Putin’s ‘cannibal military’ return house from the entrance line – and locals are fuming
An army of cannibals who joined Russian President Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Russia last year have started to return home – and locals are not happy.
Around a year after Putin’s invasion began, it became clear Russia was losing soldiers faster than Vlad could force his population to sign up to replace them. It was then announced some of Russia’s worst criminals – from murderers and serial killers to cannibals – would be allowed to join.
In exchange for their “loyalty,” they would then have their sentences cut short after spending just one year on the front line.
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And now those who have survived are starting to return home . . . to a new life of freedom. But according to local Russian media, residents in some towns and cities are furious about having the worst members of society living freely among them.
According to V1.RU, one of those is cannibal Dmitry Malyshev, who has returned home to the village of Rakhinsky in Volgograd. In 2014, he was jailed for 25 years for killing a friend, cooking their heart and eating it – all of which he live streamed on social media.
A video shows him bragging, stating: “We’re frying a human being. Here it is, the heart. I’ve already added some onion.”
Another grim individual, Alexander Maslennikov, slaughtered two girls in Volzhsky, and dismembered their bodies in 2017. He was given a 23-year prison sentence – but both criminals were allowed to fight for Russia and are now seemingly free men.
Another ex-lag, Nikolai Ogolobya, was sentenced to 20 years in a maximum security prison in 2010 after the Satanist cult member killed and ate several people. He recently returned to Yaroslavl.
And lastly, Denis Gorin was recently given his freedom after joining the army after slaughtering and eating several people in 2003 – he was given 10 years in prison at the time, but returned to prison three years later for a similar crime.
He was given 22 years but was freed in 2023 after joining the invasion, however, he was hospitalised last year after just a few months in service, and has now been freed – and pardoned – after receiving hospital treatment.
Several local news outlets are claiming local residents in all of the villages and towns now housing these men are unhappy about it, but Russian officials have refused to comment so far.
We would reach out to the Kremlin and ask but . . . it’s the Kremlin.
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