Mikhail Ustinovich

Mikhail Ivanovich Ustinovich (born March 12, 1958) is a Russian criminal and serial killer. An infamous Muscovite robber during the early 1990s, he attacked shops, apartments and currency exchange points.

Mikhail Ustinovich
Born
Mikhail Ivanovich Ustinovich

(1958-03-12) March 12, 1958
Komsomolskoye, Tyumen Oblast, RSFSR
Other names"Blind Mouse"
Conviction(s)Murder
Criminal penaltyDeath; commuted to life imprisonment
Details
Victims4
Span of crimes
1992–1993
CountryRussia
State(s)Moscow
Date apprehended
1993
Imprisoned atWhite Swan Prison

First convictions

Mikhail Ustinovich was born on March 12, 1958, inside a prison colony in Komsomolskoye village, Tyumen Oblast, where his mother was serving a sentence. He lived there up to 2 years of age, when he was sent to a boarding school. In a fight with other juvenile delinquents, he was seriously injured on the head, as a result of which Ustinovich's sight deteriorated significantly. In the colony, he earned the nickname "Blind Mouse". Following this, he had more convictions for thefts and robberies.[1]

In total, at the time of his final arrest at 35 years of age, Mikhail had spent a total of 22 years of his life behind bars.

Criminal career

In 1992, Ustinovich was once again freed from the colony. He was released into a completely different country, where the fate of the cities was decided by criminal groups, and he couldn't resist it. Initially, he robbed Muscovites in elevators.[1]

Ustinovich himself created a gang, consisting of Nikolai Grysko, Armen Sargsyan and Artsrun Karyan. At the end of 1993, the gang began to carry out armed attacks on the "Light" line of stores, who sold lighting equipment. The reward for the gang each time was 7 million rubles from the prices at the time. From August to November 1993, they robbed five "Svet" stores, with one store being robbed twice. During the second raid, Ustinovich planted a newspaper with a note from the first one. The gang's calling card was a shot at the ceiling with a TT pistol.[2]

While robbing with his accomplices, Ustinovich did not hide his face; moreover, he and the others did everything possible to be remembered. The investigating team at first took Ustinovich for being Valery Volovik, who was also wanted for robberies and murders. The truth was that Ustinovich, while serving his sentence in 1989, had met Volovik and was struck by how similar he looked. When he decided to commit crimes, he disguised as Volovik.[2]

Soon, the gang began robbing currency exchange points, and Ustinovich, during one of the robberies, committed a double murder. The victims were two security guards of the Lubyansky shopping center, who tried to stop the bandits. Mikhail lost his hat, which was conserved and preserved, which later on played an important role in his capture.

In 1993, Moscow was frightened by the exploits of a man dressed as an officer, who robbed apartments and sometimes killed the owners. Nobody knew that these crimes were the work of Ustinovich. Several apartments were robbed in this way, and in two cases, Ustinovich killed the owners.[2]

Arrest, investigation and trial

Ustinovich and Grysko were detained while trying to hand over valuables stolen from apartments to a pawnbroker. Almost immediately, they confessed to the crimes, also implicating Sargsyan and Karyan.

The hat lost by Ustinovich in the Lubyansky shopping center was brought up again, which served as some of the strongest evidence to his guilt. In total, Ustinovich and his gang were found responsible for 21 robberies, a number of thefts and 4 murders.[2]

On August 23, 1996, the Moscow City Court sentenced Ustinovich to an exceptional measure of punishment - the death penalty, which was subsequently replaced with life imprisonment. His accomplices received various other sentences: Grysko - 14 years; Sargsyan - 10 and Karyan - 6 years.[3]

Currently, Mikhail Ustinovich is serving in the White Swan colony. When journalists came to interview and ask him a question, that being would he like to be in prison forever, he replied that he preferred the death penalty, because such a life is worse than any death.[4]

  • Criminal Russia, "The Furious Raider" series (1998)
  • Documentary film by Vakhtang Mikeladze "Handwriting of the Blind" from the series "Documentary Detective" (2000).
  • Documentary film by Vakhtang Mikeladze "The Bright Strip of Mikhail Ustinovich" from the series "Sentenced to life" (2008).
  • Documentary film by Vakhtang Mikeladze "The crafty philosophy of a killer." from the series "Detective stories" (2006-2009)
  • Documentary film by Vakhtang Mikeladze "Born in Captivity" from the series "Life Sentences" (2009-2010)

See also

References

  1. "Letters from Hell, Part 2: Memoirs of the prosecutor". LiveJournal. March 20, 2008. Archived from the original on April 23, 2012. Retrieved April 22, 2010.
  2. ""Furious Robber" Documentary film from the series 'Criminal Russia'". НТВ. 1995. Retrieved April 22, 2010.
  3. Gerasimov, Alexei (September 14, 1996). "'The ideological monarchist' will be shot". Kommersant. Archived from the original on April 23, 2012. Retrieved April 22, 2010.
  4. "Would you personally like to live forever?". Komsomolskaya Pravda. May 22, 2002. Archived from the original on April 23, 2012. Retrieved April 22, 2010.
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