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» Top 10 most terrible children in the world. The most ruthless child killers in history

Top 10 most terrible children in the world. The most ruthless child killers in history

Elizaveta Dubrovina

On February 24, 2016, 19-year-old resident of St. Petersburg Elizaveta Dubrovina inflicted at least 140 stab wounds to her 17-year-old sister Stefania during an argument. In addition, the victim's eyes were gouged out and his ears were cut off. As it turned out later, the girl committed the crime out of envy. Stefania led a glamorous lifestyle and was successful with the opposite sex. As it turned out, Elizabeth had previously undergone treatment in a psychiatric clinic. The court declared the girl insane.

Knackers from Khabarovsk

In October 2016, two 17-year-old girls from Khabarovsk - Alina Orlova and Alena Savchenko - became famous after a series of photographs and videos appeared in which the girls brutally kill animals taken from a shelter. Such an atrocity caused a serious resonance in society, the whole country learned about the teenagers, mass rallies began, and the question arose about toughening criminal liability for minors. IN ultimately Khabarovsk knackers were found guilty of ill-treatment with animals and robbery. Alena Savchenko was sentenced to four years, Alina Orlova - to three years in a general regime colony.

Garrett Dye

Little Amy Dye's mother often brought rude men into the house. She ended up marrying a jerk who sexually abused the girl. By the age of nine, Amy already had considerable sexual experience. In 2006, she was sent to live with her great aunt. In February 2011, Amy Dye was murdered by her 18-year-old half-brother Garrett Dye. The girl's body was found in the bush near the farm where the family lived. The baby was beaten to death hydraulic jack. Garrett pleaded guilty to killing the girl "because she couldn't keep quiet."

William Gorzynski

On October 26, 2009, William Gorzynski angrily plunged a knife into the body of his 14-year-old brother Matthew. The boys quarreled over computer speakers. William was watching TV and asked Matthew to turn the music down. After the quarrel, William went to the kitchen, took a knife and stabbed his brother in the chest. Realizing what had happened, he immediately contacted the rescuers. He said over the phone that his brother had had an accident. The killer was sentenced to 12 months of psychiatric treatment, followed by a period of state-supervised release.

Jordan Brown

11-year-old Jordan Brown shot his father's pregnant fiancée, Kenzie Hawk, several times in 2009. The woman died on the spot, and the child also could not be saved. They wanted to try Brown as an adult. The boy was facing a life sentence, but the lawyer managed to soften the jury's decision. As a result, he was sent to a correctional facility for juvenile offenders. In 2016, Jordan Brown was released, when he turned 18 years old.

Christian Fernandez

On March 14, 2011, 12-year-old Christian Fernandez from the American city of Jacksonville (Florida) beat his 2-year-old stepbrother to death by hitting his head on a bookcase. Christian was initially tried as an adult. He became the first teenager in the United States to be sentenced to life imprisonment. State's Attorney Angela Corey said the court was forced to try Fernandez as an adult to protect the public from a young but brutal and serial killer. In 2013, after pleading guilty, the sentence was changed to manslaughter. Fernandez will remain in juvenile detention until he is 19 years old.

Keith Randulich

On May 22, 2009, 18-year-old Keith Radulich slit the throat of his four-year-old sister Sabrina with a knife. This is how he took revenge on his mother, who refused to buy him a gun. The girl begged her brother to stop, but he continued cutting until he felt “that the blade had reached the bones.” The scumbag later told the police that he needed a gun against a relative who was raping the girl. Investigators found no evidence of sexual violence. Keith was sentenced to 40 years in prison. In 2011, his mother sent a letter to the judge, begging for a reduced sentence.

The girls attacked their friend "on orders from Slenderman"

In 2014, in the US state of Wisconsin, two 12-year-old girls - Morgan Geyser and Anissa Weier - tried to kill classmate Payton Letner, inspired by the fictional Internet character Slender Man. The girl was stabbed 19 times. Fortunately, Letner survived, but the juvenile criminals were tried as adults. Weier was sent to a psychiatric hospital for 25 years, and Morgan Geyser was sentenced to 40 years in a clinic.

Constance Kent

In June 1860, in England, 16-year-old Constance Kent brutally murdered her three-year-old brother Francis Kent. She left many wounds on his body and cut his throat with a razor. Initially, the child's nanny came under suspicion, but detective Jack Whicher drew attention to Constance's behavior. However, the girl was never caught in the crime. Five years later, Constance herself admitted during confession that she killed her brother at night with one of her father's razor blades. She was sentenced to life imprisonment, but she only served 20 years before changing her name and moving to Australia.

1)Mary Bell
Mary Bell is one of the most "famous" girls in British history. In 1968, at the age of 11, together with her 13-year-old friend Norma, two months apart, she strangled two boys, 4 and 3 years old. The press around the world called this girl a "tainted seed", "the spawn of the devil" and a "monster child".
Mary and Norma lived next door to each other in one of the most deprived areas of Newcastle, in families where large families and poverty habitually coexisted and where children spent most of their time playing unsupervised in the streets or in rubbish dumps. Norma's family had 11 children, Mary's parents had four. The father pretended to be her uncle so that the family would not lose benefits for a single mother. “Who wants to work? - he was sincerely surprised. “Personally, I don’t need money, as long as it’s enough for a pint of ale in the evening.” Mary's mother, a wayward beauty, suffered from mental problems since childhood - for example, for many years she refused to eat with her family unless food was placed in a corner under her chair.


Mary was born when her mother was only 17 years old, shortly after an unsuccessful attempt to poison herself with pills. Four years later, the mother tried to poison and own daughter. Relatives took an active part in the child's fate, but the survival instinct taught the girl the art of building a wall between herself and the outside world. This feature of Mary, along with her wild imagination, cruelty, and outstanding childish mind, was noted by everyone who knew her. The girl never allowed herself to be kissed or hugged, she tore into shreds the ribbons and dresses given by her aunts.


At night she moaned in her sleep and jumped up a hundred times because she was afraid to wet herself. She loved to fantasize, talking about her uncle's horse farm and the beautiful black stallion she supposedly owned. She said that she wanted to become a nun because nuns were “good.” And I read the Bible all the time. She had about five of them. In one of the Bibles she pasted a list of all her deceased relatives, their addresses and dates of death...



2) Jon Venables and Robert Thompson
17 years ago, Jon Venables and his friend, the same scum as Venables, but only named Robert Thompson, were sentenced to life in prison, despite the fact that they were ten years old at the time of the murder. Their crime sent shockwaves throughout Britain. In 1993, Venables and Thompson stole a two-year-old boy from a Liverpool supermarket, the same James Bulger, where he was with his mother, and forcibly dragged him to railway, brutally beat him with sticks, doused him with paint and left him to die on the tracks, hoping that the baby would be run over by a train and his death would be mistaken for an accident.



3)Alice Bustamant
A 15-year-old schoolgirl has appeared in Missouri court for the brutal murder of a 9-year-old girl. According to the defendant, she committed this atrocity out of pure curiosity - she wanted to know how the killer felt.
The terrible crime was committed by schoolgirl Alice Bustamant from Jefferson City, reports the Associated Press. Last Wednesday, a Cole County judge ruled that the girl will be tried as an adult. A few hours later, Alice was charged with premeditated murder using a bladed weapon. She faces life in prison without the possibility of parole.
Alice Bustamant carefully prepared for the crime, calmly choosing the optimal moment for the attack. The girl dug two holes in advance, which were supposed to play the role of a grave, and then calmly went to school for a whole week, choosing the right time to kill her nine-year-old neighbor Elizabeth Olten.
October 21st without any apparent reason Alice strangled the girl, cut her throat and pierced her body with a knife.
Subsequently, during one of the interrogations, Alice mentioned to Missouri Highway Patrol Sergeant David Rice that she “wanted to know the feelings that a person experiences in such a situation.”
The girl confessed to the murder on October 23. Alice herself led the police to the place where she safely hid Elizabeth's corpse. Her remains were buried in a wooded area near St. Martins, a small town west of Jefferson City.
Before this, hundreds of volunteers combed the area of ​​Jefferson City and its surrounding areas in the hope of finding the missing girl, but all was in vain.
We add that District Attorney Mark Richardson has not yet explained why the defendant dug two holes at once.





4) George Junius Stinney Jr.
Although there was a lot of political and racial mistrust surrounding the case, most accepted that this Stinney guy was guilty of murdering two girls. It was 1944, Stinney was 14, he killed two girls, ages 11 and 8, and dumped their bodies in a ravine. He apparently wanted to rape the 11-year-old, but the younger one interfered with him, and he decided to get rid of her. Both girls resisted and he beat them with a baton. He was charged with first degree murder, found guilty and sentenced to death. The sentence was carried out in the state of South Carolina.



5)Bari Lukatis
In 1996, Barry Loukatis put on his best cowboy suit and headed into the office where his class was about to have an algebra lesson. Most of his classmates found Barry's costume ridiculous, and himself even stranger than usual. They didn’t know what the suit was hiding, but there were two pistols, a rifle and 78 rounds of ammunition. He opened fire, his first victim being 14-year-old Manuel Vela. A few seconds later, several more people fell victims. He began to take hostages, but made one tactical mistake: he allowed the wounded to be taken away, and at the moment when he was distracted, the teacher snatched the rifle from him.



6) Kipland Kinkel
On May 20, 1998, Kinkel was expelled from school for trying to buy stolen weapons from a classmate. He confessed to his crime and was released from the police. At home, his father told him that he would have been sent to boarding school if he had not cooperated with the police. At 3:30 p.m., Kip pulled out his rifle, hidden in his parents' room, loaded it, walked into the kitchen and shot his father. At 18:00 the mother returned. Kinkel told her he loved her and shot her - twice in the back of the head, three times in the face and once in the heart.
He later claimed that he wanted to protect his parents from any embarrassment they might have because of his legal troubles. Kinkel put his mother's body in the garage and his father's body in the bathroom. All night he listened to the same song from the movie Romeo and Juliet. On May 21, 1998, Kinkel drove his mother's Ford to school. He put on a long waterproof coat to hide his weapon: hunting knife, a rifle and two pistols, as well as ammunition.
He killed two students and wounded 24. As he reloaded his gun, several students managed to disarm him. In November 1999, Kinkel was sentenced to 111 years in prison without the possibility of parole. At his sentencing, Kinkel apologized to the court for the murders of his parents and school students.



7) Cindy Collier and Shirley Wolf
In 1983, Cindy Collier and Shirley Wolfe began looking for victims for their entertainment. Usually it was vandalism or car theft, but one day the girls showed how sick they really were. One day they knocked on the door of an unfamiliar house, and an elderly woman opened it. Seeing two young girls of 14-15 years old, the old woman without hesitation let them into the house, hoping for an interesting conversation over a cup of tea. And she got it, the girls chatted for a long time with the sweet old lady, entertaining her interesting stories. Shirley grabbed the old woman by the neck and held her, and Cindy went to the kitchen to get a knife to give it to Shirley. After receiving the knife, Shirley stabbed the old woman 28 times. The girls fled the crime scene, but were soon arrested.



8) Joshua Phyllis
Joshua Phillips was 14 when his neighbor went missing in 1998. Seven days later, his mother began to notice an unpleasant odor coming from under the bed. Under the bed she discovered the body of the missing girl, who had been beaten to death. When she asked her son, he said that he accidentally hit the girl in the eye with a bat, she started screaming, he panicked and began hitting her until she was silent. The jury didn't believe his story, and he was charged with first-degree murder.



9)Wili Bosquet
By the age of 15, in 1978, Vili Bosquet's record already included more than 2,000 crimes in New York. He never knew his father, but he knew that the man had been convicted of murder and considered it a "courageous" crime. At that time, in the United States, according to the criminal code, there was no criminal liability for minors, so Bosquet boldly walked the streets with a knife or pistol in his pocket. Ironically, it was he who became the precedent for revising this provision. Under the new law, children as young as 13 can be tried as adults for excessive cruelty.



10)Jesse died
And finally, a little story about Jesse Pomeroy.
Jesse Pomeroy is not the bloodiest maniac in history, but he is definitely one of the most brutal. Pomeroy has two deaths to his name - those whom he failed to kill, he cruelly and sophisticatedly tortured. The worst thing about all this is that he started killing at the age of 12, and at the age of 16 he was sentenced to death by a court. The criminal was nicknamed "Marble Eye".
Jesse was born in 1859 in Boston to lower middle class parents Charles and Ruth Pomeroy. Pomeroys never existed happy family: Charles drank and had an explosive temper. Walking with their father behind the outhouse meant only one thing for Jesse and his brother: now they were going to be beaten. Before beginning the punishment, Charles stripped his children naked, so that the connection between pain, punishment and sexual satisfaction was firmly imprinted in Jessie's mind. Later, the boy repeatedly recreated the same picture, tormenting his young victims.
The Pomeroy family did not keep animals at home, because any attempt to have animals ended in the death of the animals. Ruth dreamed of lovebirds, but was afraid to have them: at one time the birds lived at home, but one fine day they were found with their necks curled. And after Ruth saw Jesse tormenting the neighbor's kitten, the idea of ​​having a pet at home completely disappeared.
Like many killers who start with animals, Jesse quickly got tired of such entertainment and began to look for victims among people. Of course, he chose those who were smaller and weaker than him. Pomeroy's first victim was William Payne. In December 1871, two men walking past a small house near Powder Horn Hill in south Boston heard faint screams. When they went inside, they were dumbfounded by what they saw. Four-year-old Billy Payne was suspended by his wrists from a ceiling beam. The half-naked child was almost unconscious. The men immediately untied the boy and only then saw that his back was covered with huge red welts. Billy could not tell the police anything intelligible about the criminal, and they could only hope that this was an isolated incident.
Alas, this turned out not to be the case. In February 1872, Jesse lured seven-year-old Tracy Hayden to the vicinity of Powder Horn, promising him to “show the soldiers.” Once in a secluded place, Jesse tied Tracy up and began torturing him. Hayden's front teeth were knocked out, his nose was broken, and his eyes were blackened with blood. Hayden also could not tell the police anything except that the tormentor had brown hair and that he promised to cut off his penis. With this description, there was nothing the police could do to prevent further attacks. But it was clear that the criminal was clearly not himself and another similar case was a matter of time.
In the early spring of 1872, Jesse brought eight-year-old Robert Mayer to his den - the boy believed that his new acquaintance would take him to the circus. Having undressed Robert, Pomeroy began to beat him with a stick and forced him to repeat curses after himself. Mayer later told police that his tormentor masturbated during the torture. Having experienced an orgasm, Jesse released Robert, threatening to kill him if he told anyone about what had happened.
Boston parents have launched a hunt for the maniac. Adults forbade their children to talk to unfamiliar teenagers, hundreds of teenagers were interrogated, several raids were organized, but the pervert eluded the police over and over again. Jesse carried out the next massacre in mid-July in the same hut on Powder Horn Hill. With seven-year-old George Pratt, whom he promised to pay 25 cents for help with housework, he did exactly the same as with Robert, in addition, tearing off a piece of his cheek with his teeth, slashing his nails until they bled, and piercing his entire body with a long sewing needle. Pomeroy tried to gouge out his victim's eye, but the boy somehow miraculously managed to wriggle free. As a farewell, Jesse took a bite of meat from George's buttock and ran away.
Less than a month had passed since Pomeroy kidnapped six-year-old Harry Austin, whom he dealt with according to his favorite scenario. This time he took a knife with him and plunged it into Harry's right and left side and between his collarbones. After that, he tried to cut off the boy's penis, but he was scared off and ran away. Just six days later, Jesse lured seven-year-old Joseph Kennedy to the swamp, cut him with a knife and forced him to repeat a parody of a prayer in which words from Scripture were replaced with obscenities. When Joseph refused, Pomeroy slashed his face with a knife and washed him with salt water.
Six days later, a five-year-old boy was found tied to a pole near the railroad tracks in South Boston. He said that he was lured here by an older boy, promising to show the soldiers, but the description of the criminal turned out to be much more valuable. Robert Gould did the police a huge favor by explaining that he had been attacked by "the boy with the white eye." Pomeroy's right eye was indeed completely white - both the iris and the pupil - either due to a cataract or viral infection. This is how Jesse got his nickname, which the whole of Boston recognized: “Marble Eye.”
As often happens with serial killers, Pomeroy was arrested almost by accident. On September 21, 1872, police officers came to Jesse's school with Joseph Kennedy, but he was unable to identify his tormentor. For some unknown reason, while returning home after school, Pomeroy walked into the police station. Since he never showed much remorse for his crimes, it can be assumed that for him this was part of a game with the police. Joseph was just at the police station when Pomeroy entered. Seeing his victim, Jesse turned around and walked towards the exit, but Joseph had already noticed him and pointed out the offender to the police.
Pomeroy was locked in a cell and interrogated, but he stubbornly refused. Only when he was threatened with a hundred-year imprisonment did he confess everything. Justice was done swiftly. The court sent Jesse to the Westboro House of Correction, where he was to remain until he turned 18. However, he was soon released on parole, and six weeks later he was back to his old ways.
On March 18, 1874, ten-year-old Katie Curren walked into Ruth Pomeroy's clothing store, which Jesse was opening that day. The girl asked if there were notebooks in the store, and Jesse suggested that she go down to the basement - there was a store there that definitely sold them. Going down the stairs, Katie realized that she had been deceived, but it was too late: Pomeroy put his hand over her mouth and cut her throat. He dragged the body to the toilet and threw stones at it. When the girl’s body was discovered, it turned out that her head was completely crushed, and the upper part of her body had decomposed to such an extent that it was not possible to determine what wounds were on it. However, experts immediately determined that Katie’s stomach and genitals were mutilated with particular cruelty.
Naturally, Katie's disappearance caused panic. The girl's mother, Mary, went in search of her. The salesman of one of the stores where Katie went to buy a notebook told Mary that he had sent the girl to the Pomeroys. Hearing this, Mary almost fainted: she had heard a lot about Jesse. On the way to the Pomeroy store, she met a police captain with whom she shared her experiences, and he assured her that Jesse did not pose any danger - he had undergone rehabilitation in a correctional home, and in addition, he had never attacked girls. They turned Mary home, reassuring the woman that her daughter was most likely just lost, and within 24 hours they would find her and bring her home.
Jesse's thirst, meanwhile, did not subside. Despite the danger of being caught, he still tried to lure children into abandoned houses. Most potential victims were smart enough to refuse his offers, but five-year-old Harry Field couldn't resist. Jesse asked him to show him the way to Vernon Street, promising to give him five cents. Having brought Pomeroy to the desired street, Harry asked for his reward, and then Jesse pushed him into the arch and ordered him to remain silent. Having wandered through the streets in search of a place suitable for execution, Pomeroy found a secluded corner, but luck that day was clearly on Harry’s side: a neighbor, Jesse, passed by, who knew about his reputation. The boy shouted at Pomeroy, and while they were arguing, little Harry ran away.
The next baby was much less lucky. In April 1874, four-year-old Horace Millen went to the bakery to buy a cupcake when he met Jesse along the way and suggested they go shopping together. Having bought a cupcake, Horace shared it with Jesse, who, in gratitude, invited the child to go to the port to look at the ships. Jesse decided that he would kill Horace as soon as he saw the baby. Therefore, he specifically chose a secluded place where no one could disturb him. Having reached the swamp near the port, he invited Horace to rest, and as soon as the boy sat down, Jesse slashed him in the throat with a knife. Frustrated that he failed to kill the baby the first time, he began to fiercely strike him anywhere. The police found numerous wounds on the child's hands and forearms, which meant that Horace was alive and resisting during most of the fight. In the end, Jesse managed to cut his victim's throat, but did not rest on this and continued to strike, mainly in the groin area. Pomeroy gouged out baby Pomeroy's right eye through the boy's closed eyelid, and an investigator later counted at least 18 wounds on Horace's chest.
The boy's body was discovered a few hours after he was killed, and by the evening of the same day, Horace's body was identified. The most logical suspect was Pomeroy, who was immediately taken to the station and bombarded with questions: where had he been all day? Who could see him? Does he know Horace Millen? Why are there fresh scratches on his face? Jesse answered all the questions in detail, but he could not answer the most important one - what he did from 11 to 15.
After the interrogation, Pomeroy was taken to a cell, where he immediately fell asleep, while the police, meanwhile, made casts of traces from the crime scene. The pattern of the footprints completely matched the pattern of the soles of Jesse's shoes, so they announced his arrest. However, he denied everything. “You can’t prove anything,” Pomeroy repeated. Captain Henry Dyer acted cunningly: he invited Jesse to go to the funeral home to look at Horace’s body - they say, if you are innocent, then you have nothing to fear. After hesitating, Pomeroy said he didn't want to go, but the detectives took him to the undertaker anyway. Seeing the mutilated body of little Horace, Pomeroy could not stand it and confessed to the murder. He told police he had no idea how serious the crime was. “I'm sorry I did this,” he managed through tears. “Please don't tell my mom.”
Newspapers trumpeted the news of the maniac's capture all over the east coast. No one remembered the presumption of innocence: everyone unanimously considered Jesse guilty. On December 10, 1874, the court admitted his guilt. After the verdict, the case remained only with the signature of the governor - Pomeroy was sentenced to death. However, William Gaston refused to sign. The governor's council voted for the death penalty twice, but Gaston was adamant. Only for the third time did the Council vote to replace the execution with life imprisonment, and only then did the governor assure this decision.

1. Mary Bell

Is the Great Outlaw Girl of 1968 UK. The girl became famous for killing two of her own younger brothers.

Mary was the first child in the family; her mother gave birth to her at the age of 17. The child was not wanted; shortly before giving birth, the mother tried to poison herself; the doctors managed to save her. Four years later, she did the same with her daughter. Having many mental disorders, the mother could not raise her children normally. She never sat down to have dinner with her family, only if her plate of food was placed in the corner of the room. The father pretended to be an uncle so that the family would receive benefits.

From childhood, Mary Bell was distinguished by a special mindset and quick wit; she had a wild imagination and was a dreamer. She told stories about her “uncle’s” farm and her personal black stallion. She believed that in the future she would become a nun and constantly read Bibles (she had about five of them). She never allowed any relatives or other children near her, except for her neighbor, 13-year-old Norma. The girls were united difficult life in the worst area of ​​the city.

2. Jon Venables and Robert Thompson


In 1993, ten-year-old John and his friend Robert forcibly took two-year-old boy James Bulger near a shopping center. The mother decided to punish the baby in this way and did not take him to the store with her. When she returned, the child was gone.


Surveillance cameras recorded how two guys forcibly took James away. What happened next shocked everyone. John and Robert took the child to the railroad, doused him with paint, beat him, raped him, and left him to die on the tracks so that the train would run over him and everyone would think it was an accident.

3. Alice Bustamant


Elizabeth Olten was just 9 in 2009 when she was killed by 14-year-old Alice Bustamante. She considered herself a kind of “informal” person, like goths or emo. It was fearless, sharp and a little wild. Having two younger brothers, Bustaman constantly mocked them by playing imaginary games. cruel games.

The girl was ruled by pure interest. “What does a criminal feel when he kills?” - it was to this question that Alice received the answer by beating a little girl, strangling her and finally cutting her throat.

Two months later, the girl confessed where she buried Elizabeth’s corpse. All this time, volunteers combed the forest, but their efforts were in vain.


4. George Junius Stinney Jr.


14-year-old George was sentenced to death for the murder of two little girls.
Stinny admitted that he wanted to make love to the older girl, but she refused. Then he switched to a more cruel method, but his nine-year-old girlfriend still stood in his way. Both victims for a long time resisted and George got tired of fighting. He then took a large iron rod and beat the girls to death with it, repeatedly hitting them on the head with the iron object.

He was charged with first-degree murder the very next day. Locals They rebelled and the young man was transported to Colombia, where he was sentenced to death that same year.

5. Bari Lucatis


In 1996, Bari, dressed in his best Wild West cowboy attire, walked into his algebra class in Washington, DC. Of course, his classmates did not take this outfit well and began to make fun of the guy, calling him stupid. At that moment, they did not suspect that a rifle, a pistol and 78 rounds of ammunition were hidden under their clothes.

In a split second, Bari opened fire directly on his classmates. The first to die was 14-year-old Manuel Vela, followed by a classmate who was shot in the chest. More than 20 students were injured and two were killed. But the guy made a mistake by allowing people to collect the wounded, and the enraged teacher snatched the weapon from Lucatis’s hands.

6. Kipland Kinkel


Kipland Kinkel was expelled from an Oregon high school in 1998 at the “vulnerable” age of fifteen because of a gun he brought into class to show off. Instead of contacting law enforcement agencies the guy was simply sent home.

He returned, but this time he took a rifle with him, made his way into the school cafeteria and opened fire. One student died immediately after the first shots, another died a few minutes later, 8 people were wounded. As a result of the panic and crush, a fire started from which 10 more students were injured. When police arrived, Kinkel was disarmed and taken into custody, but they underestimated the intelligence of the boy who had hidden the knife. Fortunately for the police, he was not as skilled with a blade as he was with a rifle. Kipland claimed he wanted to commit suicide.

When the task force burst into the criminal's house, they found the father and mother dead. There were explosive traps all over the house. To make the scene even more horrific, he booby-trapped the mother's body.

7. Cindy Collier and Shirley Wolk


While Cyndi Lauper was playing on the radio in every home in 1983, Cyndi Collier and Shirley Wolk were having fun stealing cars and vandalizing.

On this day, the girls knocked on the house of an elderly woman. The unsuspecting old lady happily let in two 13 and 14 year old girls for just a nice conversation over tea.

They began to communicate with the old woman, playing with her like a cat with a mouse. Then they dropped all pretense and turned into crazed killers. Shirley grabbed the woman by the neck and held her while Cindy found a butcher knife in the kitchen and threw it to her. Shirley Wolf plunged a knife into the body and repeated this 28 times while the old woman begged not to kill.

The girls happily admitted what they had done and said that they would like to repeat it again someday.

8. Joshua Phyllis


Joshua was 14 years old in 1998 when his 8-year-old neighbor went missing. A week later, his mother began to notice a pungent odor coming from under the bed. What the mother discovered was something she never expected to see in life.

It was the missing girl - dead, bloodied, beaten to death. The mother asked what happened. To which Joshua replied: “I accidentally hit a girl in the eye at a baseball game.” She screamed and I panicked and started hitting her head with a stone.”

But the jury and the judge did not believe in such an excuse, since it is unclear why Joe beat the girl to death and later hid the body.

9. Willie Bosquet


When it comes to crime at a young age, Willie is called an anomaly. At the age of just 15, he already had nearly 2,000 crimes in New York.

All his adult life he did not know his father, he only knew that he was in prison for murder. Willie is proud of his parent’s “heroic” act.

Previously, the law on punishing juvenile offenders was slightly different. Children could not be held responsible for their actions until they were 21 years old. Willie knew this very well and understood that he was in no danger if he killed, stabbed or raped someone.

After the crimes he committed, the laws regarding minors were revised. And after the story with Willy Bosquet, the new law, it read: Children of excessively aggressive behavior who are over 13 years of age bear full responsibility for crimes and will be sentenced at the same level as an adult.


10. Jesse Pomeroy

Such criminals come from the “old school”. In a world of mentally unstable, insane, violent child killers, Jesse takes the lead.

In 1874, at the age of fourteen, Jesse was arrested for the murder of a 4-year-old boy. But this was not the first act of violence, Pomeroy spent the last three years bullying and torturing other children. His first arrest was for sexual violence over seven little boys when he himself was barely 11 years old. Then he killed a ten-year-old girl, completely mutilating her body. A little later, his mother’s body was found near the store. Local residents were against the death penalty for such a young guy, so he was sentenced to forty years in solitary confinement.

Everyone knows the expression “children are the flowers of life,” but it does not always justify itself. History knows many examples when very young girls and boys broke the law: they stole, committed petty offenses and showed cruelty. Today we remember the most famous juvenile criminals who went down in history as cold-blooded killers.

Jesse Pomeroy

Perhaps one of the most brutal child killers is Jesse Pomeroy, nicknamed “Marble Eye.” The little maniac had a specific appearance - a cleft lip and an eyesore. Pomeroy was born in Boston in 1859.

The father beat the boy after stripping him naked. Jesse's aggression as a teenager was directed at children younger age. At age 12, he tied a boy named Payne to a crossbar and beat him unconscious. In 1872, he tortured three more children. Then the police managed to catch the teenager, he was sent to a reform school, where he stayed until 1874.

Jesse Pomeroy almost became the second Jack the Ripper


Shortly after his release, it broke out new scandal: Pomeroy was accused of killing two girls. The body of one victim, Merry Curran, was found in the basement of the house where he lived with his family, and another girl was found mutilated and dismembered in a Boston suburb. Jesse was sentenced to death, but execution was delayed due to his young age. A little later, the punishment was changed, sentencing Pomeroy to life in solitary confinement. He died in 1932 at the age of 72.

Mary Bell

Charming little girl Mary Bell received the nickname “spawn of the devil” and “monster child.”


She was born in Newcastle in 1957. Mary grew up in dysfunctional family, her father did not work, and her mother suffered from mental disorders and once tried to poison her daughter with pills. According to other sources, she proposed Mary to men when she was only 4 years old. The girl’s cruel nature was revealed early: at the age of 11, she, together with a 13-year-old friend, committed two murders with an interval of several months. Little boys aged 3 and 4 were strangled. Mary had her initials carved into the body of one of them.

Pretty girl Mary Bell committed two murders at age 11


The court found her guilty of manslaughter and took into account a mitigating circumstance - doctors diagnosed Mary with a psychopathic disorder. She was released in 1980 and now lives in the UK under a new name and surname.

Arkady Neyland

The public attention was focused on the “Neyland case” Soviet Union and foreign countries. Neiland was born in Leningrad in 1949 into a simple family. He began to run away from home early and was registered in the children's room of the police. At the age of 12, his mother sent Neyland to a boarding school, from which he soon fled.


After another arrest for theft, Neyland decided on a “big deal” - robbery and murder. As he later said in court, he wanted to get money and go to Sukhumi to “start new life" On January 27, Neyland, under the guise of a postal worker, entered the apartment where 37-year-old housewife Larisa Kupreeva and her three year old son. Neyland hacked the woman and child to death with an ax that he had previously stolen from their parents. In the apartment he found money and a camera, with which he took several photographs of the murdered woman in obscene poses. He hoped to sell these photos later. Neyland decided to cover his tracks, turned on the gas and set fire to the wooden floor, but firefighters managed to put out the fire almost immediately. He forgot his ax at the crime scene. On January 30, Neyland was detained in Sukhumi.

A USSR court sentenced Neyland to death, although he was 15 years old.


He did not deny it, admitted to what he had done and helped the investigation. He also suggested that “everything will be forgiven” for him as a minor. The trial of Neyland attracted attention not only in the USSR, but also abroad. The teenager was sentenced to death, despite the fact that he was only 15 years old (this penalty could be applied to those who had reached 18). The verdict forced the foreign press and the Soviet intelligentsia to talk about disregard for the law and oppression of individual freedom in the Union. On August 11, 1964, Neyland was shot.

Jon Venelbs and Robert Thompson

These 10-year-olds are responsible for the death of three-year-old boy James Patrick Bulger. The mother left the child unattended in the supermarket, where Venelbs and Thompson noticed him. They took the child away and brutally beat him with an iron rod and stones. After this, the baby was smeared with paint and thrown onto the tracks, hoping that they would be able to present everything as an accident. The crime was discovered thanks to recordings from a surveillance camera in a supermarket.


The trial took place in 1993, the boys were sentenced to 10 years in prison, but were released early. In March 2010, Venelbs was again sent to prison for violating parole conditions. The location of the second killer, Thompson, is being kept secret by UK authorities.

Graham Young

Young was a gifted child who became interested in science very early. Graham's mother died when he was only three months old, and the boy grew up with his aunt's family until his father, who remarried, took him in. Young was an excellent student and one day received a gift from his father - a set of chemicals for conducting experiments. Since then, Graham has been spotted more than once engaged in a strange activity - he rummaged through garbage dumps in the hope of finding ingredients for poisons. Young conducted experiments on mice and frogs, and then on his school friend. One day his stepmother found a bottle of ready-made poison in his possession and demanded that he stop the dangerous experiments. Then the boy began adding antimony to her food. Soon the stepmother died, and Graham was detained on suspicion of murder.


It was not possible to prove anything - the woman’s body was cremated, and it was not possible to conduct an examination. Young continued his experiments, adding poison to the food of his father and classmate. Soon the relatives began to suspect the boy. The police again detained Graham, who did not answer for a long time and began to brag about his knowledge and crimes. At the trial, he said that he realized that he was doing “not very well,” but could not stop. Young was declared insane and sent for treatment to a psychiatric hospital, where he could secretly engage in his favorite activity - making poisons.

Graham Young poisoned his stepmother, aunt, father and schoolmate


According to some evidence, he could synthesize poison from bay leaves. Soon, one of the hospital patients died from potassium cyanide poisoning, but suspicion did not fall on Young. True, several cases of serious poisoning among patients and staff were recorded afterwards. Young left the clinic at age 23. He got a job several times, where he continued his experiments - adding various poisons to the food and drinks of his colleagues and bosses. Police arrested Young, charged him with two counts of murder and sentenced him to life in prison. In 1972, at the age of 25, he began serving his sentence. Young died in 1990 in Parkhurst prison on the Isle of Wight.

The mention of murderers makes your blood run cold, but the worst thing is when these murderers are children. It’s hard to even comprehend that a child could be capable of murder, and such cruel ones at that. Here are stories about bloodthirsty killers in the form of children, causing panic.

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Mary Bell is one of the most "famous" girls in British history. In 1968, at the age of 11, together with her 13-year-old friend Norma, she strangled two boys, 4 and 3 years old, two months apart. Brian Howe (3) was found dead under a mountain of weeds and grass just days after the death of Martin Brown (4). His hair had been cut, puncture marks were found on his thighs, and his genitals had been partially cut off. In addition to these injuries, there was a mark in the shape of the letter “M” on his stomach. When the investigation turned to Mary Bell, she gave herself away by detailing a pair of broken scissors that the girl said Brian was playing with. The scissors became irrefutable evidence of Mary's guilt.

Family background may have influenced Mary's unusual behavior. For a long time, she thought she was the daughter of a common criminal, Billy Bell, but to this day her real biological father is unknown. Mary claimed that her mother Betty, who was a prostitute, forced her to engage in sexual acts with men - especially her mother's clients - from the age of 4.

The trial ended, but according to the law, Mary could not be sentenced to prison because she was a minor. The investigation concluded that Mary's stay in a psychiatric hospital or a boarding school for troubled teenagers was also fraught with risk. Therefore, until she came of age, she was kept in a special shelter for asocial children, and then in the Moore-Curt prison with minimal supervision. During the trial, Mary's mother repeatedly sold Mary's story to the press. The girl was only 11 years old, and she was released only after 23 years. Now she lives under a different name and surname. This case is well known as the Mary Bell Case.

Jon Venables and Robert Thompson were sentenced to life imprisonment, despite the fact that they were only ten years old at the time of the murder. Their crime sent shockwaves throughout Britain. On February 12, 1993, the mother of two-year-old James Bulger left her son at the door of a butcher shop, thinking it wouldn't take her long to get back because there was no line outside the store. She didn't think she was seeing her son in last time... John and Robert were outside the same store, doing their usual business: robbing people, shoplifting, stealing things when the clerks turned their backs, climbing on chairs in restaurants until they were thrown out. The guys had the idea to kidnap the boy and then make it look like he was lost. (Pictured: Jon Venables)

John and Robert forcibly dragged the boy onto the railway, where they threw paint at him, brutally beat him with sticks, bricks and an iron rod, threw stones, and also sexually abused the little boy, and then laid his body on the railway tracks, hoping that the baby would run over the train and his death will be mistaken for an accident. James' body was discovered, but a medical examiner's examination showed the boy died before he was run over by the train. (Pictured: Robert Thompson)

A 15-year-old girl killed her younger neighbor and hid the body. Alice Bustamant planned the murder by choosing right time, and on October 21, she attacked a neighbor’s girl, began to choke her, slit her throat and stabbed her. A police sergeant who questioned the child killer after 9-year-old Elizabeth disappeared said Bustamante confessed to where she hid the slain fourth-grader's body and led officers to a wooded area where the body was located. She stated that she wanted to know how the killers felt.

On June 16, 1944, a record was set in the United States - George Stinney, who was 14 years old, became the youngest person executed in the United States. George was convicted of the murders of two girls, eleven-year-old Betty June Binniker and eight-year-old Mary Emma Thames, whose bodies were found in a ravine. The girls had severe skull injuries caused by blows from a rail spike, which was later found. George confessed to the crime and also to the fact that he initially tried to have sex with Betty, but in the end it turned out to be murder. George was charged with first-degree murder, found guilty, and sentenced to death by electric chair. The sentence was carried out in the state of South Carolina and overturned in 2014, 70 years after the execution.

On May 20, 1998, Kinkel was expelled from school for trying to buy stolen weapons from a classmate. He confessed to his crime and was released from the police. At home, his father told him that he would have been sent to boarding school if he had not cooperated with the police. At 3:30 p.m., Kip pulled out his rifle, hidden in his parents' room, loaded it, walked into the kitchen and shot his father. At 18:00 the mother returned. Kinkel told her he loved her and shot her - twice in the back of the head, three times in the face and once in the heart. He later claimed that he wanted to protect his parents from any embarrassment they might have because of his legal troubles.

On May 21, 1998, Kinkel drove to school in his mother's Ford. He put on a long waterproof coat to hide his weapons: a hunting knife, a rifle and two pistols, as well as ammunition. He killed two students and wounded 24. As he reloaded his gun, several students managed to disarm him. In November 1999, Kinkel was sentenced to 111 years in prison without the possibility of parole. During the sentencing, Kinkel apologized to the court for the murders of his parents and school students.

Cindy Collier and Shirley Wolfe

In 1983, Cindy Collier and Shirley Wolfe began looking for victims for their entertainment. Usually it was vandalism or car theft, but one day the girls showed how crazy they really were. They knocked on the door of an unfamiliar house, and an elderly woman opened it. Seeing two young girls of 14-15 years old, the old lady without hesitation let them into the house, hoping for an interesting conversation over a cup of tea, and she got it - the girls chatted for a long time with the sweet old lady, entertaining her with interesting stories. Shirley then grabbed the old woman by the neck and held her, while Cindy went to the kitchen to get a knife. Grabbing a knife, Shirley inflicted 28 stab wounds on the old woman. The girls fled the crime scene, but were soon arrested.

February 2, 1996 in the state high school There was a shooting and hostage incident in Frontier, Washington. Barry Loukatis put on his cowboy suit and went to the school algebra room where his class had a lesson. Most of his classmates found Barry's costume funny and Barry's behavior a little strange. They didn't know what the suit was hiding, but there were two pistols, a rifle and 78 rounds of ammunition. He opened fire, his first victim being 14-year-old Manuel Vela. A few seconds later, his victims were a teacher and another classmate. The students were held hostage for 10 minutes until the school physical teacher managed to disarm the boy.

He was also reported to have shouted, “This is more interesting than talking about algebra, isn’t it?” This is a quote from Stephen King's novel Fury, in which main character kills two teachers and takes the class hostage. Barry is currently serving two life sentences followed by 205 years.

On November 3, 1998, when Joshua Phillips was 14, his neighbor went missing. One morning, Joshua's mother was cleaning his room when she discovered a wet spot under her son's waterbed. While trying to find a leak, she noticed that the mattress was taped together. Inside the mattress, Mrs. Phillips discovered the body of her missing 8-year-old neighbor, Maddie Clifton, whom the entire town had been searching for for seven days.

To this day, Phillips has not voiced a motive for the murder. He said he accidentally hit the girl in the head with a baseball bat, she started screaming, he panicked, and then he dragged her into his room and started hitting her until she was silent. The jury didn't believe his story, and he was charged with first-degree murder. Since Joshua was under the age of 16, he avoided the death penalty. But he was given life without parole.

Vili Bosquet's service record by the age of 15, in 1978, according to him own confession, there have already been more than 2,000 crimes in New York. He did not know his father, but he claimed that his father had been convicted of murder and considered it a "courageous" crime. At that time, in the United States, according to the Criminal Code, there was no criminal liability for minors, so Bosquet boldly walked the streets with a knife or pistol in his pocket. On March 19, 1978, he shot and killed Moises Perez, and on March 27, the namesake of the first victim, Noel Perez.

Ironically, the Willy Bosquet case became a precedent for reconsidering the lack of criminal liability for minors. Under the new law, children as young as 13 can be tried as adults for excessive cruelty.

At age 13, Eric Smith was bullied because of his thick glasses, freckles, long red hair and another feature: protruding, elongated ears. This feature is side effect epilepsy medication his mother took during pregnancy. Smith was accused of killing a four-year-old child named Derrick Robbie. On August 2, 1993, the baby was strangled, his head was pierced with a large stone, and in addition, the child was raped with a small branch.

The psychiatrist diagnosed him with an emotionally unstable personality disorder, due to which a person cannot control his inner anger. Smith was convicted and sent to prison. During his six years in prison, he was denied parole five times.

Who would have thought that constant viewing wrestling competition could lead to murder six year old girl named Tiffany Ownik. Kathleen Grosset-Tate was Tiffany's nanny. One evening Kathleen left the child with her son, who was watching television, while she went upstairs. Around ten in the evening she shouted at the children to be quiet, but did not go downstairs, thinking that the children were playing. Forty-five minutes later, Lionel called his mother, saying that Tiffany was not breathing. He explained that he wrestled with the girl, making a grab, and then slammed her head into the table.

A pathologist later concluded that the girl's death was caused by a ruptured liver. In addition, experts testified to skull and rib fractures, as well as 35 other injuries. Tate later changed his story and said he jumped on the girl from the stairs. He was sentenced to life without parole, but his sentence was revised in 2001 due to the inmate's mental incompetence. He was released in 2004 on probation for ten years.

Craig Price (August 1974)

Joan Heaton, 39, and her two daughters, Jennifer, 10, and Melissa, 8, were found dead in their home on September 4, 1989. Police said Joan had approximately 60 stab wounds, while the girls each had approximately 30. The stabbings were so severe that the knife blade broke and became lodged in Melissa's body. Authorities believed that theft was the main motive for the crime, and that the suspect, when noticed, grabbed a kitchen knife and, in a state of passion, inflicted these wounds. It was also believed that the robber must have been someone from the area and he must have had a wound on his arm.

Craig Price was caught by police later that day with his arm in a bandage but said he had smashed a car window. The police didn't believe his story. They searched his room, finding a knife, gloves and other evidence. He also confessed to another murder that had taken place in the area two years earlier. The authorities suspected him in that case, which also began with theft and ended like the Heaton case. Craig was given a life sentence the day before he turned sixteen.

James Pomeroy, born in November 1859 in Charleston, Massachusetts, is listed as the youngest person convicted of first-degree murder in the state's history. Pomeroy began his abuse of other children at the age of 11. He lured seven children to deserted areas, where he stripped them, tied them up and tortured them using a knife or poking pins into their bodies. He was caught and sent to reform school, where he was to remain until he turned 21. But after a year and a half he was released for good behavior. (Pictured at right is Jesse Pomeroy in 1925)

Three years later, he changed - from a bad guy to a monster. He kidnapped and killed a 10-year-old girl named Katie Curran, and was also charged with the murder of a 4-year-old boy whose mutilated body was found in Dorchester Bay. Despite the lack of evidence of the boy's murder, he was found guilty of Katie's death. The body lay in a pile of ash in the basement of Pomeroy's mother's store. Jesse was sentenced to life in solitary confinement, where he died from natural death at the age of 72 years.