Vladimir Tushinsky

After his release, he married, and along with his wife and her daughter from her first marriage, moved to the Pionersky settlement in the Yelizovsky District; a son was born there soon after.

After his stepdaughter was able to leave Tushinsky, investigators believe that because of his inability to satisfy his "pathological sexual desire", a hatred for women arose.

He began to drive around Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky in his Toyota 4Runner in search of lone girls resembling his stepdaughter, and would offer them a ride.

On 18 November 2010, the criminal killed 11-year-old Olga Besprozvannaya, a high school student in Yelizovo, and then buried her corpse.

The search operation again did not give any results, because, as in the Besprozvannaya case, the criminal carefully buried the body in a secret place.

[7] After the murder of Irina Khodos, the investigators contacted the locals through the media for help, counting on the fact that among them there might have been witnesses of the crime.

After a while a man came to the regional department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, passing a stop with his car when, according to him, the murder was committed.

In the trunk of Tushinsky's car was an axe, taser, air gun, as well as female tights and an artificial vagina.

During the search of Tushinsky's apartment, video records were found on his computer, on which he committed violent acts against his minor stepdaughter.

Previously, experts conducted more than 60 examinations, including complex forensic psycho-sexual ones, which revealed that the man showed signs of paedophilia, but was declared sane.

The state prosecutor asked the court to appoint a final sentence in the form of life imprisonment to the defendant.

[10] In his last words, he pled guilty to all counts and at the same time drew the court's attention to the contradictions in the victims' testimonies, witnesses, and the inadmissibility of a number of evidence materials in the case.

In July 2016, the Board of the Supreme Court inspected a video depicting the convict and three of the victims, and ultimately upheld the verdict without change.

[14] After the enforcement of the verdict, Tushinsky was ordered to serve his sentence in the special regime colony in Ognenny Ostrov.