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Community Forum · Est. 2006
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#60
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05-10-2016, 11:10 AM
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| My Rank: LANCE CORPORAL Poster Rank:3510 Dicky Join Date: Oct 2009 Posts: 99 Mentioned: 1 Post(s) Quoted: 41 Post(s)
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Re: Teenager with a Rifle Shoot and Kills 28 Year Old Guy That Beat Him Up Earlier
These kids are all miners somewhere in Amur, the middle of nowhere in the Russian far-East. The killer was 17, the victim was 27. These are all troubled kids who come from the cities and try and start their lives over and work in the mining industry as simple laborers. But the culture in the far-East is very different, the local populations don't drink much alcohol, the lifestyle is much more conservative. But all of these families have lots of guns. The victim in this case was the supervisor of a group of young laborers, and the young killer was refused entry to the only bar in the small hamlet where the miners all live. The supervisor reportedly called the Mother and the uncle of the killer to inform them that their son had been drinking every night for a week and he asked them the passcode to a train credit pass for the killer so that he could put money on the credit pass and send the boy back home to his family. The boy came back to the bar, and the supervisor simply told him the credit pass code number and that he put money on the account and he would leave the following night. By this implication the boy knew that his family had talked to the supervisor. The boy killed the supervisor the following night right before the train arrived, when all of the older mine employees were all drunk and the two guards outside of the bar were also asleep drunk, midday. The boy was captured without incident by the drunk miners, he was tied up, and Amur federal oblast agents arrived to arrest him. I only have this source in Latvian. The boy is Latvian by origin and he is serving prison concurrent in Latvia for the murder of a teenage girl when he was 14 years old. His sentence is 30-60 years with no hearing of partial release until 2045. After 30 years his prison record will dictate his potential release. Sorry for the language! |