The Durlești Maniac is the alias attributed to an unidentified serial killer who shot six people to death in Moldova from 2007 to 2011.[1]
Durlești Maniac | |
---|---|
Details | |
Victims | 6 |
Span of crimes | 2007–2011 |
Country | Moldova |
Date apprehended | Never apprehended |
Victims
editŞtefan Cherescu and Razan Djaniev
editOn July 30, 2007, Ştefan Cherescu and Razan Djaniev were walking through a vineyard that they owned when they were fired at by the killer with a shotgun.[2] Ştefan Cherescu was shot in the throat and died soon after while Razan Djaniev was shot in the chest and survived.[3]
A man named Andrei Crăciun was convicted of the crime but later acquitted.[3]
2009 attacks
editThe next murder happened in May 2009. A person was found shot to death in their car in an isolated area. They were shot four times in total, the fatal shot went through their head.[4]
Another attack also occurred in 2009. The killer broke into a man's car with a gun. Fortunately, the owner of the car was able to escape without any injuries. It is believed that he was able to escape because the crime happened in a residential area rather than an isolated area like the former attacks.[4]
Mariana Jimbei and Valeriu Croitoru
editOn September 10, 2010, the bodies of Mariana Jimbei, 18, and her boyfriend, Valeriu Croitoru, 31, were discovered shot to death near their car on the Leuşeni-Ialoveni-Chisinau route. Mariana Jimbei was found completely naked and Valeriu Croitoru was found face down a few feet away.[4]
Later that year, in November, the killer attempted to attack another couple, but they managed to escape unharmed.[4]
Ilie Racu and Olga Câșlaru
editThe bodies of 19 year old Ilie Racu and 15 year old Olga Câșlaru were discovered in a car near St. Andrews Monastery in Durlești on April 1, 2011. Ilie Racu, the driver of the car, was found shot twice in the trunk of the car. Olga Câșlaru was shot in the back of the head and found half-naked.[5]
Subsequent attack
editIn May 2011, another couple were attacked in their car near a lake in laloveni. The killer smashed their car windows and shot at them. Both people in the car managed to escape alive, with the man being shot in the back as he ran away.[4]
The final known attack happened in July, 2011. A man broke into person's house and shot them four times before fleeing. The owner of the house survived the attack.[4]
All of the attacks are believed to be connected because of their close proximity and a shotgun being used in all of the attacks.[4]
Suspects
editAlexandru Miron
editAlexandru Miron, a former soldier, became a suspect in the murders after he murdered his wife, Angela Miron, by shooting her twice with a hunting weapon on August 3, 2011, only a month after the Durlești Maniac's final attack. Alexandru Miron murdered his wife to start a new life with his mistress, who lived very close to Durlești. Additionally, Alexandru Miron also matches the psychological portrait of the Durlești Maniac.[6]
Alexandru Miron was sentenced to 23 years in prison for murdering his wife, but there was never enough evidence to charge him in any of the Durlești murders. The gun he used to murder his wife was never found either.[6]
Andrei Crăciun
editAndrei Crăciun was convicted and later acquitted of the murder of Ştefan Cherescu.
Andrei Crăciun was arrested in 2007 and convicted in 2009. During his trial, Razan Djaniev, the surviving victim, was called to the stand where he claimed that the first time he saw Andrei Crăciun was at trial.[2] Despite this, Andrei Crăciun was convicted of the murder and sentenced to 21 years in prison.
Andrei Crăciun also claims that the Chisinau police chief Sergiu Cociorvă, The Nisporeni commissioner, Ion Balcan and a police officer named Ghenadie Ababii, attempted to torture a confession out of him, which he never gave.[2]
In 2012, the Supreme Court of Justice ordered a retrial due to Andrei Crăciun being convicted with no incriminating evidence.[4] Andrei Craciun was acquitted by the Chisinau Court of Appeal in 2013 and compensated with 1.5 million lei by the state in 2017 for being wrongly convicted of murder.[4]
The Fedoruc brothers
editVladimir and Eugene Fedoruc were suspected of murdering Mariana Jimbei and Valeriu Croitoru. However, they were released after 19 months due to a lack of evidence. The brothers still maintain their innocence.[7]
Gheorghe Inculeţ
editGheorghe Inculeţ was a mentally ill murderer who killed his sister and her two-year-old child. He was admitted to a psychiatric hospital, but escaped on April 11, 2007.[8]
Gheorghe Inculeţ later became a suspect in the murders but it was discovered that he died outside of the Republican Hospital in Chisinau on April 13, 2007, but remained unidentified until May 2012.[8]
Description of the suspect
editThe suspect is described as having short brown hair, wore military clothes and boots with short laces, and wielded his weapon easily. He is also tall, was between 35 and 40 during the murders, and had an athletic build. The suspect also repeatedly used the word "suka" (сука).[2][6]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Serial Rapist-Murderer Preys On Young Couples In Moldova". 2011.
- ^ a b c d "The mysteries of the crimes in Durlesti and Ialoveni (I): "Cociorva said that I am not the first nor the last unjustly convicted"". Vremea noua. March 29, 2013.
- ^ a b "Prosecutor SUSPENDED from office for wrongfully convicting man for murder". Publika. March 10, 2017.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i "Crimes in Durlesti and laloveni: A case with six dead and eight attacks with a hunting weapon". zdg. February 9, 2018.
- ^ "Nine years since the murders in Durești and Ialoveni: the perpetrator of the murders has not yet been identified". zdg. September 4, 2019.
- ^ a b c d "The double murder in Durleşti. Another "suspect"". zdg. October 28, 2014.
- ^ "The double murder in Ialoveni, with the accused at large". zdg. December 13, 2012.
- ^ a b "INCULETE CASE: How a DEAD became a suspect in the crimes in Ialoveni and Durleşti". zdg. June 14, 2012.