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  1. Vasili Ivanovich Komaroff (born Vasili Terentevich Petrov; Russian: Василий Терентьевич Петров; 1 January 1871 – 18 June, 1923) was a Russian serial killer, convicted for the killing of 33 people in Moscow between 1921 and 1923.

  2. Vasily Komarov (also known in English as Vasili Komaroff) was one of the worst murderers in the history of the USSR. He treated the murders of innocent people and even his own death sentence with...

  3. Vasili Komaroff (33) A horse-trader during the early days of Stalin, Vasili was known as "The Wolf of Moscow" for his unbridled reign of terror. A peasant, Vasili typically killed for money. His first victim was uncovered in 1921. Many others followed with frightful regularity.

  4. Dec 23, 2021 · The Russian serial killer Vasili Komaroff — the so-called "Wolf of Moscow" — admitted to killing 33 men after his arrest in 1921, according to The True Crime Database. One of the earliest-known modern serial killers in Russia, Komaroff was born in Vitebsk to a poor family in 1871.

  5. Jan 7, 2019 · Known as the Wolf of Moscow, Vasili Komaroff was one of the earliest known serial killers to emerge from the Soviet Union.

  6. Vasili Ivanovich Komaroff (born Vasili Terentevich Petrov; Russian: Василий Терентьевич Петров; 1 January 1871 – 18 June, 1923) was a Russian serial killer, convicted for the killing of 33 people in Moscow between 1921 and 1923.

  7. Dec 28, 2020 · Remaking the ‘Born’ Murderer: The Case of Moscow Serial Killer Vasili Komarov and Lombrosian Legacies in Early Soviet Criminological Discourse

  8. Mar 24, 2016 · But, says Thomas Blanton, the former director of the nongovernmental National Security Archive, simply put, this “guy called Vasili Arkhipov saved the world.”

  9. Aug 5, 2015 · Komaroff was eventually found guilty and put to death by firing squad. His wife, who was deemed an accomplice, was also executed. Read the full, horrific story of Vasili Komaroff, plus 29 more serial killer cases in Human Monsters Volume 2. Available now on Amazon

  10. Dec 22, 2021 · Komaroff was a Red Army veteran of the Russian Civil War, and on one occasion during his service, managed to escape from captivity by the opposing White Army. He confessed to his deeds, and while he was convicted of 29 murders, he admitted that as many as 33 people died by his hand (via Murderpedia).