about me:
hello all my name is marion and i am a 17yo male
if ur over 16 feel free to msg me (i Might be a bit awkward tho, sorry. please accept my faults.)
i do not have a dni :)
favourite cases/perps:
dylann roof, adam lanza, payton gendron, colt gray, samantha rupnow, salvador ramos, brenton tarrant, caleb/cain (not much to research atp) and academy maniacs
cases/perps im interested in but haven't really researched/want to research:
columbine, virgina tech, pekka, alina afanaskina, elliot rodger, david katz, arthur a, vladislav, solomon henderson, nikolas cruz, anders breivik, robert hawkins and kip kinkel
i will find the time to research them all one day..
interests outside of 🍵🌊🌊:
i am kind of boring here.. i draw occasionally, collect figures and read a lot on ao3
i play games:
gtaV, rdr2, genshin, hsr, overwatch, mc, tlou, life is strange 1/2, tcoaal, co09/re-up/flipside & detroit become human
i watch shows/movies:
supernatural, zeroday, klass, elephant, invincible, the boys, the pitt & hetalia
i also like:
wilbur soot/lvjy, crimeboys, sorry boys, averageharry, jack manifold, baablu, ranfren
Have the academy maniacs repented? (English Translation)
Prior to the trial, the teenage serial killers attempt to avoid thinking about the future.
The Akademovsk murderers, two young men who shocked inhabitants of Irkutsk in the Akademgorodok district, were apprehended six months ago.
What are Artyom Anufriev and Nikita Lytkin considering six months later? Do they express remorse?
On October 4, the day Artem turned 19, we conducted an interview with them.
The young men were taken to the Investigative Department of the Investigative Committee of the Russian Federation in the Irkutsk area from the pre-trial prison facility to speak with the media. The young men declared: "We are hammers" right away, not being timid but brave. There has been enough time since then. Since then, Nikita and Artyom's faces have lost all traces of that confidence. A reality that put everything in its proper perspective was shown to them. They contemplate regret. But it's hard to judge how much they truly regret their actions.
There are no points of support, thus it is clear that the earth is unstable beneath their feet. They are now utterly perplexed, miserable kids who lack the fundamental component of what makes a person a person—the ability to value human life.
If Nikita hadn't been stopped, he would have carried on killing.
Nikita Lytkin keeps quiet. He is quite timid. His responses are fragmentary. However, he is attempting to make sense of what transpired. He was teased by his peers and never had any friends. He longed for others to notice him, but it never happened. He went out to kill when his rage grew from the understanding that he was nothing.
Interview With Nikita Lytkin
Q: How do you feel six months after the conclusion of your manhunt?
N: I'm ashamed. I imagine my future hazily.
Q: Do you interact with anyone?
N: I'm speaking with my mother. Mom has said that she will wait. She didn't get me.
Q: Did your "peaceful life" interests leave you unsatisfied?
N: I aspired to major in music. Me and one of my friends formed our own little group. I wrote the music. We gathered and played with him at home. I published music online.
Q: And with whom would you wish to collaborate?
N: My involvement in my studies was minimal. I attended college twice, first for my degree in energy and later for my degree in building. I failed and was expelled. I stopped moving in the second due to a disagreement with the group.
Q: How did the decision to go on the warpath come about?
N: Artyom pulled me along. We had been studying together since the fifth grade and were raised in the same yard. Artyom called me after he joined a bunch of skinheads. We then started corresponding because I was eager to learn for myself.
But neither did the new acquaintances treat him with respect. Maxim, a common friend who went by the moniker Friedrich, recommended a certain genre of literature to them, a work whose title sounds like "Born to Hate" when translated from its original language. Friedrich, a well-known figure in skinhead circles, is currently involved with the FSB.
Q: What did you find interesting about this book?
N: We read it. Intrigued. I found that what I was reading matched my current emotions. I felt odd. There was a tendency toward conflict.
Q: Did these suggestions assist you?
N: I felt more confident.
Q: How did you feel when you went on the warpath with knives and hammers?
N: Every crime brought satisfaction.
Q: But didn't you think that was bad? And the punishment may prevail?
N: I made an effort to block out the thought. I attempted to overcome it. I overcome it, though not completely.
Nikita did not commit crimes on his own. The one time he attempted it, it failed. He attempted an assault on a woman next to house No. 297a on Lermontov Street. It wasn't successful.
N: There was a scream, and I was worried that someone would pass.
N: There was a scream, and I was worried that someone would pass. He stole the phone and fled.
Q: What were you feeling at the moment of the attack?
N: I was venting some form of anger.
The mother of Nikita is a devout person. As a child, she brought him to church. All of this is still vivid in Nikita's mind because his childhood just ended.
Q: What's the problem with believing in God?
N: It didn't work out.
Q: In your opinion, Nikita, who is the main protagonist in your duet? Who made the first murderous offer?
N: In life, we shared many similarities. I initially kind of called Artyom.
You started to kill, and your social media appearances increased. They even made an effort to get in touch with the survivors who were not slain.
N: We communicated with music. I spoke with Friedrich via email. Someone created the crime map, which I took from the Internet. I also compiled a victim's list.
Why did you go hunting in your hometown of Akademgorodok? Since the attacks were conducted in Akademgorodok, it should go without saying that they should start investigating there first if they want to find killers.
They were reluctant to bother at first. Then, they aspired to dominate the neighborhood as the coolest people.
Then, they aspired to dominate the neighborhood as the coolest people. We occasionally visited the fire academy. However, it was dull there. Additionally, we visited Novo-Irkutsk. But I also didn't enjoy it there.
A: The murder of sixth-grader Danil Semenov was whose idea?
N: I saw him. And offered to kill.
Q: Wasn't it a bit sad?
N: At the time, we didn't consider it.
Q: Would you have continued to kill if you hadn't been arrested?
N: I'd carry on in the same manner. I didn't want to go to prison, on the one hand. However, I also desired recognition.
Q: Would you kill if you were released now?
N: no. That is no longer necessary for me.
Interview With Artyom
Artem thinks he was duped into playing silly antics
On the day of the interview, Artem—who turned 19—was crying. F fFrom a failed life, disappointment, and the fact that he did not want to meet his mother despite her wanting to go on a date with him. Nevertheless, he managed to gather himself and conduct an interview. Artyom proved to be a chatty person. He quickly absolves Nikita of responsibility for what he has done, as if forgetting that he is accountable for his own deeds. Artem, in contrast to Nikita, had a purpose in life, engaged in active communication, and studied and worked. But it appears that he spoke with the incorrect individuals.
Q: Who is your group's leader?
A: I'll be blunt: he's a leader. While he did not exert influence, he was a crime-instigator.
Q: Nikita appears to be quite calm and quiet.
A: You don't know him.
Q: Can he persuade?
A: "I was simply adhering to his childish whims. Though it is obviously difficult to refer to them as children's.
Q: Didn't such whims strike you as odd?
A: They seemed to be.
Q: Was he such a close friend to you that you fell for it?
A: "Certainly not as a friend. I was personally obsessed with both videos I found on the Internet and books that I can now categorically condemn.
Q: Did the desire to kill come to you on its own?
A: He's been phoning for quite some time. When he went for a walk in the fall of 2009, Ihe found a stick and shoved it down his sleeve. He declared that he had to beat somebody.
Q: Was he hurt?
A: Hurt? He hurt himself. He and I have been longtime friends, and we are well acquainted. He has trouble connecting on a personal level with others. And mumbles when questioned. There's no need to lay everything out. Everything is already obvious, after all.
Q: Did he have any friends?
A: If I had acquaintances, he had none. There was one, but he also desired to murder it. I'll invite him to the forest, and there we'll kill him, he said.
Q: Isn't it frightening to have such a friend? You could've also been killed by him.
A:It's scary, There was a cause for concern.
Q: How do you feel about your mother?
A: Restrained. It was tense all the time. I desired more freedom. More complaints arose as I worked more. I was hired as a maintenance worker at an art gallery a month before we began killing. I subsequently went to the medical university to continue my studies. I wanted to succeed in something significant, so I either wanted to become a surgeon or a cardiologist. Possibilities existed.
Q: What became of your desires when you committed crimes?
A: I believe I have been exposed to harmful ideas.
Q: You now recognize their destructiveness. and before?
A: What is there? I immediately realized what was wrong. However, I was so over everything that I thought, "Come what may." My mother never understood me. Simply put, I was frightened of killing her one day.
Q: How have crimes affected you?
A: I started smoking in jail; whenever I smoke, I feel horrible. Then, in the same way, we'll do something horrible.
Q: What about your pal?
A: He was already hopping around in rage when we left and it didn't work out or grow together. As we got closer to the big reveal, I started trying to talk him out of it more and more. I realized his desire to succeed in this endeavor.
Q: Is he really such a bad person?
A: In general, sure. However, anger does not exist in a vacuum. Additionally, he struggles to get along with his mother. She is a miracle, not a mother, no matter how I look at her. I didn't get his rage at her.
Q: Was it your aim to meet skinheads?
A: I've been conversing with them for a while. One evening, Boomer called in order to beat someone. In fact, they did. Then I got busy and couldn't walk with them at night. After that, I limited my communication to phone calls until ceasing altogether. I He most likely matured and understood that this was not the case. I did not support these viewpoints.
Q: Did murdering people seem interesting?
A: Yes, what to conceal, it's intriguing. The process of overcoming fear is interesting.
Q: Why did you spend so much time tracking down your victims?
A: I had to locate them. Nikita was frightened of being rebuffed. Nikita was seeking for the weaker people.
A: Like Danil Semenov?
A: The youngster was approaching, and Nikita could see that he was a little creature whose head he would easily break. I was continuously telling him: "Why attack the weak if you want to kill? Throw yourself at a regular guy." However, he feared being beaten.
Q: And why did you commit crimes, Artem?
A: I caved in to his whims and climbed where I wasn't supposed to, which is how everything came about.
The maniacs will be imprisoned until mid-December. Each was determined to be entirely sane. They collaborate closely with the investigator. And the only person alive today who truly knows Nikita and Artem well is Yevgeny Karchevsky, the investigator for the investigating Committee for the Irkutsk region. Nobody else, not even their mothers, showed as much curiosity about what had happened to them.
Y: These are not children but wolves. They even had documentaries on how to murder adults and children. Not to mention gore films. They also had banned books taken from them.
Q: Did this material serve as a beginning point?
Y: They utilized it to put into order what in life they couldn't understand. They believed that by doing this, they may find a solution to their issues. With their mothers, both had issues. Nikita's mother overprotected him, and he yearned to mature into a person and receive praise. Artyom and his mother did not get along; she is an odd woman. Nikita desired fame since he was an unpopular student at school.
Q: — They didn't feel sympathy in general? Furthermore, there is the worry of being discovered.
Y: They exited the house detached from reality. They could follow a single road back and forth for a very long time, searching for the victim.
Q: Do they now recognize the consequences of their actions? Or do they think they're cool?
Y: They actually lived for this, so they could now think of themselves as cool. They also have supporters. To help them, one girl acquaintance made a webpage. They were hailed as heroes by the youth movement. Those young individuals who think it's important to rid the world of drunks, the homeless, elderly women, and elderly men.
Q: They don't appear to be friends. For instance, Artem accuses Nikita. They don't address one another by name.
Y: They are no longer in contact with one another. I recently accompanied them to the assessment so they would feel more at ease. And they no longer even use the same mug to drink from. They are experiencing something...
The lunatics will be imprisoned until mid-December. Each was determined to be entirely sane. They collaborate closely with the investigator. And the only person alive today who truly knows Nikita and Artem well is Yevgeny Karchevsky, the investigator for the investigating Committee for the Irkutsk region. Nobody else, not even their mothers, showed as much curiosity about what had happened to them.