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Five Suspects Linked To Racist Crime Wave

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  • Five Suspects Linked To Racist Crime Wave

    St Petersburg Times, Russia
    May 26 2006

    Five Suspects Linked To Racist Crime Wave
    By Simon Saradzhyan and Galina Stolyarova

    Staff Writer

    Five men detained last week for possible ties to the killing of an
    African student are being charged with killing a prominent racial
    issues expert, city prosecutor Sergei Zaitsev said Wednesday at a
    news conference at the City Prosecutor's Office.

    The suspects, members of the Mad Crowd group, are thought to have
    taken part in the June 2004 fatal shooting of Nikolai Girenko, 64, as
    revenge for Girenko's testimony in court against another extremist
    group, Schultz-88, the prosecutor said.

    Girenko, who pioneered a method for classifying ethnically motivated
    crimes, died after an unidentified assailant rang the doorbell of his
    St. Petersburg apartment and then shot him through the closed door as
    he approached it.

    `The recent outburst of extremist crimes is associated with the
    activities of this gang,' Zaitsev said at the news conference. `We
    have long suspected that the wave of extremist crimes was not a
    symptom of a widespread nationalism, which is not typical of St.
    Petersburg, but was the result of the activities of a well-organized
    gang that specialized in this type of crime.'

    Although the trial has not yet begun, Zaitsev's strong words were
    echoed by an even more powerful statement from Governor Valentina
    Matviyenko, who suggested the gang `sought to taint the reputation of
    St. Petersburg nearing the G8 summit'.

    Besides the murder, the five suspects are also to be charged with
    taking part in a series of other attacks and robberies, including the
    2003 killing of a Chinese citizen and a 2003 attack on an Armenian
    citizen, Zaitsev said.

    During searches at the apartments of the detainees the police found
    extremist literature. Medical examinations of the suspects have shown
    that some of them have tattoos of swastikas and extremist or racist
    slogans. Two of the suspects are students of local universities: one
    studies at the Baltic International Tourism Institute, while another
    is a student of the Herzen Pedagogical University.

    The arrested men have also confessed to having incited teenagers to
    attack a Tajik family. In that 2004 attack, Khursheda Sultanova, a
    9-year-old Tajik girl, was stabbed to death while her father and a
    sibling also suffered knife wounds.

    The suspects are also being investigated for their ties to the
    killings of a Vietnamese citizen and a Sengalese student, the
    prosecutor said. The suspects are all in their early twenties.

    Mad Crowd founder Dmitry Borovikov, who was killed last week, is also
    suspected of having killed two teenagers allied with the group,
    Rostislav Gofman and Aleksei Golovchenko, Fontanka.ru reported. The
    two were killed because `they were the weak link and could have
    betrayed the group,' Zaitsev said. Borovikov was shot dead Thursday
    after lunging at police officers with a knife.

    Eight of Mad Crowd's 13 members have been detained, Zaitsev said.
    After Borovikov was killed, police arrested five other Mad Crowd
    members. Searches of their apartments netted six guns, three
    kilograms of TNT and extremist literature, Zaitsev said.
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