FULL TEXT: London, June 25. – The “Daily Express” Moscow correspondent says that Anastasia Permiakova, a gipsy clairvoyant, with her husband and six male and female accomplices, has been sentenced to death for the horrible murders of 20 women and girls. Permiakova escaped from prison during the revolution while serving a murder sentence. She then organised a murder gang, pillaged villages and held up trains. Afterwards she settled down as a clairvoyant at Perm. She had a huge clientele of women, many of whom mysteriously disappeared. The crimes were undetected till Permiakova called at a solicitor's house and told his beautiful daughter her future. She ordered the girl to bare her neck to see if she had a lucky mark and then murdered her with a hatchet. The police found in the woman's flat ten bloodstained hatchets. Thirteen other accomplices received long sentences.
[“Ghoulish
Creature - Organised Atrocities, Clairvoyant Guise. Twenty Persons
Slain.” (Reuter), The Northern Advocate (Whangarel, New Zealand), Jul.
27, 1924, p. 5]
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For more Violence by Women cases involving axes and hatchets, see: Give ‘Em the Axe
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For more cases of this type, see: Occult Female Serial Killers
FULL TEXT (translated from German): These days, the
Moscow Supreme Court sentenced a woman Anastasia Permiakova to death for
killing more than twenty women and children out of sheer bloodlust. She founded
a band of robbers in the city of Perm which, under her leadership, carried out
a large number of robberies, many of which involved violence. The woman then
settled in Perm as a fortune teller. Many of her visitors disappeared
mysteriously. Once what she had been
summoned to the home of a lawyer, because the daughter, who was about to marry,
wanted to know her future.
The fortune-teller asked the girl to turn around and
pull her hair up over her neck, so she could see if she had a certain sign of
happiness at the back of the throat. When the girl obeyed, the murderess pulled
out a small ax from under her clothes and killed her in a single blow. Then she
left the house unnoticed.
The death of the young girl, however, aroused great
outrage and the police searched into the dwelling of fortune-teller. There were
ten small axes there, all stained with human blood, two revolvers and a number
of bloodstained knives. In the course of the investigation, it was flawlessly
established.that she had committed over twenty murders against her visitors.
[“Twenty murders of a Russian fortune teller.” (Zwanzig Morde einer russischen
Wahrsagerin.) Innsbruster Nachrichten (Vienna, Austria), 18 August
1924, p. 4]
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FULL
TEXT: In diesen Tagen wurde vom Moskauer Obergericht eine Frau Anastasia
Permiakova zum Tode verurteilt, die aus reiner Mordlust mehr als zwanzig Frauen
und Kinder getötet hat. Sie gründete in der Stadt Perm eine Räuberbande, die
unter ihrer Führung eine grosse Auzahl von Räubereien ausführte, bei denen
viele Gewalttaten verübt wurden. Die Frau siess sich dann in Perm als
Wahrsagerin nieder.
Viele
ihrer Besucherinnen verschwanden aus geheimnisvolle Weife. Einmal was sie nach
dem Hause eines angejehenen Anwalls bestellt worden, weil die Tochter, die kurz
vor der Verheiratung stand, ihre Zukunst wissen wollte. Die Wahrsagerin bat das
Mädchen, sich umdzudreben und ihr Haar über den Nacken hochzunnehmen, damit sie
sehen könne, ob sie ein gewisses Glüdzeichen hinten am Halfe befässe.
Als
das Mädchen gehorchte, zog die Mörderin ein kleines Beil unter ihrer Kleidung
hervor und tötete sie mir einem einzigen
Schlage. Dann verliess sie unbemerkt das Haus. Der Tod des jungen Mädchen
erregte aber grosses Ausieben und die Polizei drang in die Behausung der
Wahrsagerin.
Man
fand dort zehn kleine Aexte, die alle Flecken von Menschenblut trugen, zwei
Revolver und eine Anzahl blutbesleckter Messer. Im Verlauf der Untersuchung
wurden über zwanzig Mordtaten einwandfrei festgestellt die sie an ihren
Besucherinnen begangen hatte.
[Zwanzig
Morde einer russischen Wahrsagerin. Innsbruster Nachrichten (Vienna, Austria),
18. August 1924, p. 4]
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FULL
TEXT: Der Oberste Gerichtshof in Moskau hat eine Frau Anastasia Permiakowa zum
Tode verurteilt, nachdem sie der Ermordung von über zwanzig Frauen und Mädchen
überführt war. Die Frau war zuerst Führerin einer Räuberbande in Perm. Nachdem
ihr bei diesem Gewerde das Handwerk gelegt war, liess sie sich in der gleichen
Stadt als Wahrsagerin nieder.
Wenn
ihre Kundinnen sie aussuchten, liess sie sie den Kopf vornüber benugen und das
Haar austösen, damit sie, wie sie sagte, nach bestimmien Malen in der Haut
suchen könne.
Sassen
die unglücklichen Opfer in dieser Henkersiellung da, schlug ihnen die
Permiakova mit einer Axt en Kopf ab.
Die
Tatsache, dass so viele Frauen nach einem Besuch bei der Wahrlagerin vermisst
wurden, veranlasste die Polizei, eine Haussuchung vorzunehmen.
Dabei
wurden mehrere blutige Aexte und Messer gefunden und ausserdem zwei Revolver.
Die
Verbrecherin erklärte, dass sie unter dem Zwange einer unwibersiehlichen
Mordblust hehandelt habe.
[Die
Wahrsagerin. Neues Wiener Journal (Vienna, Austria), 7. September 1924, p. 23]
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FULL TEXT (translated from German): The Supreme Court
in Moscow sentenced a woman Anastasia Permiakova to death after being convicted
of the murder of over twenty women and girls. The woman was first a leader of a
band of robbers in Perm. After she had done the craft in this trade, she
settled in the same city as a fortune teller.
When her customers came to her, she had them bend
their head over and push back their hair so that, as she said, she could look
for certain marks on the skin.
When the unfortunate victims sat in this
execution-posture, the Permiakova struck them with an ax on their heads.
The fact that so many women were missing following a
visit to the fortune-teller prompted the police to make a search.
Several bloody axes and knives were found, as well as
two revolvers.
The criminal explained that she had been under the influence of an uncontrollable compulsion to murder.
The criminal explained that she had been under the influence of an uncontrollable compulsion to murder.
[The
Fortune teller. Die
Wahrsagerin. Neues Wiener Journal (Vienna, Austria), 7. September 1924, p. 23]
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For more Violence by Women cases involving axes and hatchets, see: Give ‘Em the Axe
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For more cases of this type, see: Occult Female Serial Killers
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For similar cases, see: Female Serial Killer Bandits
For similar cases, see: Female Serial Killer Bandits
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Links to more cases: Female Serial Killers Who Like to Murder Women
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[1419-11/1/18; 1910-5/30/21]
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Links to more cases: Female Serial Killers Who Like to Murder Women
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Links to more Serial Killer Couples
[1419-11/1/18; 1910-5/30/21]
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