Mucitano was involved in the death of the prominent Greek military officer Tellos Agras and his ally Antonis Mingas [bg; el].
[3] Mucitano fought during the 1903 Ilinden–Preobrazhenie Uprising in the Ottoman Balkans, being part of the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization (IMRO) band of Gyorche Petrov.
[7] Although Mucitano gained the nickname of Kasapcheto (Касапчето; "Butcher"), he preferred to solve problems diplomatically, and his band generally applied relatively pacific measures despite being constantly pursued by ethnic Greek antartes fighters.
[8] A notable exception would be the murder of the prominent Greek military officer Tellos Agras and his pro-Greek Bulgarian companion Antonis Mingas [bg; el].
After the capture of both, and with strong opposition from the Aromanians' Bulgarian allies led by Ivan Zlatanov (better known as "Zlatan"), Agras and Mingas were hanged on 7 June 1907 in an area between the villages of Techovo and Vladovon [el].
[13] Costa Dabija, who had joined Mucitano during the formation of his band in Sofia, said about him that he was interested in poetry, having written a collection of poems which he read to his comrades in their spare time.
[4] Today, Mucitano is included under the name of "Georgi Kasapcheto" at the Monument to Todor Aleksandrov [bg; mk] in Kyustendil, Bulgaria, which honors the revolutionaries who fought in Macedonia.