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Nikolay Alekseyevich SOLTYS

 
 
 
 
 

 

 

 

 
 
 
Classification: Spree killer
Characteristics: Parricide
Number of victims: 6
Date of murders: August 19, 2001
Date of arrest: August 30, 2001
Date of birth: May 19, 1974
Victims profile: His pregnant wife, Lyubov, 22 / His son Sergey, 3 / His aunt Galina Kukharskaya, 74, uncle Petr Kukharskiy, 75, and two of their grandchildren, Tatyana Kukharskaya and Dimitriy Kukharskiy, both 9
Method of murder: Stabbing with knife
Location: Sacramento, California, USA
Status: Committed suicide in Sacramento County Jail on February 13, 2002
 
 
 
 
 
 
photo gallery
 
 
 
 
 
 

Nikolay Alekseyevich Soltys (May 19, 1974 – February 13, 2002) was a fugitive charged by the United States District Court for the Eastern District of California in a federal and state arrest warrants for six murders of his family members in and around the Sacramento area in August, 2001.

Rampage and aftermath

On August 20 2001, Soltys, a Ukrainian immigrant, drove to the home of his aunt and uncle where he killed the couple and his two young cousins. Later on, Soltys stabbed his 23-year-old pregnant wife to death in their North Highlands home. He then drove his three-year-old son to a deserted field, attracted him to a box of toys and then murdered him and left him there. Soltys' car was found night in the vicinity of his mother's house, and a in search of the vehicle a note with information on location of his son was found. Soltys had driven to his mother's house and picked up his son after killing five other relatives.

On 23 August he became the 466th fugitive to be placed on the FBI's Ten Most Wanted list. On August 30, Soltys was arrested in the backyard of a family member's home without incident in Citrus Heights, California. He committed suicide in Sacramento County Jail on February 13, 2002.

Wikipedia.org

 
 

Nikolay Soltys

Classification: Mass Murderer - Family Annihilator
Born: Shumsk, Ukraine
Arrested: August 30, 2001
Date of Rampage: August 20, 2001
No. Victims: 6
Victim Profile: His wife, child, uncle aunt and two cousins
Warning Signs: Had a history of domestic violence and mental disease
M.O.:Stabbed to death
Location: Sacramento, California

Chronology of events

August 20, 2001 - For reasons unknown, Nikolay Soltys, a 27-year-old Ukrainian immigrant, stabbed to death his 22-year-old pregnant wife, Lyubov, at their home in North Highlands (1), a Sacramento suburb. Twenty minutes later he went to his uncle's home in nearby Rancho Cordova (2) were he killed his aunt and uncle, Galina Kukharskaya, 74, and Petr Kukharskiy, 75, and two of their grandchildren, Tatyana Kukharskaya and Dimitriy Kukharskiy. The two cousins were 9 years old. About an hour later Soltys went to his mother's house in Citrus Heights (4), another Sacramento suburb, from where he left with Sergey, his 3-year-old son. According to the mother Soltys seemed fine, and showed no sign of anything wrong. Police believe he was probably agitated and bloody, and cleaned up at her house before leaving.

Language problems between family members and police have hampered the investigation. Also basic mistrust of authorities in the Ukranian community have proved problematic. "Everybody's Russian -- neighbors, relatives, everybody," Sacramento County sheriff's Sergeant James Lewis said, adding, "We want to get this guy off the streets as quickly as possible." The last reported sighting of Soltys puts him driving with his son in a green 1998 Ford Explorer.

August 21, 2001 - Police discovered Soltys' Nissan Altima, with two family photographs inside with notes written in Russian on the back. One note had directions to the body of Sergey, his 3-year-old son. The second listed the slayings, suggesting that the victims were killed "for speaking out." As indicated on the picture, Sergey's body was found face down in a bloody cardboard box with his throat slit. The box was in the trash pile under a remote microwave tower outside Sacramento about a half-mile from the nearest road. The box had a several new toys inside, suggesting that the father lured the boy into the box with the toys before killing him. Sheriff's Detective Ron Garverick said two sets of footprints went into the area where the body was found. Only one set of footprints led out.

August 22, 2001 - Police in Sacramento searching for Nikolay Soltys, the 27-year-old Ukrainian immigrant suspected of stabbing to death his wife, child and four other family members, believe he could still be in the same Sacramento neighborhood where the killings occurred. They also canvassing Ukranian neighborhoods in San Francisco, Seattle and Charlotte, Noth Carolina, searching for the killer. Agents believe he could have gone as far as Binghamton, New York, where he once lived before moving to Sacramento. Fearing that he is not done killing family members, 14 of his relatives -- including his mother and brother -- were put under police protection in a motel in downtown Sacramento.

Soltys had a history of domestic violence before emmigrating to the United States. When his wife Lyobov was pregnant with Sergey, she told her brother Petro Nakonechny that Nikolay would beat her head against the wall until she fainted, then he would revive her with water and would beat her again. One account from the Ukraine paints a picture of police and family members coming to remove Lyobov from their home after a violent epidsode and a frantic Nikolay running around furiously and threatening them with an axe. Those who knew them said Nikolay never cared much for his son. In fact he resented the baby for taking away the attention from his wife. Though the had a volatile relationship, after emmigrating to the U.S. thgree years ago, Nikolay pinned for his wife until she came abouty a year ago to live with him in Sacramento.

At the time of the slayings, Nikolay was unemployed and on welfare. In the Ukraine he was trained as a shoemaker, but he really wanted to set up a automobile repair shop. He also considered careers as a paramedic and a a chiropractor, but his inability to learn English frustrated his hope of finding employment. Those who knew him said he was searching for meaning in his life and had difficulties focusing on his future.

August 23, 2001 - As the search for Nikolay Soltys has expanded nationwide, the family rampager was added to the FBI's Most Wanted list. Adding Soltys to the list means that there will be more publicity and manpower allocated to his capture, said Sacramento County Sheriff Lou Blanas. "Most wanted" posters of Soltys will be posted nationally and internationally, said Richard Baker, special agent in charge of the FBI's Sacramento office. Despite reports placing Soltys in the Southeast, police believe he is probably still in the Sacramento area. Also the reward fund for his arrest was raised to $70,000.

August 26, 2001 - With a police helicopter circling overhead, more than 5,000 members of Sacramento's Eastern European community of 70,000 packed into the Bethany Slavic Missionary Church for the funerals of four of the six slain family members.

August 30, 2001 - After a 10-day nationwide manhunt, Ukranian immigrant family annihilator Nikolay Soltys was captured at his mother's backyard in Sacramento where he was hiding under a desk. Soltys was arrested after his panicked family fled the home in a car and his brother called 911 from a framing shop several blocks away. According to Jennifer Murphy, an employess of the frame shop, Stepan Soltys was so nervous he, "kept pushing buttons 1-1-9, so I knew he wanted to dial 911. I brought him into the store and dialed 911 for him."

Apparently Soltys had sneaked into the yard during the night. Stephan saw him through a glass back door as he was having breakfast. Nikolay motioned for Stepan to be quiet, but Stepan instead assembled relatives in the garage, where police had installed a panic button. Neither the alarm nor a phone police had given the family worked, so the family piled into the car and fled. Unknown to them, there was two plainclothes detectives outside the house in an unmarked car. Once police determined that the suspect was in the backyard, the neighborhood was cordoned off and Soltys was arrested without insident.

Authorities believe Soltys had been staying in woods behind the house. A sleeping bag was found nearby, along with a backpack containing a knife "consistent with the murder weapon," Sacramento County Sheriff Lou Blanas said. At the time of his arrest Soltys had a metal potato peeler in his pocket and a map of the Sacramento area. He was barefoot, unshaven, dirty, shabbily dressed "and looked like he could have been hiding in a field somewhere," Blanas said.

September 6, 2001 - Sacramento County District Attorney Jan Scully charged Nikolay Soltys with the murder of his unborn child, bringing the total muder charges against him to seven. "Baby Soltys is a seventh victim and it's appropriate that all victims be charged, and that's what we have done," Scully said in a news conference. Investigators have been unable to establish a clear motive for the killing spree, other than he thought his wife and relatives were trying to poison him.

September 9, 2001 - Thousands of mourners in Shumsk, Ukraine, attended the funeral of Lyubov and Sergei Soltys, the immigrant mother and son killed by Nikolay Soltys, her husband (and father), in Sacramento. The two white coffins first arrived from Sacramento to the airport Ukraine's capital Kiev. Relatives then took the bodies to the victims' hometown of Shumsk, 220 miles away, in western Ukraine, for a burial ceremony. The first reports of the killings rattled this little town of one- and two-story brick homes in the western Ternopil region, and the whole town was overwhelmed with mourning. Most of Shumsk's 5,000 residents came to express their condolences.

February 13, 2002 - Ukrainian immigrant and family annihilator Nikolay Soltys was found hanged to death in his Sacramento jail cell. But Nikolay Soltys' attorney, Tommy Clinkenbeard, said he was not convinced the man took his own life, and the sheriff ordered a more extensive investigation. Soltys used a rope braided out of cloth ­ possibly from his bed sheet or a cast he was wearing on his leg ­ and a plastic bag, Blanas said. The rope was attached to a light fixture 5 feet off the ground. Blanas said the 6-foot Soltys apparently leaned against the rope until he lost consciousness. "This was not an instant death," said Clinkenbeard. "He was essentially choking to death." Soltys' body was in a corner of the cell out of view of the surveillance camera, Blanas said, and the microphone picked up no unusual noises. No suicide note was immediately found.

February 14, 2002 - Three separate psychologists said Sacramento killer Nikolay Soltys wasn't a suicide risk. He had a surveillance camera and hidden microphone monitoring his jail cell around the clock, and three guards checked on him hourly. Yet the Ukrainian immigrant and family annihilator somehow managed to hang himself in his cell at the Sacramento County Jail. "I can't put 2,200 officers over there to hold the hand of every inmate," said Sheriff Lou Blanas, who oversees the jail, adding that preliminary investigations indicated officers followed procedures.

Soltys had last appeared in court three days before killing himself in a wheelchair after jumping off a jail balcony in December. Jail officials said he had leaped from the second floor after he was ordered back to his cell. He was placed under a medical watch in October after he punctured his chest several times with a pencil. Clinkenbeard said he was merely imitating other inmates by giving himself a jailhouse tattoo. He was returned to his cell after psychiatrists decided he was not suicidal. Clinkenbeard had been considering an insanity please for his client, saying he believed Soltys may have been mentally damaged at birth or as a child.

Mayhem.net

 
 

Jailers: Accused killer Soltys commits suicide

CNN.com

February 14, 2002

SACRAMENTO, California (CNN) -- Nikolay Soltys, the Ukrainian immigrant accused of killing six members of his family and hiding from authorities for 10 days last summer, committed suicide early Wednesday at Sacramento County Jail, according to the sheriff's department.

Deputies found Soltys, 28, hanging in his cell during a routine check, Sgt. James Lewis said.

Sacramento County Sheriff Lou Blanas said he is "absolutely satisfied" that Soltys' death was a suicide.

Soltys was charged with the stabbing deaths of his pregnant wife, 3-year-old son, two 9-year-old cousins, an aunt and an uncle during a violent spree in late August 2001. He was arrested on August 30 after camping out and hiding in an abandoned home for 10 days. He was captured after family members spotted him in his mother's back yard and notified deputies.

Authorities said Soltys killed his wife, aunt, uncle and cousins and then drove to his mother's home, where he picked up his 3-year-old son, Sergei. Sergei's body was a day later in a cardboard box in a remote area, his throat slit

A note found in his abandoned car indicated that he had killed his relatives because they were "poisoning" his reputation. He later reportedly told authorities he had killed his wife because she had been disrespectful to him.

Soltys, 28, had attempted suicide earlier in his incarceration, and had at times been on a suicide watch, according to sheriff's department spokeswoman Sharon Telles. He was not under a suicide watch Wednesday, she said.

Blanas said Soltys' next court appearance had been scheduled for March 19. Soltys had been visited by investigators Tuesday and his attorney Friday, he said.

 
 

FBI "Ten Most Wanted Fugitive" Nikolay Soltys Arrested in Sacramento

FBI.gov

August 30, 2001

Sacramento, CA -- Richard R. Baker, Special Agent in Charge (SAC) of the Sacramento Division of the FBI, U.S. Marshal Jerry Enomoto, and Sacramento County Sheriff Lou Blanas announced that earlier today FBI "Ten Most Wanted Fugitive" Nikolay Soltys was arrested in Citrus Heights, California, a suburb of Sacramento. Soltys was located in the backyard of a family member's home and taken into custody without incident by Sacramento County Sheriff's Deputies and Officers from the Sacramento Police Department. FBI Agents and Deputies from the U.S. Marshals were also on scene during the arrest. Soltys is currently being detained at the Sacramento County Jail.

Nikolay Soltys, who was being sought for the murder of six of his family members in and around the Sacramento area, was considered armed and extremely dangerous.Soltys allegedly stabbed his 23-year-old pregnant wife to death in their North Highlands, California, home on August 20, 2001. He reportedly then drove to the home of his aunt and uncle where he is suspected of killing the couple and his two young cousins. After the first five murders, Soltys allegedly drove to his mother's house and picked up his three-year-old son. On August 21, 2001, investigators located the boy's body in an empty field in Roseville, California.

A state arrest warrant for murder was issued for Nikolay Soltys on August 20, 2001, by the California Superior Court for the County of Sacramento in Sacramento, California. Then, on August 21, 2001, the United States District Court for the Eastern District of California issued a federal arrest warrant charging Soltys with unlawful flight to avoid prosecution.

Nikolay Soltys was the 466th person to be placed on the FBI's "Ten Most Wanted Fugitives" list, which began in 1950. Since then, 438 fugitives have been apprehended or located, 140 of them as a result of citizen cooperation. "The FBI is indebted to the media for keeping this case in the public eye, and to the Ukrainian community for helping to capture this dangerous fugitive," said SAC Baker.

Further information about Nikolay Soltys, including his wanted poster, is available on the FBI's Internet Home Page. The FBI's Internet Home Page address is: http://www.fbi.gov. Sacramento Media Contact: FBI Special Agent Nick Rossi (916) 977-2258.

 
 

Nikolay Soltys Named to FBI's Ten Most Wanted Fugitives List

FBI.gov

August 23, 2001

Sacramento, CA -- Richard R. Baker, Special Agent in Charge of the Sacramento Division of the FBI, U.S. Marshal Jerry Enomoto and Sacramento County Sheriff Lou Blanas announce the Federal Bureau of Investigation today placed Nikolay Soltys on its "Ten Most Wanted Fugitives" list. Nikolay Soltys is being sought for the murder of six of his family members in and around the Sacramento, California area. Soltys should be considered armed and extremely dangerous.

On August 20, 2001, Nikolay Soltys allegedly stabbed his 23-year-old pregnant wife to death in their North Highlands, California home. He reportedly then drove to the home of his aunt and uncle where he is suspected of killing the couple and his two young cousins. After the first five murders, Soltys allegedly drove to his mother's house and picked up his three-year-old son. Later that evening, Soltys' car was found in the vicinity of his mother's house. During a search of the vehicle, a note was recovered with information regarding the location of Soltys' son. On August 21, 2001, investigators located the boy's body in an empty field in Roseville, California.

A state arrest warrant for murder was issued for Nikolay Soltys on August 20, 2001, by the California Superior Court for the County of Sacramento in Sacramento, California. Then, on August 21, 2001, the United States District Court for the Eastern District of California issued a federal arrest warrant charging Soltys with unlawful flight to avoid prosecution.

Nikolay Soltys is described as a White male, 6'0", 165 pounds, with blond or brown hair and blue eyes. He was born in Ukraine on May 19, 1974, and speaks broken English with an accent. Soltys uses the following aliases: Mykola Soltys, Nikolay A. Soltys, Nikolay Alekseyevi Soltys. Soltys has ties to Canada; New York; California, Seattle, Washington; and Charlotte, North Carolina.

Nikolay Soltys is the 466th person to be placed on the FBI's "Ten Most Wanted Fugitives" list, which began in 1950. Since then, 437 fugitives have been apprehended or located, 139 of them as a result of citizen cooperation.

The federal fugitive investigation is being coordinated jointly by the FBI and the United States Marshals Service. A reward of up to $50,000 is being offered for any information leading directly to the arrest of Nikolay Soltys. Individuals with information concerning Nikolay Soltys should take no action themselves, but instead immediately contact the nearest office of the FBI, United States Marshals Service, or local law enforcement agency. For any possible sighting outside the United States, contact the nearest U.S. Embassy or Consulate.

Further information about Nikolay Soltys, including his wanted poster, is available on the FBI's Internet Home Page. The FBI's Internet Home Page address is: http://www.fbi.gov.

The Sacramento Sheriff's Department has also established two 24-hour tip lines for information concerning Soltys: (916) 874-5321 and (916) 874-5414. Sacramento Media Contacts: FBI Special Agent Nick Rossi (916) 977-2258 Sheriff's Sgt. James Lewis (916) 874-5021.

 

 

 
 
 
 
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