List of serial killers by country

This is a list of notable serial killers, by the country where most of the killings occurred.

Convicted serial killers by country

Afghanistan

Antigua and Barbuda

  • John Baughman: former American police officer who pushed his second wife from the roof of the Royal Antiguan Hotel in 1995; suspected of killing a close friend and first wife back in the USA; committed suicide in 2000.[2]

Argentina

  • Marcelo Antelo: also known as the "San La Muerte Killer"; drug addict who killed at least four people between February and August 2010, allegedly in the name of a pagan saint; sentenced to life imprisonment.[3]
  • Florencio Fernández: also known as "The Argentine Vampire"; killed fifteen women in his hometown of Monteros during the 1950s, died in Jail in 1968.
  • Cayetano Santos Godino: also known as "Petiso Orejudo" ("Big Eared Midget"); at 16, killed four children in 1912; died in prison in 1944.[4]
  • Cayetano Domingo Grossi: the first known serial killer in Argentine history; Italian immigrant who murdered five of his newborn children between 1896 and 1898; executed 1900.[5]
  • Francisco Antonio Laureana: also known as "The Satyr of San Isidro"; murdered fifteen women from 1974 to 1975, raping thirteen of them; killed in a shootout with the police in 1975.[6]
  • Yiya Murano: also known as "The Poisoner of Monserrat", poisoned three women in Buenos Aires in 1979.
  • Javier Hernán Pino: killed and robbed five people between February and October 2015 in three cities; sentenced to life imprisonment.[7]
  • Robledo Puch: also known as "The Death Angel" and "The Black Angel"; killed eleven people before his arrest in 1972; sentenced to life imprisonment in 1980.[8]

Australia

Austria

  • Elfriede Blauensteiner: also known as the "Black Widow"; poisoner of three individuals; died in prison in 2003.[51]
  • Max Gufler: poisoned and drowned women; convicted of four murders and two attempted murders, but believed to have committed 18; died 1966.
  • Dariusz Kotwica: also known as the "Euro Ripper"; Polish vagrant who murdered at least three pensioners in Austria and Sweden in 2015; suspected of more murders in the Netherlands, Czech Republic and the United Kingdom; sentenced to involuntary commitment.[52]
  • Martha Marek: poisoned three family members and a lodger in her house with thallium between 1932 and 1937; executed 1938.[53]
  • Wolfgang Ott: sex offender and suspected serial killer who kidnapped several women in 1995, killing two of them; sentenced to life imprisonment in 1996.[54]
  • Harald Sassak: gasworks employee who between 1971 and 1972 killed six people for the purpose of robbery; died from an undisclosed illness in 2013.[55]
  • Hugo Schenk: also known as the "Viennese Housemaids Killer"; swindler who killed four maids in 1883 with his accomplice Karl Schlossarek; suspected of more murders; executed 1884.[56]
  • Jack Unterweger: author and sexual sadist; convicted of ten murders; believed to have killed twelve women; committed suicide in prison in 1994.[57]
  • Maria Gruber, Irene Leidolf, Stephanija Mayer and Waltraud Wagner: also known as the "Lainz Angels of Death"; nurses at the Lainz General Hospital in Vienna who admitted to murdering 49 patients between 1983 and 1989.[58]
  • Guido Zingerle: also known as the "Monster of Tyrol"; Italian who brutally raped women in Italy and Austria between 1946 and 1950, killing at least two by burying them under a pile of stones; died in prison from liver cancer in 1962.[59]

The Bahamas

  • Cordell Farrington: killed four children and his homosexual lover from 2002 to 2003; sentenced to death and later commuted to life imprisonment.[60]
  • Michaiah Shobek: also known as "The Angels of Lucifer Killer"; American emigrant who murdered three fellow US tourists from 1973 to 1974; executed 1976.[61]

Bangladesh

  • Roshu Kha: enraged over rejection by his lover, Roshu killed at least eleven garment workers in Chandpur District. He pretended to love them, later killing them brutally.[62]
  • Ershad Sikder: career criminal and corrupt politician responsible for the torture-murders of numerous people in the 1990s; convicted on seven counts of murder and executed in 2004.[63]

Belarus

Belgium

  • Marie Alexandrine Becker: poisoned at least eleven people with Digitalis; sentenced to life imprisonment; died 1938.
  • Michel Bellen: known as "The Strangler of the Left Bank"; raped and killed four women in Leuven between 1964 and 1982; died in prison from heart failure in 2020.[70]
  • Jan Caubergh: strangled his pregnant neighbour, his girlfriend and their child in 1979; sentenced to death but it was converted to life imprisonment; was the longest-serving prisoner in the country until his death in 2013.[71][72][73][74]
  • Étienne Dedroog: known as the "Lodgers' Killer"; killed a B&B owner in France and a couple in Belgium from October to November 2011; also suspected of a murder in Spain; sentenced to life imprisonment.[75]
  • Marc Dutroux: convicted of having kidnapped, tortured and sexually abused six girls ranging in age from 8 to 19, during 1995 and 1996. Four of his victims were murdered; the final two were rescued.[76]
  • Staf Van Eyken: also known as the "Vampire of Muizen"; raped and strangled three women from 1971 to 1972 in Muizen and Bonheiden; sentenced to death, commuted to life imprisonment.[77]
  • Renaud Hardy: also known as the "Parkinson's Murderer"; murdered between two and three women in the Flemish Community from 2009 to 2015; sentenced to life imprisonment.[78]
  • Ronald Janssen: killed a woman in 2007 and later his neighbour and her boyfriend in 2010 in Flemish Brabant; admitted to five rapes committed in 1993, but is suspected of 20; sentenced to life imprisonment in 2011.[79][80]
  • Marie-Thérèse Joniaux: poisoned three of her family members between 1894 and 1895; sentenced to death in 1895, but was commuted to life imprisonment; died in Antwerp in 1923.[81]
  • Junior Kabunda: also known as "The Monster of Brussels"; murdered pianist Benjamin Rawitz-Castel in 2006 during a robbery, later killing his daughter and her grandmother in 2009; sentenced to life imprisonment.[82]
  • András Pándy: also known as "Vader Blauwbaard" (Father Bluebeard); Hungarian immigrant convicted of the murder and rape of his two wives and four children in Brussels between 1986 and 1990 with the aid of his daughter, Ágnes Pándy; died in prison in 2013.[83]
  • Nestor Pirotte: also known as the "Crazy Killer"; considered one of the worst Belgian criminals, responsible for the murders of up to seven people from 1954 to 1981, including his great-aunt; died from a heart attack in 2000.[84]

Bolivia

  • Ramiro Artieda: killed his brother in the early 1920s for monetary purposes; emigrated to the United States, but later returned and killed seven women until 1938; was arrested in 1939, confessed and was executed by firing squad.[85]

Brazil

  • José Augusto do Amaral: also known as "Preto Amaral"; first documented Brazilian serial killer; suspected of murdering and then raping the corpses of three young men in São Paulo in 1926; died from tuberculosis while imprisoned before he could be put on trial.[86]
  • Marcelo Costa de Andrade: also known as "The Vampire of Niterói"; raped and killed fourteen children.
  • Marcelo de Jesus Silva: also known as "Chucky"; dwarf man convicted of twenty counts of murder, robbery, drug trafficking and death squad.
  • Luiz Baú: known as "The Monster of Erechim"; schizophrenic who murdered and mutilated a boy in 1975; imprisoned, but escaped in 1980, committing four more murders in four days; recaptured, but escaped yet again, with his ultimate fate unknown.[87]
  • José Paz Bezerra: also known as "The Morumbi Monster"; sexually violated, tortured and murdered more than twenty women in São Paulo and Pará during the 1960s and 1970s; sentenced to 30 years imprisonment and released in 2001.[88]
  • Febrônio Índio do Brasil: delusional religious maniac and habitual criminal who murdered at least six people from 1925 to 1927, mostly young boys and teens; acquitted by reason of insanity and sent to a mental institution, in which he died in 1984 from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.[89]
  • Abraão José Bueno: Rio de Janeiro nurse who killed four child patients; sentenced to 110 years imprisonment in 2005.[90]
  • Francisco das Chagas Rodrigues de Brito: pedophile who sexually abused, murdered and mutilated between 30 and 42 young boys from 1989 to 2003 in Maranhão and Pará; sentenced to 217 years imprisonment.[91]
  • Pedro Rosa da Conceição: Brazilian mass murderer who killed three people and wounded thirteen others on April 22, 1904. Killed his cellmate and a guard in 1911, and is said to have murdered a family of twelve people in an unspecified date and year. Died in 1919.
  • Pedro Rodrigues Filho: also known as "Pedrinho Matador"; convicted and sentenced to 128 years imprisonment for 70 murders; however, the maximum one can serve in Brazil is 30 years; claimed to have killed more than 100 victims, including 40 prison inmates.[92]
  • Roneys Fon Firmino Gomes: known as the "Tower Maniac"; murdered at least six prostitutes in the city of Maringá between 2005 and 2015, disposing of their bodies under electric towers; sentenced to 21 years imprisonment.[93]
  • Francisco de Assis Pereira: rapist and serial killer, known as "O Maníaco do Parque" (The Park Maniac); arrested for the torture, rape and death of eleven women and for assaulting nine in a park in São Paulo during the 1990s.[94]
  • Tiago Henrique Gomes da Rocha: security guard who has claimed to have killed 39 people in the state of Goiás.[95]
  • Edson Izidoro Guimarães: nurse who killed four patients in the Rio de Janeiro neighborhood of Méier; suspected of 131 deaths in total.[96]
  • Paulo Sérgio Guimarães da Silva: known as "The Cassino Maniac"; fisherman who attacked couples in Rio Grande do Sul between 1998 and 1999, killing seven; sentenced to 184 years imprisonment.[97]
  • José Vicente Matias: also known as "Corumbá"; former artisan who raped, murdered and dismembered six women between 1999 and 2005, cannibalizing one of them; sentenced to 23 years imprisonment.[98]
  • Florisvaldo de Oliveira: also known as "Cabo Bruno"; former police officer accused of more than 50 murders on the outskirts of São Paulo in 1982; murdered by unknown assailants in 2012.[99]
  • Sebastião Antônio de Oliveira: also known as "The Monster of Bragança"; mentally-ill man who murdered five children and raped at least eight between 1953 and 1975; committed suicide before trial in 1976.[100]
  • Diogo Figueira da Rocha: also known as "Dioguinho"; career criminal responsible for at least 50 murders between 1894 and 1897 around São Paulo; supposedly killed in a shootout with the police in 1897.[101]
  • José Ramos: known as "The Butcher of Rua de Arvoredo"; together with his wife and another accomplice (whom he later killed), lured at least eight men into his Porto Alegre house between 1863 and 1864, killing and dismembering them; allegedly made the remains into sausages which he sold at his shop; died in hospital in 1893.[102]
  • Orlando Sabino: also known as the "Monster of Capinópolis"; suspected of murdering twelve people in several municipalities around Minas Gerais and Goiás; died from a heart attack in 2013.[103]
  • Anísio Ferreira de Sousa: gynaecologist from Altamira who was convicted of the murder of three children but linked to the disappearance of a total of 19.[104]
  • Jorge Luiz Thais Martins: former Military Firefighters Corps colonel who killed nine drug addicts from August 2010 and January 2011 to avenge the death of his son.[105]
  • Marcos Antunes Trigueiro: known as "The Industrial Maniac"; former taxi driver who killed five women from 2009 to 2010 in Contagem and Belo Horizonte.

Burundi

  • Ivomoku Bakusuba: confessed to having killed over 67 children. Committed suicide, "probably in the late 1940s, or in the early 1950s".

Bulgaria

  • Hristo Georgiev: also known as "The Sadist"; former militiaman who murdered four women and one man in Sofia from 1974 to 1980; executed 1980.[106]
  • Sokrat Kirshveng: also known as "The Killer with the Adze"; murdered two of his lovers in 1919, for which he was sentenced to death; commuted to 17 years imprisonment, and upon release in 1937, murdered his aunt and uncle-in-law; executed 1937.[107]
  • Lenko Latkov: murdered three elderly women in Haskovo Province from 1999 to 2000 and raped two children; suspected in another three killings in Plovdiv Province; murdered by his cellmate in 2003.[108]
  • Mihail Leshtarski: also known as "The Killer from the Cave"; habitual thief who lived in the mountains, suspected of murdering at least five elderly pensioners from 2009 to 2011; convicted of one murder and sentenced to life imprisonment.[109]
  • Ludwig Tolumov and Ivan Serafimov: also known as "The Sour and The Sweet"; criminal duo jointly responsible for three murders from May to July 2000; Serafimov, solely responsible for a 1996 murder, was later murdered by Tolumov, who was himself arrested and sentenced to life imprisonment.[110]

Canada

  • Gerald Thomas Archer: known as "the London Chambermaid Slayer"; killed three female hotel employees in his hometown of London, Ontario between 1969 and 1971; died of a heart attack in 1995.[111][112]
  • Paul Bernardo: also known as "the Scarborough Rapist"; a Toronto serial rapist who killed three teenage girls (including his wife's sister) with the aid of his wife Karla Homolka.[113]
  • Wayne Boden: also known as "the Vampire Rapist" killed four women between 1968 and 1971; died in prison 2006.[114]
  • Camille Cléroux: murdered two wives and a neighbour in Ottawa between 1990 and 2010; sentenced to life imprisonment; died in prison.[115]
  • John Martin Crawford: convicted in 1996 for the murders of three women in Saskatoon.[116]
  • Léopold Dion: also known as "Monster of Pont-Rouge"; raped and killed four young boys in 1960;[117] murdered in 1972 by a fellow prison inmate.[118]
  • William Patrick Fyfe: convicted of killing five women in Montreal between 1979 and 1999; suspect in several other murders.
  • Russell Maurice Johnson: also known as the "Bedroom Strangler"; convicted of raping and murdering three women in the 1970s; total number of victims later found to be higher.
  • Gilbert Paul Jordan: also known as the "Boozing Barber", killed between eight and ten women by alcohol poisoning in Vancouver; died in 2006.[119][120]
  • Simmi Kahlon: Indian immigrant who murdered her three newborn children in Calgary between 2005 and 2009; died from complications in childbirth before crimes were discovered.[121]
  • Joseph LaPage: also known as the "French Monster"; murdered four women in Canada and the US from 1867 to 1875; executed 1878.[122]
  • Cody Legebokoff: one of Canada's youngest serial killers, convicted of murdering three women and a teenage girl around Prince George, British Columbia between 2009 and 2010.[123]
  • Allan Legere: also known as "Monster of the Miramichi"; killer of five individuals.[124]
  • Bruce McArthur: Toronto man who killed and dismemembered eight men between 2010 and 2017; sentenced to life in prison in 2019.[125]
  • Michael Wayne McGray: killed seven people, including a woman and child and a cellmate, claims to have killed eleven others.[126][127]
  • Dellen Millard: convicted of murdering three people, including his father; two were killed with help from accomplice Mark Smich.[128]
  • Clifford Olson: murdered eleven children in British Columbia in the early 1980s; died in prison 2011.[129]
  • Robert Pickton: Port Coquitlam, British Columbia man charged with the first degree murders of 26 women; allegedly confessed to 49 murders; convicted December 9, 2007 of six charges; reduced to second degree murder.[130]
  • Yves Trudeau: known as "the Mad Bumper"; former member of an outlaw motorcycle gang took part in 43 murders between 1973 and 1985; died of bone-marrow cancer in 2008.[131]
  • Elizabeth Wettlaufer: registered nurse who murdered eight senior citizens in Ontario with fatal injections of insulin, and gave non-fatal injections to six others, between 2007 and 2016.[132]
  • Russell Williams: former Colonel of the Canadian Forces; killed two women and is suspected of murdering a third; sentenced to life imprisonment.[133]
  • Peter Woodcock: murdered three children in 1956 and 1957 in Toronto and a fellow psychiatric institute patient in 1991; died while incarcerated in 2010.[134]

Chile

  • Émile Dubois: French-born murderer and folk hero who's revered as "The Chilean Robin Hood" for killing alleged usurers; executed 1907.[135]
  • Catalina de los Ríos y Lisperguer: also known as "La Quintrala"; 17th century landowner tried for over 40 murders; died 1665.[136]
  • Julio Pérez Silva: also known as "Psychopath from Alto Hospicio", sentenced to life imprisonment for murdering fourteen women from 1998 to 2001.
  • Jorge Sagredo and Carlos Topp: also known as the "Viña del Mar Psychopaths"; committed ten murders and four rapes from 5 August 1980 to 1 November 1981 in Viña del Mar; executed by firing squad on 29 January 1985; they were the last people executed in Chile.[137]

People's Republic of China

  • Bai Baoshan: robber who attacked several police stations in three provinces; killed fifteen people; executed 1998.
  • Dong Wenyu: burglar-rapist who killed six people during break-ins between March and May 2006; also raped the female victims' corpses; executed 2007.[138]
  • Li Pingping: committed a triple murder in 1995; after that, between 2002 and 2003, stabbed and mutilated four prostitutes in Beijing while working as a taxi driver; executed 2004.[139]
  • Li Shikang: killed six people and wounded 17 others with letter bombs sent to medical staff for whom he blamed for not curing his sexually transmitted disease.
  • Li Yijiang: killed seven people in the early 2000s; shot in 2004.[140]
  • Liu Pengli: 2nd century BC Han prince; one of the earliest serial killers attested by historical sources.[141]
  • Long Zhimin: together with his wife Yan Shuxia, lured in and subsequently murdered 48 people in his home for various reasons between 1983 and 1985; both executed 1985.[142]
  • Gao Chengyong: nicknamed the "Chinese Jack the Ripper", killed eleven women between 1988 and 2002 in Baiyin and Inner Mongolia; executed 2019.[143]
  • Gong Runbo: found guilty of the murders of six children and teenagers in aged between 9 and 16 from 2005 to 2006 in Jiamusi; executed 2007.[144]
  • Huang Yong: between September 2001 and 2003 killed at least seventeen teenage boys; executed in 2003.[145]
  • Shen Changyin and Shen Changping: found guilty of the murders of eleven prostitutes between 1999 and 2004 in Lanzhou and Taiyuan; sentenced to death in 2005.[146]
  • Wang Qiang: 45 murder victims and ten rapes; executed on 17 November 2005.[147]
  • Wang Zongfang and Wang Zongwei: known as "Er Wang"; murderers who killed soldiers using guns and grenades in Hunan, Hubei and Jiangsu; killed by armed forces in 1983.[148]
  • Yang Xinhai: also known as the "Monster Killer"; confessed to killing 65 people between 2000 and 2003; executed in 2004.[149]
  • Zhang Jun: robber who killed 28 people from 1993 to 2000 throughout China with accomplices; captured and executed in 2001.[150]
  • Zhang Yongming: killed eleven males between March 2008 and April 2012; executed in 2013.[151]
  • Zhao Zhihong: known as "The Smiling Killer"; raped and killed six women in Inner Mongolia between 1996 and 2005; confessed to a murder for which an innocent man was executed; executed 2019.[152]
  • Zhou Kehua: former soldier who targeted ATM users; killed ten people in Jiangsu and Chongqing and evaded the law for 8 years, before being killed in 2012 in a shootout with police after a year-long manhunt.[153]

Colombia

  • Andrés Leonardo Achipiz: also known as "The Fish"; psychopathic hired killer who killed between 30 and 35 people in Bogotá from 2009 to 2013.[154]
  • José William Aranguren: also known as "Desquite"; bandit who murdered approximately 115 people in three municipalities from 1956 to 1964; killed by commandos on a farm in 1964, along with his three accomplices.[155]
  • Daniel Camargo Barbosa: also known as "The Sadist of El Charquito", who is believed to have raped and killed over 150 young girls in Colombia and Ecuador during the 1970s and 1980s.[156]
  • Jairo Alexander Beltrán Castañeda: also known as "El Monstruo de Llana" (The Monster of the Plains); kidnapper who murdered a woman in Meta in 2015; suspected of at least three other murders, after bodies were found in mass graves; currently incarcerated.[157]
  • Manuel Octavio Bermúdez: also known as "El Monstruo de los Cañaduzales" (The Monster of the Cane Fields); confessed to raping and killing at least twenty-one children in remote areas of Colombia.[158]
  • Black Widow Gang: group of predominantly women who lured and then killed at least three men for life insurance in Antioquia between 2008 and 2011; imprisoned.[159]
  • Esneda Ruiz Cataño: also known as "The Predator"; murdered three husbands for life insurance between 2001 and 2010.[160]
  • Tomás Maldonado Cera: also known as "The Satanist"; murdered between seven and ten people in satanic rituals in Barranquilla.[161]
  • Cristopher Chávez Cuellar: also known as "The Soulless"; killed six people, including four underage brothers, in 2015; suspected of at least fifteen murders dating back to the 1990s; sentenced to 40 years imprisonment.[162]
  • Luis Garavito: also known as "The Beast"; admitted to murder and rape of 140 young boys in the 1990s.[163]
  • Rubén Villalobos Herrera: also known as "The Black Canes Monster"; necrophile who raped and murdered nine women from 2012 to 2017; currently awaiting trial.[164]
  • María Concepción Ladino: also known as "The Killer Witch"; defrauded and murdered six people from 1994 to 1998; sentenced to 40 years imprisonment.[165]
  • Pedro López: also known as "The Monster of the Andes"; claimed to have raped and killed more than 300 girls across South America between 1969 and 1980.[166]
  • Jaime Iván Martínez: also known as "The Guarne Killer"; killed at least four people in Guarne from 2005 to 2016, including his wife and two children; sentenced to 42 years imprisonment.[167]
  • Nepomuceno Matallana: also known as "Doctor Mata"; fraudster convicted of a 1947 murder of a merchant, but suspected of other murders; died 1960 from bronchitis combined with heart failure.[168]
  • Luis Alberto Malagón Suárez: also known as "The Sadist of Rincón"; kidnapped, raped and killed five girls from 1995 to 1997 in Suba; imprisoned in 2012 for the 2001 murder of his wife.[169]
  • Élver James Melchor Bañol: also known as "The Predator of Picaleña"; serial child rapist who murderd a girl in Tolima in 2019, after being released on parole for three similar murders and sex crimes; sentenced to 60 years imprisonment.[170]
  • John Jairo Moreno Torres: also known as "Johnny the Leper"; gang leader who brutally murdered at least four people between 1997 and 1998 in Bogotá; murdered in prison by several inmates in 1998.[171]
  • Harlis Alexis Murillo Moreno: sex offender who killed two women in Cali and Bucaramanga in 2017; suspected of two more murders in Bogotá; sentenced to 36 years imprisonment.[172]
  • Yadira Narváez: also known as "The Queen of Scopolamine"; poisoned between five and six men with Carbofuran in 2011, but confessed to other murders; sentenced to 100 years imprisonment.[173]
  • Diego Fernando Ramírez: also known as "The Butcher of Buga"; cattle rancher who murdered two men in January 2007 in the rural town of Buga; suspected in other similar disappearances from 2006.[174]
  • Luis Gregorio Ramírez Maestre: killed 30 motorists in various municipalities; captured in 2012; expected to be released in 2032.[175]
  • Fredy Armando Valencia: also known as "The Monster of Monserrate"; raped and strangled at least nine drug-addicted women in the Eastern Hills region between 2012 and 2014; confessed to more murders; sentenced to 36 years imprisonment.[176]

Costa Rica

Croatia

  • Milka Pavlović: milkmaid who poisoned her husband and other peasants with arsenic in Stari Pavljani between March and July 1934; executed 1935.[178]
  • Vinko Pintarić: murdered five people, including his wife, between 1973 and 1990; escaped from custody three times, killed in a 1991 shootout with the police.[179]

Cyprus

Czech Republic

Denmark

  • Ane Cathrine Andersdatter: maid who killed three of her children between 1853 and 1861, drowning them in ditches or wells; executed 1861, the last woman to be executed in the country.[193]
  • Christina Aistrup Hansen: nurse who killed three patients at the Nykøbing Falster Hospital; charges changed from three murders to four attempted manslaughter charges; initially sentenced to life imprisonment, changed to 12 years in prison.[194]
  • Peter Lundin: killed his mother in the United States in 1991, then killed his mistress and her two children in Denmark 9 years later; sentenced to life imprisonment.[195]
  • Dagmar Overbye: childcare provider who killed between nine and twenty-five children in her care in Copenhagen; sentenced to death in 1921 then reprieved; died in prison on 6 May 1929.[196]

Ecuador

  • Gilberto Chamba: known as "The Monster of Machala"; murdered eight people in Ecuador and one in Spain; sentenced to 45 years in prison in Spain on 5 November 2006.[197]
  • Jairo Humberto Giraldo: known as "The Gay Strangler"; Colombian male prostitute who strangled and robbed other gay men in Quito between April and September 2002; sentenced to 25 years imprisonment.[198]
  • Juan Fernando Hermosa: known as "El Niño del Terror"; minor responsible for killing twenty-three people from 1991 to 1992 in Quito, mostly taxi drivers and homosexuals; sentenced to four years imprisonment and then released, later murdered on his 20th birthday by unknown assailants.[199]

Egypt

  • Ramadan Abdel Rehim Mansour: also known as "Al-Tourbini"; gang leader who raped and murdered homeless children across Egypt by throwing them off trains in the 2000s, sometimes burying them alive; executed in 2010.[200][201][202]
  • Raya and Sakina: Egypt's most famous serial killers and the first Egyptian women to be executed by the modern state of Egypt; executed along with their husbands in 1921.[203]

Estonia

  • Johannes-Andreas Hanni: murderer, rapist, and cannibal who killed three people in 1982; committed suicide in police custody on 6 November 1982.[204]
  • Märt Ringmaa: also known as the "Bomb Man of Pae Street"; killed seven people over the course of ten years in Tallinn using IEDs that exploded in public places.[205]
  • Aleksandr Rubel: Ukrainian-born killer who was convicted the murderers of six people in Tallinn as a minor in the late 1990s; released from prison on 8 June 2006 and subsequently returned to Ukraine.
  • Yuri Ustimenko and Dmitry Medvedev: Russian duo who committed robberies, killing five people; Medvedev was killed by police, and Ustimenko was captured in Poland, extradited to Estonia and sentenced to life imprisonment.[206]

Finland

  • Juhani Aataminpoika: also known as "Kerpeikkari"; murdered twelve people in the span of two months in 1849, including his parents; sentenced to death, commuted to life imprisonment; died in 1854.[207]
  • Matti Haapoja: convicted murderer of three, but admitted to the killing of 18. Evidence suggests having killed as many as 22–25 people between 1867 and 1894 in Finland and Siberia. Sentenced to life imprisonment, but committed suicide by hanging in a prison cell.
  • Ismo Junni: killed his wife in 1980, then killed four people in arson attacks at the Kivinokka allotment garden in Helsinki from 1986 to 1989; committed suicide while in custody.[208]
  • Ensio Koivunen: also known as "Häkä-Enska"; abducted and murdered three female hitchhikers between July and August 1971; sentenced for 25 years to prison, but released in the 1980s; died in 2003.[209]
  • Jukka Lindholm: murdered three women from 1985 to 1993 in and around Oulu and one in Helsinki in 2018; sentenced to life imprisonment, and is currently appealing the decision. Has spent 25 years in prison between his crimes.[210]
  • Aino Nykopp-Koski: a female nurse convicted of five murders and five attempted murders between 2004 and 2009. Sentenced to life in prison.[211]
  • Kaisa Vornanen-Karaduman: purposefully neglected her newborn children, starving them to death between 2005 and 2013; initially convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment, later reduced to 13 years imprisonment for manslaughter.[212]

France

Germany

Ghana

Greece

  • Antonis Daglis: also known as the "Athens Ripper"; convicted in 1997 of the strangulation murder and dismemberment of three women and the attempted murder of six others; committed suicide in police custody in 1997.[214]
  • Hermann Duft and Hans Wilhelm Bassenauer: West Germans who murdered six persons in Greece, within a short period in 1969, were captured, tried, sentenced to death and executed in 1969.[215]
  • Aristidis Pagratidis: also known as the "Ogre of Seikh Sou"; allegedly attacked couples in the forested area of Seikh Sou in suburban Thessaloniki from 1958 to 1959, killing three people; executed 1968, and since then his guilt has been questioned.[216]
  • Kyriakos Papachronis: also known as the "Ogre of Drama"; murdered three women from 1981 to 1982, committing other crimes as well; sentenced to life imprisonment, released on bail in 2004.[217]
  • Giannis and Thymios Retzos: brothers responsible for numerous kidnapping and murders in Epirus between 1917 and 1924; released under amnesty, then orchestrated a robbery in 1928, during which 8 people died; both executed 1930.[218]
  • Mariam Soulakiotis: also known as the "Woman Rasputin"; convent abbot who lured, tortured and killed 177 wealthy women and children from 1939 to 1951; died 1954.[219]
  • Dimitris Vakrinos: killed five people and attempted seven more murders in and around Athens for minor quarrels between 1987 and 1996; hanged himself in the prison showers in 1997.[220]

Hong Kong

  • Lam Kor-wan: sexual sadist who murdered and dismembered four women in the 1980s; sentenced to death (commuted to life imprisonment as per tradition at that time).[221]
  • Lam Kwok-wai: murdered three women, apprehended in 1993 and sentenced to life imprisonment (capital punishment already abolished).[222]

Hungary

  • Angel Makers of Nagyrév: group of women led by Susanna Fazekas who poisoned around 300 people in the village of Nagyrév between 1914 and 1929.[223][224]
  • Erzsébet Báthory: countess who killed servant girls; rumored to have killed more than 600.[225]
  • Aladár Donászi: robber who killed four people from 1991 to 1992 with his accomplice László Bene; committed suicide in prison in 2001.[226]
  • Béla Kiss: murdered at least twenty-four women, escaped justice in the confusion of World War I.[227]
  • Péter Kovács: also known as the "Martfű Monster"; truck driver who raped and killed between four and five women from 1957 and 1967, possibly responsible for more murders; executed 1968.[228]
  • Gusztáv Nemeskéri: also known as the "Katóka Street Killer"; killed four people between 1996 and 1999 to settle his debts, including his half-brother; sentenced to life imprisonment.[229]
  • Zoltán Szabó: also known as the "Balástya Monster"; killed and mutilated at least four women on his farm in Balástya between 1998 and 2001; committed suicide while imprisoned in 2016.[230]

Iceland

  • Björn Pétursson: also known as "Axlar-Björn"; killed at least nine travellers in the 16th century.

India

  • Thug Behram (ca. 1765–1840): alleged to have killed over 900 people; executed in 1840.[231][232][233]
  • Seema Gavit and Renuka Shinde (born 1975 and 1973): sisters who kidnapped and murdered five children between 1990 and 1996.[234]
  • M. Jaishankar (born 1977): also known as "Psycho Shankar", involved in about 30 rapes, murders and robbery cases around Tamil Nadu.[235]
  • Chandrakant Jha (born 1967): befriended and murdered seven male migrants from 1998 to 2007; sentenced to life imprisonment.[236]
  • Joshi-Abhyankar serial murders: series of ten murders committed by four art students in Pune; all were executed on 27 November 1983.[237]
  • KD Kempamma (born 1970): also known as "Cyanide Mallika"; poisoned six women from 1999 to 2007 with cyanide; India's first convicted female serial killer; sentenced to death, commuted to life imprisonment.[238][239]
  • Surendra Koli (born 1970-71): convicted of raping and murdering four children in Delhi in 2005 and 2006 with another twelve cases pending.[240][241]
  • Mohan Kumar (born 1963): also known as "Cyanide Mohan"; killed twenty female victims with cyanide, claiming they were contraceptive pills; sentenced to death in 2013.[242]
  • Ravinder Kumar (born 1991): killed the children of poor families from 2008 until his arrest in 2015.[243]
  • Motta Navas (born 1966): killed pavement dwellers in their sleep during a three-month period in 2012 in Kollam.[244]
  • Santosh Pol (born 1974): also known as "Dr. Death"; killed six people with succinylcholine in the town of Dhom.[245]
  • Raman Raghav (1929–1995): also known as "Psycho Raman"; Mumbai man who killed homeless people and others in their sleep.[246][247]
  • Umesh Reddy alias BA Umesh (born 1969): confessed to eighteen rapes and murders, convicted in nine cases.[248]
  • Ripper Jayanandan (born 1968): also known as the "Singing Serial Killer"; killed seven people during robberies.[249]
  • Satish (born c. 1973): also known as the "Bahadurgarh Baby Killer"; confessed to and convicted for ten murders; sentenced to life imprisonment.[250]
  • Auto Shankar (1954–1995): murdered nine teenage girls in Thiruvanmiyur, Chennai during a six-month period in 1988; executed in 1995.[251][252]
  • Kampatimar Shankariya (1952–1979): killed at least 70 people with hammer in 1977–78; hung in Jaipur.[253]
  • Devendra Sharma: doctor who murdered taxi and truck drivers across India between 2002 and 2004, dumping their bodies in canals; suspected of more than 100 murders; sentenced to life imprisonment.[254]
  • Darbara Singh (1952-2018): convicted for two murders, seventeen suspected victims.[255] Singh had three children; his wife expelled him from their house, because of his "bad habits". Died in Prison in 2018.
  • Charles Sobhraj (born 1944): killed at least twelve Western tourists in Southeast Asia during the 1970s; imprisoned in India (released) and Nepal (in prison).[256][257]
  • Akku Yadav (died 2004): murdered at least three people and dumped their bodies on the railroad tracks; lynched by a mob of around 200 women in Nagpur.[258][259][260]

Indonesia

  • Baekuni: also known as "Babe"; pedophile who killed between four and fourteen boys from 1993 to 2010; sentenced to life imprisonment, later changed to the death sentence.[261]
  • Very Idham Henyansyah: also known as "Ryan" and the "Singing Serial Killer"; convicted and sentenced to death in 2008 for the killing of eleven people.[262]
  • Ahmad Suradji: admitted to killing 42 women around Medan; sentenced to death and executed by firing squad on 10 July 2008.[263]

Iraq

Iran

  • Mohammed Bijeh: also known as the "Tehran Desert Vampire"; killed at least sixteen young boys near Tehran; executed in 2005.
  • Saeed Hanaei: also known as "The Spider Killer"; killed at least sixteen women around Mashhad; executed in 2002.[267]
  • Esmail Jafarzadeh: murdered a young girl in 2017, confessing to the murder of two women in 2012 and 2014 after his arrest; executed 2017.[268]
  • Gholamreza Khosroo Kurdieh: also known as "The Night Bat"; murdered nine women in Tehran in 1997, burning the bodies afterwards; executed 1997.[269]
  • Majid Salek Mohammadi: murdered twenty-four people from 1981 to 1985, primarily women he considered unfaithful to their husbands; committed suicide in prison before he could be sentenced.[270]

Republic of Ireland

  • Geoffrey Evans and John Shaw: Englishmen who traveled to Ireland in 1976 and vowed to murder a woman once a week, killing two; both apprehended and sentenced. Until his 2012 death, Evans was one of Ireland's longest-serving prisoners.[271]
  • Darkey Kelly: brothel-keeper who killed six men in the 18th century; accused of witchcraft and was burned at the stake in 1761.[272][273]
  • Alice Kyteler: also known as "The Witch of Kilkenny"; alleged witch who poisoned four husbands in the 14th century; fled to England, fate unknown.[274]
  • Mark Nash: murdered two female patients in Grangegorman in March 1997, followed by a couple in Ballintober in August; another man was wrongfully convicted of the first double murder; sentenced to life imprisonment.[275]

Israel

  • Yahya Farhan: Bedouin serial killer, who murdered between two and four people from 1994 to 2004, including Dana Bennett; sentenced to three consecutive life sentences, and later acquitted of one murder.[276]
  • Vladimir Piniov: known as "The Bat Yam Homeless Killer"; Russian immigrant who murdered as least three vagrants in Bat Yam during drunken quarrels between 1999 and 2000; committed suicide before trial.[277]

Italy

  • Wolfgang Abel and Marco Furlan: German-Italian duo found guilty of ten of 27 counts of murder in 1987.
  • Beasts of Satan: Satanic cult members who committed three notorious ritual murders from 1998 to 2004.[278]
  • Marco Bergamo: also known as the "Monster of Bolzano"; murdered five women in Bolzano from 1985 to 1992; died from a lung infection in 2017.[279]
  • Donato Bilancia: also known as the "Monster of Liguria" murdered seventeen people in seven months between 1997 and 1998.[280]
  • Antonio Boggia: also known as the "Monster of Milan"; first documented Italian serial killer; murdered four people for monetary purposes between 1849 and 1859; hanged 1862.[281]
  • Ralph Brydges: also known as the "Monster of Rome"; English pastor who is widely believed to have murdered five girls in Rome in the 1920s, and four in other countries; never convicted of his crimes.[282]
  • Sonya Caleffi: nurse who poisoned terminally ill patients between 2003 and 2004, killing 5 of them; sentenced to 20 years of imprisonment.[283]
  • Luigi Chiatti: also known as the "Monster of Foligno"; kidnapped and killed two children in 1992 and 1993; sentenced to two life sentences, but he was found unfit to stand trial and was reduced to 30 years in a mental hospital.[284]
  • Leonarda Cianciulli: also known as the "Soap-Maker of Correggio"; murderer of three women between 1939 and 1940; died in a women's criminal asylum in 1970.[285]
  • Ferdinand Gamper: also known as the "Monster of Merano"; killed six people in 1996.[286]
  • Pier Paolo Brega Massone: murdered at least four people in Milan and maimed other dozens of victims through unnecessary surgeries to illegally obtain a large amounts of money refunds; convicted and given a life sentence.[287]
  • Andrea Matteucci: also known as the "Monster of Aosta"; murdered a merchant and three prostitutes in Aosta from 1980 to 1995; sentenced to 28 years imprisonment and three years in a mental institution.[288]
  • Maurizio Minghella: killed five women in his hometown of Genoa in 1978; imprisoned and released, after which he murdered at least four more and is suspected of other murders between 1997 and 2001; sentenced to life imprisonment.[289]
  • Giorgio Orsolano: also known as the "Hyena of San Giorgio"; raped, killed and dismembered three girls from 1834 to 1835 in his hometown of San Giorgio Canavese; executed 1835.[290]
  • Ernesto Picchioni: also known as "The Monster of Nerola"; murdered people around his home; died of cardiac arrest in 1967.
  • Milena Quaglini: murdered her husband and two men who tried to rape her from 1995 to 1999; committed suicide while imprisoned in 2001.[291]
  • Gianfranco Stevanin: also known as the "Monster of Terrazzo"; raped and murdered prostitutes after violent sex games between 1993 and 1994; violated the corpse of one victim; sentenced to life imprisonment.[292]
  • Giulia Tofana: leader of a group of female poisoners in the 17th century; died in her bed, never been arrested.[293]
  • Giorgio Vizzardelli: shot and killed five people around Sarzana from 1937 to 1939; sentenced to life imprisonment; committed suicide by slitting his throat with a kitchen knife in 1973.[294]

Jamaica

  • Lewis Hutchinson: Scottish immigrant convicted of shooting dozens of people in the 18th century; executed in 1773.[295]

Japan

  • Ryuun Daimai: also known as the "Nun Slayer"; former monk who raped and killed at least five people in several cities between 1905 and 1915; executed 1916.[296]
  • Sachiko Eto: also known as the "Drumstick Killer"; cult leader who murdered six of her followers with Taiko sticks from 1994 to 1995; executed 2012.[297]
  • Satarō Fukiage: raped and killed at least seven girls in the early 20th century; executed 1926.[298]
  • Sokichi Furuya: murdered eight elderly people in several western Japanese cities for more than a month in 1965; suspected of four earlier murders, for two of which an accomplice was executed; executed 1985.[299]
  • Hiroaki Hidaka: killed four prostitutes in Hiroshima in 1996; executed 25 December 2006.[300]
  • Hayato Imai: paramedic who pushed to death at least three elderly nursing home patiens to their deaths between November and December 2014; suspected of other murders; sentenced to death.[301]
  • Miyuki Ishikawa: midwife who murdered an estimated 103 infants, but could have been up to 169, in the 1940s.[302][303]
  • Chisako Kakehi: poisoned her husband and two other men to death, attempted to kill a fourth man, and is a suspect in another seven deaths; sentenced to death in 2017.[304]
  • Kiyotaka Katsuta: firefighter who shot and strangled at least eight people, some during robberies, between 1972 and 1982.[305]
  • Kanae Kijima: also known as "The Konkatsu Killer"; marriage fraudster who poisoned between three and seven men for money, from 2007 to 2009; sentenced to death.[306]
  • Yoshio Kodaira: rapist thought to have killed eleven people in Japan and China as a soldier; executed on 5 October 1949.[307]
  • Genzo Kurita: killed six women and two children and engaged in rape and necrophilia; executed on 14 October 1959.[308]
  • Hiroshi Maeue: also known as "Suicide Website Murderer"; Osaka man who lured people from suicide clubs promising to kill himself with his victims.[309]
  • Futoshi Matsunaga and Junko Ogata: also known as "House of Horror"; tortured and killed at least seven people between 1996 and 1998, including Ogata's family.[310]
  • Tsutomu Miyazaki: also known as "The Otaku Murderer", "The Little Girl Murderer" and "Dracula"; killed four pre-school-age girls and ate the hand of a victim; executed in 2008.[311]
  • Seisaku Nakamura: also known as the "Hamamatsu Deaf Killer", murdered at least nine people; executed in 1943.[312]
  • Akira Nishiguchi: killed five people and engaged in fraud; executed on 11 December 1970.[313]
  • Kiyoshi Ōkubo: also known as "Tanigawa Ivan"; raped and murdered eight young women over a period of 41 days in 1971.
  • Sadakichi Shimizu: first recorded Japanese serial killer; robbed and murdered five people and a police officer in Tokyo between 1882 and 1886; executed 1887.[314]
  • Takahiro Shiraishi: also known as the "Twitter Killer"; murdered nine women and young girls at his apartment in Zama that he met through social media after making bogus suicide pacts with them.[315]
  • Yasunori Suzuki: robbed and killed three women in the Fukuoka Prefecture from 2004 to 2005; executed 2019.[316]
  • Miyuki Ueta: former snack hostess who murdered between two and six men she dated in Tottori, from 2004 to 2009; sentenced to death.[317]
  • Yukio Yamaji: murdered his own mother in 2000, and then murdered a 27-year-old woman and her 19-year-old sister in 2005.[318]

Kazakhstan

  • Nikolai Dzhumagaliev: also known as "Metal Fang"; raped and hacked seven women to death with an axe in Almaty in 1980, then cannibalised them using his unusual false teeth.[319]
  • Yuri Ivanov: also known as the "Ust-Kamenogorsk Maniac"; raped and killed sixteen girls and young women who spoke badly of men in Ust-Kamenogorsk from 1974 to 1987; executed 1987.[320]
  • Ivan Mandzhikov: also known as the "Kazgugrad Monster"; raped and strangled four female students and one man in the vicinity of the KazGU University between 1988 and 1989; executed 1993.[321]
  • Oleg Murayenko: murdered an inmate in 1998; after release, murdered six women between March and November 2000 in and around Petropavl; executed 2002.[322]

Kyrgyzstan

  • Viktor Selikhov: known as "The Naked Demon"; attacked and raped young girls and women in Frunze and its surroundings between 1962 and 1964, killing at least three; executed 1965.[323]

Latvia

  • Ansis Kaupēns: army deserter who committed 30 robberies and 19 murders from 1920 to 1926; executed 1927 in Vircava Parish.[324]
  • Kaspars Petrovs: convicted of murdering thirteen elderly Riga women in 2005; confessed to killing 38.[325]
  • Stanislav Rogolev: also known as "Agent 000"; robbed, raped and killed ten women from 1980 to 1982; suspected of having inside information for the investigation on him; executed 1984.[326]

Lebanon

Lithuania

  • Antanas Varnelis: murdered and robbed six pensioners between July and December 1992 around several municipalities; first known serial killer in Lithuania; executed 1994.[328]

Malta

  • Silvio Mangion: only known serial killer in Malta; murdered three elderly pensioners during robberies between 1984 and 1998; sentenced to life imprisonment.[329]

Mexico

Moldova

Morocco

Netherlands

  • Klaas Annink: also known as "Huttenkloas"; robber and murderer from Twente who killed along with his wife Anna and son Jannes; both he and his wife were executed in 1775.[370]
  • Hendrikje Doelen: 19th century farm-wife who poisoned several people in a poorhouse from 1845 to 1846, killing three of them; died of natural causes in 1847.[371]
  • Willem van Eijk: also known as the "Beast of Harkstede"; convicted of the murders of five women between 1971 and 2001. Died in prison in 2019.
  • Koos Hertogs: convicted of the murders of three women between 1979 and 1980. Died in jail in 2019.
  • Aalt Mondria: escaped mental patient who murdered a family of three in 1978; after release, murdered his girlfriend's son in 1997; died 2011 from untreated Hepatitis C.[372]
  • Gustav Müller: German watchmaker who murdered his wife and son in Rotterdam in 1897; surrendered and subsequently confessed to killing his parents and at least fourteen other wives around the world; acquitted by reason of insanity and confined to an asylum.[373]
  • Hester Rebecca Nepping: poisoned an elderly boarder, her father and husband in two months in 1811; executed 1812.[374]
  • Patrick Soultana: strangled two women in 2010, suspected of three more murders; sentenced to 25 years plus provision in 2014.[375]
  • Michel Stockx: murdered three children around Assen in 1991; sentenced to 20 years in prison in 1992; died of severe burns from an incident during his work therapy in 2001.[376]
  • Maria Swanenburg: suspected of killing between 27 and 90 people with arsenic in Leiden in the 1880s; died in prison in 1915.
  • Hans van Zon: murdered three people from April to August 1967, including a former lover; suspected of several other murders; died 1998 from alcohol poisoning.[377]

New Zealand

  • Robert Butler: Irish highwayman who allegedly killed a family of three in Dunedin in 1880; acquitted, but was later hanged for shooting a man in Australia.[378]
  • Daniel Cooper: also known as "The Newlands Baby Farmer"; killed two infants and supposedly his first wife; executed 1932.[379]
  • Minnie Dean: Scottish immigrant baby farmer who killed at least three children by Laudanum poisoning and suffocation in the 1890s; executed by hanging in 1895.[380]

Nigeria

North Macedonia

  • Viktor Karamarkov: known as "The Macedonian Raskolnikov"; drug addict who murdered four elderly women in Skopje from March to October 2009; sentenced to life imprisonment.[382]
  • Vlado Taneski: crime reporter arrested in June 2008 for the murder of three elderly women on whose deaths he had written articles; committed suicide in police custody; suspected of killing another woman.[383]

Norway

  • Roger Haglund: murdered four people in Tistedalen between 1991 and 1992; suspected of a double murder in Sweden in the 1980s; sentenced to 21 years imprisonment, released and died a free man in 2011.[384]
  • Arnfinn Nesset: manager of an Orkdal geriatric nursing home who poisoned twenty-two residents with suxamethonium chloride over a period of years before being convicted in 1983.[385]

Pakistan

  • Javed Iqbal: believed to have raped and killed 100 boys, committed suicide while in prison in 2001.[386]
  • Amir Qayyum: also known as the "Brick Killer"; murdered fourteen homeless men in Lahore with rocks or bricks when they were asleep and was sentenced to death in May 2006.[387]

Panama

  • Silvano Ward Brown: known as "The Panamá Strangler"; first known serial killer in Panamanian history; strangled three women from 1959 to 1973 in the Panamá Province; released in 1993 after serving a 20-year sentence.[388]
  • Gilberto Ventura Ceballos: Dominican man who murdered five Panamanian youths of Chinese descent in La Chorrera from 2010 to 2011; sentenced to 50 years imprisonment.[389]
  • William Dathan Holbert: also known as "Wild Bill"; American expatriate who had the bodies of five other Americans buried on his property; he would kill people to get their money and properties; his wife, Laura Michelle Reese, was also arrested.[390][391]

Peru

Poland

  • Bogdan Arnold: murdered four women in Katowice from 1966 to 1967; also attempted to poison his third wife; executed 1968.[393]
  • Władysław Baczyński: killed a woman and three men in Wrocław and Bytom from 1946 to 1957; executed 1960.[394]
  • Józef Cyppek: also known as "The Butcher of Niebuszewo"; dismembered his neighbour in 1952; was sentenced to death and executed that same year; suspected of other murders.[395]
  • Tadeusz Ensztajn: also known as "Vampire of Łowicz"; raped and killed seven women in Łowicz and the surrounding areas in 1933; sentenced to 15 years in prison in 1934.[396]
  • Krzysztof Gawlik: also known as "Scorpio"; murdered five people with a silenced machine gun in 2001; sentenced to life imprisonment.[397]
  • Tadeusz Grzesik: leader of the so-called "Bureaucrats Gang"; killed between eight and twenty people in several Polish voivodeships with his gang, mainly owners of exchange offices; suspected of more murders; sentenced to life imprisonment.[398]
  • Joachim Knychała: also known as "The Vampire of Bytom" or "Frankenstein", who murdered five women between 1975 and 1982.[399][400]
  • Edmund Kolanowski: necrophile who murdered three women from 1970 to 1982; also mutilated and desecrated corpses he excavated from chapels; executed 1986.[401]
  • Karol Kot: killed two people from 1964 to 1966 in his native Kraków, attempted to murder many more; executed 1968.[402]
  • Henryk Kukuła: also known as "The Monster from Chorzów"; pedophile who murdered four children from 1980 to 1990; sentenced to 28 years in prison, expected to be released in 2020.[403]
  • Tadeusz Kwaśniak: also known as the "Towel Strangler"; violent pedophile who raped and murdered five boys from 1990 and 1991; also responsible for numerous robberies; hanged himself in his prison cell before he could be sentenced.
  • Zdzisław Marchwicki: also known as the "Zagłębie Vampire"; convicted of murdering fourteen women; executed in 1976.
  • Nikifor Maruszeczko: criminal who killed four men for the purpose of robbery; executed 1938.[404]
  • Władysław Mazurkiewicz: also known as "The Gentleman Killer"; killed up to 30 women; executed by hanging in 1957.[405]
  • Stanisław Modzelewski: murdered seven women in Łódź during the 1960s; executed in 1970.
  • Henryk Moruś: killed seven people in the Piotrków Voivodeship from 1986 to 1992; sentenced to 25 years imprisonment; died of probable heart failure in 2013.[406][407]
  • Grzegorz Musiatowicz: violent criminal who killed three men between 2002 and 2014; sentenced to life imprisonment.[408]
  • Leszek Pękalski: also known as the "Vampire of Bytów"; killed up to seventeen women.[409]
  • Kazimierz Polus: pedophile who killed two boys and one man from 1971 to 1982; executed 1985.[410]
  • Skin Hunters: Karol Banaś, Andrzej Nowocień, Dr. Janusz Kuliński and Dr. Paweł Wasilewski; paramedics and doctors in Łódź who killed patients for profit; all four were convicted and officials are investigating possible accomplices.[411]
  • Mariusz Sowiński: also known as "The Stefankowice Vampire"; raped and killed four women from 1994 to 1997; sentenced to 50 years in prison.[412]
  • Paweł Tuchlin: also known as "Scorpion"; killed nine women and attempted to kill eleven more to feel better; executed 1987.[413]
  • Mieczysław Zub: also known as "Fantomas"; killed four women the area of Ruda Śląska; committed suicide in 1985.[414]

Portugal

Romania

  • Vera Renczi: poisoned two husbands, one son and 32 of her suitors in the 1920s and 1930s.[417][418]
  • Ion Rîmaru: murdered and raped young women in Bucharest from 1970 to 1971; executed in 1971.[419]
  • Vasile Tcaciuc: also known as "The Butcher of Iași": murdered victims with an axe and confessed to have committed at least 26 murders; shot dead by a policeman while trying to escape from prison.[420]
  • Romulus Vereș: convicted of five murders in the 1970s; sent to a mental institution; died in 1993.[421]

Russia

Saudi Arabia

  • Awdah Ahmad Awdah Salem: known as "The Yanbu Serial Killer"; Yemeni expatriate who raped and murdered three Indonesian housemaids in Yanbu between 2007 and 2009, burying their bodies afterwards; executed 2014.[422]

Serbia

  • Baba Anujka: also known as Anna Pistova, Ana di Pištonja, Anuyka Dee, "The Banat Witch" and "The Witch of Vladimirovac"; professional poisoner who poisoned between 50 and 150 people until apprehended in 1928.[423]

Singapore

  • Sek Kim Wah: 19-year-old NS conscript who was responsible for killing five people between June 1983 to July 1983 in two separate murder cases in Singapore, the latter of which became known as the Andrew Road triple murders. Executed in 1988.[424]
  • John Martin: British man who murdered and dismembered a South African tourist in Singapore and was responsible for killing a mother and son in Thailand and other alleged murders in several other countries. Sentenced to death in November 1995, he was hanged in April 1996.[425]

Slovakia

  • Matej Čurko: also known as the "Slovak Cannibal"; killed and cannibalized two willing victims in 2010 in Kysak, suspected of another 28 such cases from 2009 to 2011; killed by police in 2011.[426]
  • Juraj Lupták: also known as the "Strangler from Banská Bystrica"; shepherd who raped and strangled three women from 1978 to 1982; executed 1987 in Bratislava.[427]
  • Ondrej Rigo: killed, raped and mutilated nine women in Amsterdam, Munich and Bratislava, always wearing socks on his hands; he remains the Slovak murderer with the highest number of victims and he is also the most prolific serial killer in modern Slovakian history.[428]
  • Jozef Slovák: after serving just 8 years for his first murder from 1978, Slovák killed at least four other women in Slovakia and Czech Republic in the early 1990s; highly intelligent, holder of numerous patents in electronics.[429]

Slovenia

  • Silvo Plut: killed three women in Slovenia and Serbia from 1990 until 2006; committed suicide in prison in 2007.[430]
  • Metod Trobec: raped and killed at least five women between 1976 and 1978; committed suicide in prison in 2006.[431]

South Africa

As of October 2014, South Africa had 160 recorded serial killers since 1950. A disproportionately large number of them were white males, although no racial group was more likely to be a victim.[432]

South Korea

  • Chijon family: gang of cannibals that was sentenced to death for killing five people; sentenced to death in 1994; all members were executed by hanging on November 2, 1995.[466]
  • Véronique Courjault: French woman who confessed to killing three of her babies, stuffing two of them in a freezer at their family home in South Korea; sentenced to 8 years imprisonment in 2009, released 2010.[467]
  • Crown Prince Sado: Joseon prince who raped and killed his palace staff; sealed in a rice chest and died.[468]
  • Jeong Du-yeong: killed an officer in 1986; after release, killed eight other people in robberies from 1999 to 2000; sentenced to death.[469]
  • Jeong Nam-gyu: sexually assaulted and killed fourteen people from 2004 to 2006; died in hospital after failing to hang himself the previous day.[470]
  • Jeong Seong-hyeon: misandrist who killed a karaoke assistant in Gunpo in 2004, then two young girls in Anyang in 2007; sentenced to death.[471]
  • Kang Ho-sun: sentenced to death in 2010 for killing ten women, including his wife and mother-in-law.[472]
  • Kim Hae-sun: violent drunkard who raped and killed three children in 2000; sentenced to death in 2001.[473]
  • Kim Sun-ja: poisoned five people with potassium cyanide between 1986 and 1988 for monetary reasons; executed 1997.[474]
  • Lee Choon-jae: responsible for the "Hwaseong serial murders"; murdered fifteen women, including his sister-in-law, and raped numerous others; sentenced to life imprisonment for one murder in 1994, and connected to the others decades later.[475]
  • Pocheon poisonings: poisonings of three family members with herbicides, committed by a woman known only as "Noh", between 2011 and 2014 in Pocheon; sentenced to life imprisonment.[476]
  • Yoo Young-chul: cannibal; killed twenty-one people from September 2003 to July 2004, mainly young women and rich men; sentenced to death in 2004.[477]

Spain

  • Andrés Aldije Monmejá and José Muñoz Lopera: responsible for the "Frenchman's Garden" murders; owners of an illegal gambling house who killed six visitors from 1889 to 1904; both garroted in 1906.[478]
  • Francisca Ballesteros: known as La Viuda Negra[479] ("The Black Widow"), poisoned her husband and three children in Valencia between 1990 and 2004 (one survived), sentenced to 84 years in prison in 2005.
  • Manuel Blanco Romasanta: travelling salesman who claimed to be a werewolf, confessed to thirteen murders and was convicted of eight in 1853; his initial death sentence commuted in order to make a study in clinical lycanthropy, died in prison ten years later.[480]
  • Manuel Delgado Villegas: also known as El Arropiero[479] ("The Arrope Trader"), wandering criminal with XYY syndrome that confessed to 48 murders in Spain, France and Italy, including his girlfriend; considered guilty of seven and interned in a mental institution until his death in 1998.
  • Joaquín Ferrándiz Ventura: insurance salesman who murdered five women in Castellón Province between 1995 and 1996.[481]
  • Alfredo Galán: also known as "The Playing Card Killer", Spanish Army corporal who killed six individuals in 2003.[482]
  • Juan Díaz de Garayo: also known as "The Sacamantecas"; killed six people from 1870 to 1879 in Álava. Executed by garrote in 1881.[483][484]
  • Francisco García Escalero: also known as El Mendigo Asesino[479] ("The Killer Beggar"); schizophrenic beggar convicted of eleven murders, confined to a psychiatric hospital since 1995
  • Gila Giraldo: also known as "La Serrana de la Verra"; alleged 15th-16th century serial killer who beheaded men she slept with.
  • Tony Alexander King: also known as the "Costa Killer"; British sex offender who murdered two girls in Málaga in 1999 and 2003; suspected of possibly committing more murders in his native UK; sentenced to 19 years imprisonment.[485]
  • Ramón Laso: killed his two wives, child and brother in law in order to pursue extra-marital relationships.[486]
  • Enriqueta Martí: self-proclaimed witch who kidnapped, prostituted, murdered and made potions with the remains of small children in early 20th century Barcelona (12 bodies were identified in her home); murdered in prison while awaiting trial in 1913.[487]
  • Dámaso Rodríguez Martín: El Brujo ("The Warlock"), serial rapist and voyeur imprisoned in 1981 after attacking a couple, killing the man and raping the woman. Escaped from prison to the Anaga mountains in 1991, where he killed two German hikers (one of them was raped). Cornered in an abandoned house, he shot himself unsuccessfully, only to be shot dead in turn by law enforcement.[488]
  • Jorge Ignacio Palma: known as "The Butcher"; Colombian drug trafficker linked to the murders of at least three prostitutes in Valencia between 2019 and 2020; awaiting murder trial.[489]
  • José Antonio Rodríguez Vega: El Mataviejas[479] ("The Old Lady Killer"), raped and killed at least sixteen elderly women, sentenced to 440 years in prison in 1995, murdered by fellow inmates in 2002.
  • Abdelkader Salhi: known as the "10 Killer"; German convicted of a robbery-murder in 1988 in Germany, later moving to Spain and allegedly murdering three prostitutes from August to September 2011; currently awaiting sentencing.[490]
  • Gustavo Romero Tercero: "The Valdepeñas Killer", killed three people from 1993 to 1998.[491]
  • Margarita Sánchez Gutiérrez: known as "The Black Widow of Barcelona"; poisoned family members and relatives, killing four of them; acquitted of the murders, but sentenced to 34 years for other crimes.[492]

Swaziland

Sweden

Switzerland

  • Roger Andermatt: also known as the "Death-Keeper of Lucerne"; nurse who killed twenty-two people from 1995 to 2001; sentenced to life imprisonment.[497]
  • Werner Ferrari: child killer who lured his victims from popular festivals, strangling them afterwards; sentenced to life imprisonment.[498]
  • Erich Hauert: sex offender who committed eleven rapes and three murders from 1982 to 1983; sentenced to life imprisonment; his case impacted treatment of dangerous sexual offenders in Switzerland tremendously.[499]

Taiwan

  • Chen Ruiqin: known as "The Chiayi Demon"; murdered five relatives and one girlfriend for insurance money between 1985 and 2003; also suspected in two other disappearances; executed 2013.[500]
  • Lin Yuru: fatally poisoned three relatives in Puli to pay off gambling debts between 2008 and 2009; sentenced to death.[501]
  • Zhang Renbao: murdered three women from 1993 to 2003, also sexually violating the first victim; sentenced to death.[502]

Thailand

  • Si Ouey: Chinese immigrant who murdered between five to seven children from 1954 and 1958, cannibalizing their organs; executed 1959.[503]

Tunisia

Turkey

  • Süleyman Aktaş: also known as the "Nailing Killer"; killed five people and nailed them in the eyes and head; he is kept in a psychiatric hospital.[506]
  • Adnan Çolak: also known as "The Beast of Artvin"; killed seventeen elderly women in Artvin, Turkey from 1992 to 1995; in 2000 he was sentenced to death six times, and 40 years in prison. However, since October 1984, Turkey has not executed any prisoners, and as of 2004, Turkey does not have capital punishment.
  • Seyit Ahmet Demirci: also known as the "Furniture dealers' killer"; killed three furniture dealers selected at random and because he was sexually abused by his employer during his youth;[507] sentenced to death.[508]
  • Özgür Dengiz: serial killer from Ankara, who killed four people and cannibalized at least one.[509]
  • Atalay Filiz: fugitive suspected of four murders from 2012 to 2016.[510]
  • Ali Kaya: also known as "The Babyface Killer"; responsible for ten murders.[511]
  • Hamdi Kayapınar: also known as "Avcı" ("Hunter"); killed eight people from 1994 to 2018; sentenced to life imprisonment.[512]
  • Yavuz Yapıcıoğlu: also known as "The Screwdriver Killer"; responsible for at least eighteen murders.[513]
  • Özkan Zengin: known as "The Well Driller Killer"; four victims.[514]

Ukraine

  • Zaven Almazyan: also known as the "Voroshilovgrad Maniac"; Russian soldier who raped and killed three women in Voroshilovgrad; executed 1973.[515]
  • Oleksandr Berlizov: also known as the "Night Demon"; sexual psychopath who raped numerous women from 1969 to 1972 in Dnipropetrovsk, killing nine of them; executed 1972.
  • Sergei Dovzhenko: killed between seventeen and nineteen people in his native home of Mariupol for "mocking" him; sentenced to life imprisonment.[516]
  • Tamara Ivanyutina: also known as the "Kiev Poisoner"; poisoned people from personal spite 1976 to 1987, killing nine of them; executed 1987.[517]
  • Ruslan Khamarov: seduced and murdered eleven women in his home from 2000 to 2003; sentenced to life imprisonment.[518]
  • Oleg Kuznetsov: also known as "The Balashikha Ripper"; killed a total of ten people in Russia and Ukraine; sentenced to death but commuted to life imprisonment.[519]
  • Anatoly Onoprienko: also known as "The Terminator"; murdered 52 people from 1989 until his capture in 1996; died in prison in 2013.[520][521]
  • Viktor Sayenko and Igor Suprunyuk: also known as the "Dnepropetrovsk Maniacs"; teenagers in Dnipropetrovsk who bludgeoned 21 people to death in 2007 with the aid of a third teenager, often filming their murders; sentenced to life in prison in 2009.[522]
  • Serhiy Tkach: convicted of raping and murdering 36 women between 1980–2005; claims the total is 100.[523][524]
  • Vladyslav Volkovich and Volodymyr Kondratenko: also known as the "Nighttime Killers"; charged with shooting, stabbing and bludgeoning sixteen victims to death in Kyiv between 1991 and 1997; Kondratenko committed suicide in prison during the trial; Volkovich was found guilty and sentenced to life imprisonment.[525]

England

Northern Ireland

  • Shankill Butchers: The Shankill Butchers was an Ulster loyalist gang—many of whom were members of the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF)—that was active between 1975 and 1982 in Belfast, Northern Ireland. The gang was based in the Shankill area and were responsible for the deaths of at least twenty-three people, most of whom were Irish Catholics killed in sectarian attacks.[588]

Scotland

Wales

  • John Cooper: also known as "The Wildman" and "The Bullseye Killer"; Pembrokeshire burglar responsible for the robbery and shotgun double-murders of a brother and sister in 1985 and a couple in 1989.[597]
  • Peter Moore: also known as "The Man in Black"; businessman who killed four men at random in North Wales in 1995.[598]

United States

Uruguay

Uzbekistan

  • Polatbay Berdaliyev: raped, murdered and robbed a total of eleven women in Uzbekistan and neighboring Kazakhstan with accomplice Abduseit Ormanov between 2011 and 2012; both sentenced to life imprisonment in both countries.[604]

Venezuela

Yemen

  • Abdallah al-Hubal: killed seven people in 1990 after the Yemeni reunion; fled prison and killed a young couple and three other people in 1998; killed in a shootout with the police.[606]
  • Mohammed Adam Omar: known as "The Sana'a Ripper"; Sudanese morgue assistant who killed between two and 51 women across Yemen and other countries from 1975 to 1999; guilt has been questioned; executed 2001.[607]
  • Dhu Shanatir: 5th-century Yemeni (formerly Himyarite) serial killer.[608]

Zambia

Zimbabwe

  • Richard McGown: also known as "Dr. Death"; Scottish doctor responsible for administering fatal doses of morphine to at least five patients in Harare from 1986 to 1992; convicted of two counts of culpable homicide and sentenced to a year in prison, after which he was released and returned to the UK.[610]

Unidentified serial killers

This is a list of unidentified serial killers. It includes circumstances where a suspect has been arrested, but not convicted.

Australia

Belgium

  • Brabant killers: gang of serial killers who operated in the Brabant province from 1982 until 1985; murdered 28 people and injured 40.[617]
  • The Butcher of Mons: unidentified serial killer who committed five murders from January 1996 to July 1997 in Mons; Montenegrin murderer Smail Tulja is suspected of being the Butcher.[618]

Belize

  • Belize Ripper: abducted, tortured, raped and murdered five young girls in Belize City between 1998 and 2000, mutilating their bodies post-mortem.[619]

Brazil

Canada

Colombia

Costa Rica

Finland

  • Helsinki cellar killer: suspected of raping and strangling three women in Helsinki cellars between 1976 and 1981, including Susanne Lindholm; the validity of this theory has been disputed.[625]
  • Järvenpää Serial Killer: responsible for the so-called "Hausjärvi Gravel Pit Murders"; killed a woman in 1991 and suspected in the disappearance of another in 1993; possibly responsible for other abductions and murders in the late 20th century.[626]

Germany

India

  • Beer Man: murdered seven people in south Mumbai between October 2006 and January 2007.[627]
  • Stoneman: responsible for thirteen murders in Kolkata in 1989.[628]

Italy

Japan

  • Paraquat murders: series of indiscriminate poisonings carried out in Japan in 1985 where twelve people were killed.[631]
  • Wednesday Strangler: killed 7 children and women in Saga Prefecture between 1975 and 1989, most of them on Wednesdays; a suspect was indicted for three of the murders, but later acquitted.[632]

Mexico

Namibia

Nicaragua

Poland

Portugal

Russia

South Africa

United Kingdom

United States

See also

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