Dmitry Borovikov

For his love of heavy music and the band "Kiss", Borovikov received the nickname "Kislyi" (Russian: Кислый, lit.

Many articles in the magazines «Made in St. Petersburg» and «Гнев Перуна» (The Wrath of Perun), such as «Жёлтая угроза» (The Yellow Threat), «Аргументы и факты» (Arguments and facts), «Советы начинающим штурмовикам» (Tips for novice stormtroopers), «Перунов день» (Perun's Day), «Стрижено?

In this group, Borovikov met Alexey Voevodin [ru], then their views with Schultz diverged, and they left Schultz-88.

The main difference of the new group was the emphasis on a healthy lifestyle, sympathy for the football movement and the desire to find foreign Nazis.

There were strict conditions, a person joining their new group must meet three criteria: Interest in football at this stage cools down, there is an installation not for beating, but for killing.

Borovikov was detained in 2004 in the high-profile case of the "Tajik girl" Khursheda Sultonova, who was killed on February 9 near her home.

It was suggested that Borovikov managed to evade responsibility, thanks to the connections of his father, a police officer.

[1] On June 7, Borovikov organized the execution of two of his former associates Rostislav Hoffman and Alexey Golovchenko in the forest near the village of Zahodskoye in the Vyborg district.

[5][2][6][7][8] On June 19, the scientist Nikolai Girenko was killed by Borovikov's associates Andrey Kostrachenkov and Artem Prokhorenko.

Since April 25, 2005 Borovikov was put on the international wanted list for extremism with the note "especially dangerous" and "may actively resist during detention".

On April 7, 2006, Borovikov organized the murder of Senegalese Samba Lampsar (1978-2006), a 5th-year student of the Bonch-Bruevich State University, one of the leaders of the "African Unity",[11] who was returning from the "Apollo" nightclub (12 Izmailovsky Avenue).

When he saw that a group of people in civilian clothes (operatives) were approaching him, he realized that law enforcement officials had decided to detain him.

Borovikov was buried in the Severnoye Kladbishche, St Petersburg without a funeral service, since he was a neo-pagan.

Direct action in the form of street attacks on "non-russians", in his opinion, contributes to the purification of the people from non-racial elements and the transformation of the Russian Federation into "White Rus".

"To be a warrior is to live forever". Graffiti on a transformer booth near the place of Dmitry Borovikov's death, this slogan is used by Russian neo-Nazis as a tribute to one of the leaders of the BTO.