
This particular behavior, according to psychologists, developed as a result of his failure to have sexual intercourse with women and the subsequent ridicule he received led to psychological scarring.


Many of his victims were women and children, who he sexually assaulted before brutally murdering. Apart from that, the conditions that he was born and brought up in molded him as a menace to the overall fabric of the society. Psychologists later concluded that he suffered from some psychological disorders since his early childhood and that played a great role in his chaotic set of beliefs. Andrei Chikatilo was nicknamed as Butcher of Rostov, the Rostov Ripper, and the Red Ripper. Andrei Chikatilo is the 13th most popular extremist (down from 12th in 2019), the 33rd most popular biography from Ukraine (down from 18th in 2019) and the most popular Ukrainian Extremist.Īndrei Chikatilo was a serial killer who murdered and mutilated at least 52 people in the Soviet Union during the 1980s.Andrei Chikatilo was a soviet serial killer, who admitted killing a total of 56 people in Soviet Russia during the 70s and 80s before finally getting executed in 1994. His biography is available in 40 different languages on Wikipedia. Since 2007, the English Wikipedia page of Andrei Chikatilo has received more than 5,954,753 page views. He was convicted and sentenced to death for fifty-two of these murders in October 1992, although the Supreme Court of Russia ruled in 1993 that insufficient evidence existed to prove his guilt in nine of those killings. Chikatilo confessed to fifty-six murders and was tried for fifty-three of them in April 1992. Andrei Romanovich Chikatilo (Russian: Андре́й Рома́нович Чикати́ло, romanized: Andréy Románovich Chikatílo Ukrainian: Андрій Романович Чикатило, romanized: Andriy Romanovych Chykatylo 16 October 1936 – 14 February 1994) was a Soviet serial killer nicknamed The Butcher of Rostov, The Rostov Ripper, and The Red Ripper who sexually assaulted, murdered, and mutilated at least fifty-two women and children between 19 in the Russian SFSR, the Ukrainian SSR, and the Uzbek SSR.
