Serial killer who murdered 80 women volunteers to go to Ukraine frontline for Kremlin


Former police officer Mikhail Popkov was jailed in 2015 after carrying out a string of gruesome murders in the Russian far-east. The brutality of the crimes in Angarsk and Irkutsk between 1992 and 2010 earned him the nickname “the Werewolf.” 

During an interview with the Russian news channel Vesti, Popkov was asked: “What is your dream?” Popkov replied: “To get into the army.”

The 58-year-old said that he recognized fighting in Ukraine “is not a computer game” and that “these are not fiction books about superheroes.”

Popkov suggested he “would not hesitate” to join Putin’s war in Ukraine.
He told Vesti: “Realistically, how would I manage to live through January and February, for me the coldest frosts are the worst.

“Taking into consideration my military specialization, I think it is in quite high demand now.”

Popkov added: “Even though I have been in prison for 10 years, I don’t think it would be so hard to learn new skills.”

It has been reported that Wagner, a Russian private military company, has been recruiting former prisoners to fight in Ukraine.

According to the Washington Post, the United States estimates that Wagner has a total of 50,000 troops in Ukraine, with 40,000 of them being convicts recruited from prisons.

He chose to deliver the statement in his home city on the 80th anniversary of the breaking of the siege of St Petersburg, then Leningrad, during World War 2.

Putin laid a wreath at the city’s Piskaryov memorial cemetery, where 420,000 civilian victims of the siege and 70,000 Soviet soldiers were buried.

He also put flowers in a section where his brother, who died as a child during the siege, was buried in a mass grave.

Addressing gathered veterans, Putin said: “Large-scale combat operations involving heavy weapons, artillery, tanks and aircraft haven’t stopped in Donbas since 2014. All that we are doing today as part of the special military operation is an attempt to stop this war. This is the meaning of our operation — protecting people who live on those territories.”



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