Academy maniacs


Artyom Alexandrovich Anoufriev and Nikita Vakhtangovich Lytkin are two serial killers from Irkutsk, Russia, known as the "Academy maniacs" and the "Irkutsk Molotochniki". The pair collectively committed six murders and injured nine others in a series of attacks that took place in Irkutsk Academgorodok between December 2010 and April 2011.
Both perpetrators were detained in April 2011, and were collectively charged with murder, robbery, abuse of victims' bodies and organizing extremist activities. The judicial investigation of the case lasted from August 2012 to February 2013. On April 2, 2013, the Irkutsk Regional Court sentenced Anoufriev to life imprisonment, and Lytkin to 24 years imprisonment. On October 3, 2013, the Supreme Court of Russia finalized the verdict of Anoufriev's life sentence, while Lytkin's sentence was reduced to 20 years' imprisonment.
The case is noteworthy for the fact that it was the first ever time that a case concerning violent extremism in the Irkutsk Oblast was solved using forensic science.

The criminals

Artyom Anoufriev

Anoufriev was born on October 4, 1992 in Irkutsk, and was raised without a father. Childhood friends described him in court positively, but nevertheless, his childhood was very difficult psychologically. His mother, Nina Ivanovna Anoufrieva, who worked as an accountant in an insurance company, had a great influence on the teenager's upbringing. According to the previous headmaster of the school he studied in, she had instructed young Artyom to hate people. When he received bad grades, his mother immediately wrote statements in which she reproached teachers for psychological pressure on her son, and if the marks were written only in his journal, she would write complaints about the concealment of information. Ultimately, while Artyom was in the 9th grade, the school management was forced to look for a new physics teacher, because the previous one refused to study with the class that Anoufriev was in.
Meanwhile, Anoufriev studied well—he was good in Literature and English, he participated in many activities and school competitions, had musical lessons for the guitar and double bass in 5 years, and also sang and played in a local music group that fell apart after his organizer left Irkutsk. However, since first grade Anoufriev was an outcast, and only in senior classes, when his classmates gradually matured and became more friendly, Artyom managed to get rid of this stigma, but at the same time, while in the 10th grade, his performance worsened and graduated from school with a triple passport. In the senior class, shortly before graduation, classmates shot a farewell amateur film, in which there was an episode in which students took turns telling what happiness was in their opinion. Anoufriev was the only one who said: "To be honest, I do not know what happiness is. But I would really like to quickly find out what it is." After school, Artyom entered the Irkutsk State Medical University and at the same time went to work as an auxiliary worker in the art museum.
At the trial, Artyom's mother said that he had been beaten once by a group of Armenians, and a criminal case was opened, but nobody was charged. The Anoufriev family was transferred a sum amounting of 50 thousand rubles as compensation for non-pecuniary damage, but according to his mother, Artyom became very unbalanced after this incident. According to some reports, however, Anoufriev himself provoked the conflict by insulting the Armenians' family on the social network, after which his representatives called him to a "showdown", and the criminal case was stopped after the parties reconciled.
Nina Anoufrieva spoke against her son's friendship with Nikita Lytkin and believed that their communication should be prohibited, because, in her opinion, Nikita was a bad influence on her son.

Nikita Lytkin

Nikita Lytkin was born on March 24, 1993. His great-grandparents were hydraulic builders, and participated in the construction of the Uglich and Irkutsk hydropower stations, while his mother Marina worked as an employee at a shoe store. Like Artyom Anoufriev, he grew up without a father. His father, an Ossetian by nationality, left the family in Lytkin's early childhood. Nikita also had a younger half-brother, who shot himself after the death of his mother. Soon after, the father returned to the family, but his depression, caused by the death of his second wife and the suicide of his second son, did not allow him to establish contact with Nikita. After that, the father left the family and then returned on several occasions, leaving Nikita even more disappointed each time. The last time he saw him was at 16, but they could simply no longer find topics for conversations.
Outwardly, Lytkin behaved quietly and calmly, but, according to his mother, he grew up very closed and uncommunicative. If guests came to visit, Nikita preferred not to appear and each time went to his room. In childhood, he was often caught for painting walls at the entrance of the house. In his elementary school, Nikita had a friend named Artur Lysenko, who helped him adapt among his peers. "He treated him like a thing. <...> Nikita could not refuse, did not know how to say no. He had no opinion. I taught him to be able to say this very no. And when he learned that he became friends with Artur"—Nikita's mother said later.
Prior to the 5th grade, Nikita was a good student, had exemplary behavior, often participated in creative contests and received commendable letters, his hobby being video games. In 2004, Lytkin was enrolled in the math class according to test results, although he did not apply to mathematical sciences; he was unable to join the new team. He met Anoufriev, who was a year older, at Lysenko's birthday party. By that time, Nikita was in a state of deep depression, and only decided to entrust all of his problems to Anoufriev, since he received support from him in return. According to Lytkin's mother, since the other guys did not like Anoufriev, Nikita gradually began to lose previous friends, because Artyom's unfriendly attitude began to spread to him, but the teenager did not worry about it, as he considered relationships with previous friends as "a child's fake friendship." Meanwhile, Artur Lysenko said in court that Lytkin lost friends due to his quick metamorphosis, which was expressed once when Lytkin came to school, he did not greet anyone, and then completely closed himself. According to Lysenko, this was due to the fact that Lytkin was very jealous of classmates from richer families. The lack of socialization of the teenager resulted in his classmates bullying him; Lysenko said at the trial that there would be no conflict if Lytkin had learned to fight back, but instead he answered "die for nothing", because of which for 5 years Lytkin's school name was "Jimbo".
Together with Anoufriev, Nikita formed a punk rock band called Злые Гномы. This group didn't last long, but managed to release one full-length album in 2008 entitled Чёрные полосы крови. Soon after, the duo created another new group; this time a noise band called Расчленённая Пугачoва. The lyrics of both bands centered around violence and obscene language. Dismembered Pugachova released a series of digital albums and splits, as well as a number of video clips that Lytkin subsequently uploaded to the Internet. Few acquaintances knew about this, since Nikita did not show the slightest signs of aggression, sadism or interest in heavy music. According to Anoufriev, Nikita could not stand up for himself and often gave up to the offenders. At the time of the killings, Anoufriev was Lytkin's only friend, and he was very dependent on their friendship. In turn, Lytkin was also Anoufriev's only friend at the time.
In the 8th grade he began to skip school and, unlike Artyom, was expelled after nine classes, entering college twice afterwards—first in energy, then in construction in 2009. In the first case, he was expelled for academic failure, after he failed to pass the first session; in the second, Nikita had a conflict with his group mates when they began to bully him, and one of his classmates even patronized him, but in return he extorted money and stole belongings from his home. Nikita's mother wrote a complaint about the young man, but nothing came out of it. After this, Nikita stopped attending classes.
As a child, Nikita and his mother attended church for two years and both were baptized, but over time Marina began paying more attention to work, going to church less and less. Then Nikita himself began to reject the church. For some time he was engaged in music, painting and kickboxing, but then gave it all up, devoting all his free time to regular visits on social networks. He had a lag in psychological development since childhood. Psychologists had advised his mother to give him more freedom and not to restrict his personal space; however, with age Nikita's state of mind began to deteriorate, and several years before the killings he began to be ashamed of his mother, trying to avoid her at all costs.

Crimes

Background and motives

Artyom was for some time a member of a white power skinhead group, and in certain circles he had the nickname "Fashik-Natsik", but did not participate in speeches and was not very active. Lytkin, at the suggestion of Anoufriev, also communicated with the skinheads, but was not accepted because of the "discrediting" patronymic Vakhtangovich. After his arrest, Artyom said that it was the communication with the skinheads that led him to commit murder, although he had not participated in their society for long, finding their ideology too passive and soft. The then unofficial leader of the Irkutsk skinheads "Boomer", to whom Anoufriev spoke for a couple months in 2009, said in court that Artyom was not part of their society, because his views differed from their ideology. According to Boomer, Anoufriev simply felt hatred towards everyone, and did not care about whom he killed.
The prime investigator, Captain Yevgeny Karchevsky, who interrogated both criminals during the investigation, claimed from joining the skinhead group and ending with murders, the entire thing was caused by the desire to become famous and attract attention. A peculiar role was also played by the fact that when they were members of the Neo-nazi organization "White Power", one of its members was a certain Maxim "Friedrich Oberschylets" from Zheleznogorsk-Ilimsky, advised the pair to read a certain kind of literature—a book whose name, in Russian, sounds like "Born to hate". The duo became interested in this, because they discovered that the psychological state of the person described there was very similar to their own, and it seemed that they would be able to solve all their problems this way. In fact, this is precisely what caused the misanthropy in them. Meanwhile, Alexander Kostrov, an associate professor at the department of Modern National History of the Irkutsk State University, support the claim in court that their actions fit into the misanthropy category.
Another motive, confirmed by both Anoufriev and Lytkin, was the desire to imitate other well-known serial killers. A certain role was played when they viewed in 2007 a TV program about the "Bitsa Park Maniac" Alexander Pichushkin, who committed several dozen murders in Moscow. The pair became interested in him, and Anoufriev created the "Pichushkin – Our President" group on the Internet. On February 13, one day before the anniversary of the execution of Andrei Chikatilo, they posted his portrait on the Internet with the signature "Andrei Romanovich. We grieve." They were interested in the so-called "Dnepropetrovsk maniacs" Viktor Sayenko and Igor Suprunyuk, as well as the Irkutsk "Blood Magic Gang", whose sentence was delivered on March 1, 2010. The duo openly expressed their sympathy for the gang leader Konstantin Shumkov and the for the gang's activities in general, in particular, Lytkin even created a group in one social network called "Irkutsk anti-bom gang: Blood Magic". In addition, the teens dedicated one of their albums from "Dismembered PugachOva" to Shumkov's gang under the name "Blood Magic", and in the introduction they openly declared their intention of continuing Shumkov's work:
Three months before the arrest, Anoufriev's neighbors began to hear strange sounds from his apartment. Artyom shouted "I hate everybody!" and "I will kill you!", and at the same time, strange sounds were heard, as if he was beating with his fists on the wall or rushing at it with his body. There is an assumption that he beat his mother, because sometimes the neighbors would hear somebody telling to get off them. During the investigation, Artyom frankly admitted that his relationship with his mother was so restrained that at times he was afraid he wouldn't be able to prevent himself from killing her. Lytkin also expressed a similar aggravation: he almost stopped communicating with his family, his depression intensified, and he began to suffer from insomnia.
During the investigation, Marina Lytkina pleaded guilty entirely to the cause of her son's hatred, saying: "I have always told him that there are many good people in the world and that there are more good people than bad people to learn and forgive. I tried to protect him from trouble while I could, and thus broke his life. I have ceased to be an authority for him, because I myself am just a weak woman who has not achieved anything in life, who has only worked from morning till night in order to somehow survive."

Inclination to kill

According to Anoufriev, the idea of killing belonged to Lytkin, arguing that, unlike Lytkin, killing did not give him the satisfaction or relief he had hoped for, and only did it because "he put it where it wasn't necessary". "I will just say—he is a leader. He did not influence, but was an instigator of crimes," said Artyom. In the course of the investigation, Anoufriev stated in the testimony that he planned to move to St. Petersburg in the future, where he wanted to commit more crimes, but later refuted his claims.
According to investigator Yevgeny Karchevsky, Lytkin himself admitted that he could not have committed the murders alone, since it "wasn't interesting to one." "Artyom and I did it—I liked it," he said. In a number of interviews, Lytkin also stated that he would have continued to kill if he hadn't been arrested.
At the court hearing on March 6, 2013, Lytkin declared that Anoufriev did not incline him to commit crimes, in response to which Artyom said: "I will go crazy with this person". After the announcement of the sentence, one of the surviving victims, Nina Kuzmina, said:
Among the investigators there was an opinion that in the pair "Anoufriev-Lytkin", Anoufriev was a "think tank" and "ideological inspirer", and Lytkin was the "performer", since it was established that all knife wounds were made by Lytkin. But during the arrest, Anoufriev called Lytkin a leader and instigator in an interview with CM Number One. The "Boomer" mentioned above, at the trial, said that Anoufriev was "too flawed" to be a leader. In his words, once their group attacked a group of Caucasians, but Anoufriev didn't show his worth and fled. However, it was later established that most of the first strikes were delivered by Lytkin. After the verdict was passed, investigator Maxim Khomyak said: "These teenagers are locked on each other, because they fit together perfectly. Anoufriev is a leader who wanted to be understood at a glance. Lytkin is a performer who dreamed of approval and recognition."

Chronology of attacks

While searching for victims, Anoufriev and Lytkin walked the same way—from the "State University" stop to the "Akademgorodok" every day, from 6PM to 10PM. They missed five, ten or twenty people in search for a victim that was suitable for them. It happened that they walked like this for a week and did not attack anyone. As the investigator Yevgeny Karchevsky stated at the trial, "this was the urge they listened to their inner voice." For the killings, the Molotchiki chose to attack either in the late evening, night, or early morning, taking advantage of the fact that their mothers worked at night. Mallets, hammers, baseball bats were used as murder weapons, as well as knives. During interrogation, Anoufriev admitted that he had dealt the first blows primarily, while Lytkin first began to mock the corpses. They finished off the victims together, inflicting anywhere from 15 to 20 blows. Since Anoufriev and Lytkin always attacked from behind, all the survivors of the "Molotchiki" could not tell the investigators any specific details that could immediately expose the criminals, because all of them at best saw them only briefly and did not even remember their voices. And although at court they recalled the same signs of the attackers and recognized that Anoufriev and Lytkin were very similar to them, they couldn't definitely recognize them.
In October 2012, a 27-year-old Vladimir from Krasnoyarsk Krai spoke at the trial, admitting that he was Anoufriev's "second friend", with whom he agreed on the basis of common extremist views. The young man confessed that at one time Artyom told him about three of the murders and had even taken him two times to "hunt", which, however, both times ended in nothing. For the first time, Vladimir agreed to go, because he did not believe that Anoufriev and Lytkin were behind the killings, and when he realized that they weren't lying, he did not report it to the police, because he was afraid that they would kill him and the girl who lived next door to Anoufriev. Vladimir also stated that a few days before the murder, Lytkin had received a subpoena in the army in connection to coming of age, to which Anoufriev casually told Vladimir that "Lytkin will have to be killed so that he will not be burned."
On March 6, 2013, Lytkin unexpectedly stated at the trial that Anoufriev did not take part in four of the crimes. In particular, he hadn't killed Olga Pirog, and instead there was another person there with Lytkin, with whom he committed two of the attacks, and in the fourth they were joined by another accomplice. The defendant called their names, but the press did not disclose them; however, they did confirm that the accomplice in the fourth crime had been a witness. The investigation was on the verge of renewal, when on March 13, Lytkin, again, unexpectedly, admitted that he had no accomplices. He declined to say why he had slandered the innocent, but the media suggested that in this way he wanted to delay the investigation. His mother said that he had done it to shield Anoufriev—on dates in the detention center Lytkin once told his mother that "they had made the devil out of Artyom" and he, Lytkin, "is so white and fluffy." Anoufriev said that the investigator had pressured Nikita, threatening him with a transfer to a solitary cell. Lytkin's mother denied a statement from Anoufriev, saying that at those early interrogations where she was present, the investigators had never pressed her son, and that she did not see the point that they would pressure him now.

Online activities

In addition to the attacks, Anoufriev and Lytkin were active in social networks. Without concealing themselves, they described their crimes and even framed their gravity. On his personal pages on social networks, Anoufriev wrote: "We are gods, deciding who will live and who will die." The young men also led "recruiting conversations" with a number of users who visited their pages and groups. In a correspondence with a certain Yura Anoufriev, he suggested that the interlocutor try and kill the janitor for "training" and "training the psyche"; during the trial, Artyom stated that his account was being corresponded by an acquaintance who had access to it. Later during the investigation, when all the users with whom Anoufriev and Lytkin communicated were interrogated, it turned out that most of them simply did not believe the criminals, believing that they were taking on other people's murders in order to attract attention. The entire correspondence of Anoufriev, seized during the investigation, was 8 volumes in the form of 4,600 pages of printed text, which remained classified until the end of the trial.

Investigation

On March 11, after the body of the next victim of the "Molotchniki" was found, a rally was held in Akademgorodok on what measures should be taken regarding the events taking place. By that time, there was already information that the killers were from age 16 to 18. Anoufriev and Lytkin also attended the meeting, offering ideas and videotaping it on a mobile phone. Meanwhile, constant patrols were conducted in the area. Special squads were created, and the crime rate decreased markedly, but did not lead to the killers' capture. Meanwhile, in Akademgorodok there was a panic caused by misinformation about the killings, which is why most common version among citizens was that it was a single maniac and he was about 30 years old. Anoufriev and Lytkin never once came under suspicion, because, according to the words of investigator Maxim Khomyak, "everyone looked for strangers. And these guys were their own in Akademgorodok."
Olga Lipchinskaya, a journalist of Komsomolskaya Pravda, a month before the arrest of the "Molotchniki", when, accordingly, no one could establish their identities, gave this description of the "Academy Maniac":
On January 15, 2011, on suspicion of murdering the unknown homeless man, the homeless 19-year-old Vladimir Bazilevsky, who had blood on his clothes, was detained. On the night of January 1, Bazilevsky, according to his statements, had spent in a sewer well, but the operative who interrogated him began to convince him otherwise using beatings. According to Bazilevsky, the investigator literally knocked out a murder confession from him, forcing him to write it down. The name of murdered—Andrei, nicknamed "Taiga"—Bazilevsky gave under pressure: that was the name of one of his friends. During the investigative experiment, Bazilevsky explained how the murder took place and where the body laid, taking his testimony to the camera. In fact, based on results from a biological examination, which showed the blood of the murdered and the blood on Bazilevsky's clothes matched, Judge Andrei Obyskalov convicted Bazilevsky in April 2011, sentencing him to 4 years. Subsequently, investigator Yevgeny Karchevsky, while checking the man's testimony, found with the help of an investigator from the Sverdlovsk Oblast that the blood on Bazilevsky's clothes did not match the victim's. In addition to this, the investigators found that Andrei "Taiga" was actually alive. He asked the prosecutor's office to reconsider the case, but he was refused. However, the lawyers of the human rights organization Public Verdict soon found out about it, because of which Karchevsky's second petition was granted. In May 2012, Bazilevsky, after one-and-a-half years' imprisonment, was released from prison, and all charges against him were dropped. The operative who pressed him was never found. Another officer, Yuri Fedorov, was accused of falsifying evidence and removed from work at the end of July. On October 9, 2014, he was sentenced to three years with 2 years prohition of holding posts in state and municipal services. Fedorov did not admit guilt and filed an appeal, after which in February 2015 his sentence was canceled and sent for review. For the illegal sentence, Bazilevsky's lawyer demanded compensation from the state amounting to 3 million rubles, but as a result, on November 19, 2013, the Sverdlovsk District Court of Irkutsk ordered the state to pay only 300,000 rubles.

Detention and arrest

A few days before his arrest, Lytkin's mother found a knife packaged in the hallway. When asked why he needed a knife, Artyom answered that he has it for self-defense. A little later, he said to his grandmother: "I will soon be lost." Both were arrested on April 5, 2011, after the alleged facial composites were distributed at the Institute of Organic Chemistry, where Lytkin's grandmother worked at the time. His grandmother and Artyom's uncle Vladislav studied the images, and suspecting something was wrong, Vladislav went to Lytkin's house. Artyom was not at home then, but at that very moment he had left his camera, in which he inadvertently left a flash card with a recording of Alevtina Kuydina's murder. Upon seeing the recording, Vladislav took the camera to the police, and after an hour and a half the "Molotchniki" were detained by officers. Lytkin reacted calmly to the arrest, as the relatives persuaded him to surrender. By midnight, Lytkin and Anoufriev confessed to the authorities about five of the murders and six other attacks. When Anoufriev signed the protocol, he imitating Pichushkin, told investigator Yevgeny Karchevsky that: "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." Later the number of crimes increased to six murders and ten attacks. Anoufriev and Lytkin also added that in the evening of that day they had planned another murder.
During the investigation, the apartment of "Friedrich Oberschulets" was searched, which gave nothing, but Lyudmila Begagoina from "Irkutsk Reporter" stated that the search was carried out too late and there was also time to hide the dirt. During a search in the apartments of the teenagers, a 60-mm mallet, four "pearly yellowish" teeth, a black hat with slots, an air gun which Anoufriev had hidden in an electric stove, folding knives, video tapes and flash cards were found. There were also notebooks with materials of an extremist nature, which the public prosecutor hardly read during the trial, because all of them contained profanities. Anoufriev's mother destroyed one of the notebooks while investigators searched the apartment, as it clearly incriminated Artyom; this fact was later indicated by the prosecutor during the announcement of the search protocol.
On April 7, 2011, the Sverdlovsk District Court of Irkutsk chose a measure of restraint in relation to Anoufriev and Lytkin in the form of detention for a period of two months. Subsequently, the terms of keeping the "Molotchniki" in custody were periodically extended: on June 6, 2011, they were extended until October 6, due to the need for a forensic psychiatric examination, but on October 5 it became known that the prison terms were extended by another two and a half months. On February 13, 2013, when they once again expired, Anoufriev's lawyers made a petition in which they asked the court to change the preventative measures on their own recognizance, and Artyom himself stated that he no longer represented a danger to society. Lytkin did not submit any petitions. The court disagreed with the arguments of the defense and extended both's terms in custody until March 2013.
On June 9, 2011, the media published a video message made by Anoufriev, where he apologized to the victims' families and advised parents to monitor their children in order to avoid similar crimes in the future. A month earlier, an open letter was published by Irina Alekseyevna Antipova, Nikita's grandmother, in which she accused the media and the Internet of promoting violence.

Court

Judicial investigation

On August 12, 2012, the Investigative Committee transferred the case of Anoufriev and Lytkin to the Irkutsk Regional Court. Officially, the judicial investigation of the case lasted from September 5, 2012 to February 11, 2013, during this period 16 victims and more than 50 witnesses were questioned.
On September 5, 2012, the consideration of the case began, which eventually amounted to 49 volumes. At the meeting, the court granted Anoufriev's petition to have another lawyer enter the case, in connection with which the court hearing was postponed until September 10; thus, during the trial, the defendants were represented by three lawyers.
The meeting on September 10 began with announcement of the indictment, which the prosecutor read out for an hour and a half. In total, Anoufriev and Lytkin were charged with six murders, nine attempted murders, three robberies and desecration of the bodies of the dead. In addition to the killings, the "Molotchniki" were incriminated in the creation of an extremist community. Separately, Artyom Anoufriev was charged with 14 counts of engaging a minor in criminal activities. Anoufriev refused to admit his guilt for the involvement, extremism, attempted murders, robberies and mockery of the corpses, and of the six murder charges against him, he agreed only with two—the murders of Pirog and Kuydina. Lytkin, on the contrary, only rejected the extremism charge.
In Irkutsk's reman prison No. 1, Anoufriev was placed in a common cell, and Lytkin in a double room. Although the forensic psychiatric examination found both sane, the Anoufriev SIZO was registered as prone to self-mutilation and suicide, and psychologists carried out separate work with him. During the investigative experiment, the suspects were accompanied by twenty operatives because of the fear that local residents would attack them. Danil Semyonov's father wanted to be present at the experiment, but he was not allowed in an attempt to avoid a mob trial. Anoufriev was present only at the verbal identification of the experiment, the technical verification was carried out only by Lytkin. Subsequently, the defendants were placed in different solitary cells, since there was information about a planned murder against both.
The trial was very difficult psychologically. Because of the wide publicity of the criminal case, some witnesses and victims refused to testify, and others did not want to remind themselves of the tragedy. During the trial, several times the court had to declare breaks due to the witnesses fainting. At the trial, Anoufriev, at first, behaved very cynically and carefully outlined the interviews of witnesses, which caused their discontent, but at some point he lost his courage and burst into tears twice in the hall, finally giving his testimony, trying to pin all the murders on Lytkin, claiming that he was only present at the time of the murder, but did not do anything. Vladimir's testimony provoked indignation in Artyom and he denied it all, mentioning that Vladimir had allegedly killed a Caucasian in his time, and at the same time he offered Artyom to injure his girlfriend when he quarreled with her. Vladimir, in response, admitted that he actually lied about the murder, so as not to fall out in the eyes of the skinheads and denied all accusations against Anoufriev who, at the end of the trial, became firmly insistent that he was involved only in the murders of Pirog and Kuydina. Lytkin, throughout the whole process, looked aloof and behaved inexpressively. One time, after a 4-hour testimony, his head ached, because of which the interrogation was postponed another day, but at the end of the proceedings he began to give short answers with many pauses.
On October 16, 2012, Anoufriev, while in court, inflicted cut wounds to the side of his neck and scratched his stomach with a razor, which he carried in his sock when he was taken from prison to court. He could not explain why he did it. His lawyer Svetlana Kukareva considered this the result of a strong emotional outburst, which was caused by the fact that his mother first appeared in court that day. The media mentioned the case when Anoufriev, in front of one of the meetings, cut his neck with a screw, unscrewed from the sink in the convoy room.

Anoufriev's complaints

On November 6, 2012, Anoufriev filed a complaint against the operatives and investigators of the OP-2 Akademgorodok, accusing them of cruel psychological and physical treatment during the arrest and no less cruel treatment during his time in the cell. According to him, he made confessions to the murders under pressure from police officers, and after the incident on October 16 in the temporary detention cell in which he was taking breaks during the trial, the escorts handcuffed him to the window bars. Anoufriev also filed a complaint that he did not receive materials on the case, and that on October 3, through guards, he was in the same compartment of a special car with a pair of skinheads who, while also being arrested, were witnesses in the case. The inspection on the fact of self-mutilation did not reveal any irregularities in the actions of the police: it was established that the handcuffs were applied to Anoufriev in accordance with the federal law "On Police", and that there was no indication in his personal file about the need for separate maintenance from other prisoners. Nevertheless, his lawyers noted that a few days after his arrest, the examination recorded an abrasion in the region of the crown of Anoufriev's head, inflicted by a tangential blow of a hard blunt object.
At the beginning of December, at the court hearing, a video was shown of Anoufriev's testimony at the investigative experiment, after which the judge asked the defendant whether he confirms it. However, Anoufriev refuted his words regarding the murder of the homeless man, committed on the night of March 10–11. He wouldn't have been able to into the pneumatics even from two steps, and then testified about the attacks which involved a knife. Artyom stated that he told all this in the investigative experiment only because the authorities ordered him to do so. When the judge asked him why he was silent about this matter, Anoufriev replied that he did not have the right to vote, and his lawyer was "sitting like furniture in his office." Then he announced that he was beaten and humiliated by cellmates in the SIZO cell, and when he decided to change his lawyer, he was told it wasn't worth it. He also stated that the protocol for checking testimonies on the spot took place on April 11 of 2011, and was signed by another person on his behalf. At the request of the public prosecutor, a handwriting examination was appointed, which was entrusted to the Irkutsk forensic laboratory. This was one of the reasons for the delay in the judicial investigation. The examination acknowledged that Anoufriev's signature was genuine, which caused many objections from the latter, who continued to insist that he did not sign the protocols.
From the very beginning of the trial, Anoufriev firmly insisted on his non-involvement in the killings, referring to the fact that his case was never proven guilty. When Lytkin announced that Artyom was not involved in the four other murders, the latter began to request that the investigator visit Lytkin and interrogate the convoy on duty. The court denied this, but granted the prosecution's petition—from now on, the killers were separated from the courtroom, while communication between them was excluded.

Judicial debate and sentence

On February 13, 2013, a judicial debate began about Anoufriev and Lytkin's case. First in the debate was the public prosecutor, who, taking into account all the evidence examined at the court session and the position of the defendants, asked the court to find the defendants guilty and sentence Anoufriev to life imprisonment in a strict regime correctional colony, and Lytkin to 25 years' imprisonment serving the sentence in a strict regime colony. In addition, the prosecutor eventually refused to file charges against Anoufriev for involvement in a criminal activities as a minor, justifying his refusal by saying that the age difference between Anoufriev and Lytkin was only six months.
On February 25, the lawyers of the defendants spoke at the debate. Anoufriev's lawyers asked the court to acquit him, and they didn't take into account the two counts of murder in which he pleaded guilty, referring to the fact that during the murder of the homeless man, Anoufriev was recording with the camera, and the audio recording of Pirog's murder was impossible to establish that he also took part in it. In turn, Lytkin's lawyer insisted on reducing the term of the latter to 20 years' imprisonment.
The defendants's last words were scheduled for March 12, 2013, but it failed, since, according to them, they weren't ready. Then Anoufriev was transferred the next day, but even then they weren't ready, and as a result it took place on March 18. Lytkin refused the right to a last word. Without interrupting, Anoufriev read a prepared text, in which he again asked for forgiveness from the victims, once again rejecting accusations against him:
On April 2, 2013, the Irkutsk Regional Court sentenced Anoufriev to life imprisonment with serving in a special regime colony, Lytkin to 24 years' imprisonment, of which five years was to be held in prison, and the rest—in a strict regime colony. After Lytkin's liberation, another year will be restricted in movement with the prohibition to leave the territory of the place and travel abroad. The sentence, which had about 150 pages, was read out for 8 hours, during which one of those present in the hall—a man who, during the killings, was among the combatants patrolling Akademgorodok—fell into a swoon. Anoufriev looked indifferently at the floor all the time, and Lytkin was visibly nervous but did not lower his eyes. Anoufriev, on the contrary, having heard the judge's verdict, fell on the bench and wept. After the announcement of the verdict, he shouted to the victims' families: "Well, are you satisfied?". In response, Danil Semyonov's mother, Svetlana, shouted at him: "And you were pleased when my son was killed, the 12-year-old child lying in the ground!" Lytkin did not respond to the verdict and did not look at Artyom. The verdict provoked harsh criticism from the victims, who felt that Lytkin deserved a similar life sentence. Svetlana Semyonova filed an appeal and personally wrote a letter to Vladimir Putin. Meanwhile, one of the surviving victims, Nina Kuzmina, considered the verdict against Lytkin fair, even though it was him who attacked her.
Around October 2013, the killers remained in Irkutsk's detention center. During this time, their lawyers challenged the decision of the regional court in the Supreme Court, where an appeal hearing was held on October 3, at which, by a decision from the Supreme Court, Lytkin's term was reduced from 24 years to 20, as his minor age was taken into account at the time of the majority of murders, and the appointment of a term of 5 years was considered unfounded. Anoufriev's sentence remained unchanged.

Civil proceedings

In November 2012, the surviving Yekaterina Karpova sued Anoufriev and Lytkin in a civil suit for 1 million rubles. Then another two people filed a lawsuit—also one of the surviving victims, who estimated the damage at 800,000 rubles, and the son of Alevtina Kuydina, who also estimated the damage at 1 million rubles. During the announcement of the verdict, the Irkutsk Regional Court ruled that the total amount of compensation that the criminals had to pay is 2.75 million rubles, of which 500,000 rubles must be paid to Nina Kuzmina. State prosecutor Alexander Shkinev said that they would have to pay from the money they earn in prison, so they are unlikely to ever pay off his victims.

Aftermath

On January 27, 2014, Anoufriev was transferred to Ognenny Ostrov in the Vologda Oblast, where he became the youngest prisoner at the time. In April, journalists from Komsomolskaya Pravda interviewed him, in which he made it clear that he did not repent at all, did not consider himself guilty, and did not agree with the verdict. "Your colleagues helped me get here. I see you need something from me all the time," he said, further saying that he would only talk if he was paid. He added that his family is taking various measures by which he can be released on parole, but he does not count on it. Anoufriev also admitted that he was writing a book, without explaining what it was about.
On April 21, 2016, the Irkutsk Court partially granted Anoufriev's claim for compensation for non-pecuniary damage and collected money from the Ministry of Finance of the Russian Federation in its favor. The amount of compensation wasn't reported.
In February 2017, Anoufriev stated in a report to NTV's infoshow True Gurnov that he was studying law at the University of Latvia.
Lytkin, allegedly, is serving his term in one of the colonies in the Irkutsk Oblast.

Fatalities