continues to walk until he reaches the finish line on boylston street. He then stood in one spot towards the back of the crowd. He then placed down his backpack at the finish line. Tamerlan is seen hurrying with other people away after the explosion at 2:50 pm.
DZHOKHAR: Dzhokhar Tsarnaev walks, while on his cellphone, up to the forum restaurant at 2:45 pm. He takes a spot in front of the restaurant and places down his backpack. He takes a phone call with Tamerlan that lasts 19 seconds. The first explosion goes off at 2:49 pm. Dzhokhar glances in the wrong direction, before looking back, then he walks away seconds before the second blast at 2:49 pm. He is seen running at the corner of Fairfield and Boylston street.
3 were killed in the explosion and 260+ others were injured. Injuries range from scratches from the nails and other objects inside the bombs, to losing limbs. The brothers had figured out how to make these bombs through a magazine by Al Qaeda.
MANHUNT:
the bombers lived regular lives for days after that. Dzhokhar partied with friends and tweeted hours after the bombing "Ain't no love in the heart of the city, stay safe people “. The police searched every crumb of evidence in the area. They found glass, nails, backpack remains, etc.
APRIL 18TH: After many hours of examination, they identified the “White Hat guy” as a suspect, which caused confusion. Dzhokhar Tsarnaev was the man in the white hat. Tamerlan was seen as a suspect due to the fact he was with Dzhokhar. The pair went into hiding. At 10:25 pm, the pair shot and killed an officer named Sean A. Collier after attempting to steal his gun. They then stole a (a Mercedes Benz and kept the owner, Dun Meng, hostage. They allegedly wanted to go to New York and that's why they stole it. They then took 800 dollars from Meng and went to fill up gas at a shell gas station. Dzhokhar went inside, Tamerlan pumped gas. Meng got out of the car and went to a different gas station and begged the cashier to call for help.
APRIL 19TH: The police follow the honda and mercedez benz after properly identifying that these cars were being used by the bombers. The cars stopped and Tamerlan got out of the car and began to shoot at officers. Bombs were also thrown at officers. When tamerlan ran out of ammo, he threw his gun at an officer. The officers then tackled him to the ground. Dzhokhar then pressed on the gas, attempting to run over the cops who darted out of the way. Dzhokhar ran over Tamerlan, dragging him 30 feet. Tamerlan would die from these injuries paired with the gunshot wounds. Half a mile later, he would abandon the car. At some point, Dzhokhar ended up hiding under a boat. He was badly injured since he had been shot. David Henneberry was the owner of the house. He noticed a bleeding body under his boat. He called the police immediately at 6:42 pm. The police arrived and used thermal imaging and they saw that Dzhokhar was inside. He ended up being shot at until he came out of the boat. He surrendered, holding his arms up and he lifted his shirt to show he had no weapon on him. He was then arrested 2 hours after the initial call, at 8:42 pm. He was in critical condition. With that, the manhunt was over.
Total death count: 6
3 from the bombing
2 from the manhunt
1 from severe injuries that were related to the manhunt but died at a later date.
BOMBING: Martin Richard (8) Krystle Campbell (29) Lu Lingzi (23)
MANHUNT: Sean Collier (26) Tamerlan Tsarnaev (26)
OTHER: Dennis Simmonds (28)
Dzhokhar pleaded not guilty to all charges. He was found guilty on all charges.
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev was sentenced to death on June 24th, 2015. He was then taken off of death row on July 30th, 2020. He was then put back on death row on March 4th, 2022. He currently awaits further trials to see if he will be put to death.
SMALL EXTRA FACTS:
Dzhokhar wrote inside the boat with a pencil.
The motive was ultimately decided to be islamic terrorism.
Tamerlan was connected to 3 murders before the bombings.
A boy was wrongfully accused of being one of the bombers. The boy was found dead from suicide, and had died before the bombing.
The pair's mother was investigated before the bombings alongside Tamerlan.
3 other friends were arrested for providing weapons to the pair and for attempting to destroy evidence against them.
Tamerlan attempted to legally change his name to Muaz. but he never went through with it.
Dzhokhar held up the middle finger at a prision camera.
Dzhokhar was not told of Tamerlans death immediately.
constantly missing her.
Elliots’ entire facebook page
Preserved and archived.
Today I locked in and did an internet deep dive, I was able to uncover quite a bit of lost media regarding Elliot. Here’s an archive of his entire facebook page that I recorded, I believe only fragmented pictures of the account are currently in circulation. I’m excited to finally make a post regarding the case that is actually my special interest, he also got me into the community.
He’s not too popular on here, but for the 3 other elliot researchers I may post some hidden gems I found.
Disclaimer: This post is for research, educational and awareness purposes only. I do not condone or encourage violence or harmful rhetoric of any kind.
edit I made that I kinda hate