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Sometime around noon Officer Khuney received a strange call from a
man by the name of Pyotr Onoprienko. According to Pyotr, he had
recently stumbled upon a stash of weapons hidden in his home. He
had suspected that they belonged to his live-in cousin, Anatoly
Onoprienko, and ordered him to pack up and move. Anatoly had
become enraged at his cousin’s accusations and told Pyotr that he
better watch out, because he would take care of his cousin's family on
Easter. Obviously fearing for the safety of his family, Pyotr
wanted Khuney to investigate the threat. Pyotr told the
investigator that his cousin had recently moved in with a woman and
her child in the nearby town of Zhitomirskaya. The information
about the suspicious character from the Zhitomirskaya intrigued
Kryukov, who had just read a police report about a 12-gauge,
Russian-made Tos-34 hunting rifle ─ the type used in a recent
local killing ─ had been reported stolen in the Zhitomirskaya
area.
“It was a long shot, but I thought, here we've got an armed guy
from Zhitomirskaya, and a weapon missing. And we don't have too
many people from Zhitom come here,” said Kryukov. “If I
hadn't gotten the (tip) that morning, I might never have considered
it. But as it was, I had to think about it.” Concerned,
Kryukov quickly called superiors in the Lviv police headquarters for
advice on how to proceed. Lviv police chief, General Bogdan
Romanuk, instructed Kryukov to form a task force and conduct a search
of Anatoly Onoprienko’s apartment.
Within an hour, over 20 patrolmen and detectives were assembled,
and the group set off for Ivana Khristitelya Street in unmarked cars.
The suspect shared an apartment there with a Yavoriv hairdresser
“Anna” and her two children. The exits to the suspect's
building were blocked with unmarked cars and two men guarded the
fourth and second floors. The remaining investigators surrounded
the building. Khuney, Kryukov and patrolman Vladimir Kensalo
then approached the suspect's door.
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| Anatoly Onoprienko mugshot |
Kryukov had no idea whether Anna and her two children were home.
Unbeknown to investigators, they were at church, and Anatoly
Onoprienko, whom the children now called "Dad", was
expecting them home any minute. When Kryukov rang the doorbell,
Onoprienko assumed that it was Anna and opened the door without
hesitation. To his surprise, he was quickly subdued and
handcuffed. As Kryukov looked around the suspect’s apartment,
he noticed an Akai stereo in the living room. The stereo caught
his eye because a Novosad family, recently murdered in nearby Busk on
March 22, 1996, had a similar stereo, which was reported missing by
family members shortly after their murder. “I had a list,
which I always carried around, of certain items that had been reported
missing, their makes and serial numbers,” said Kryukov. “And
the Akai matched the Busk crime scene.”
When police asked Onoprienko for his identification, he led them to
a closet. As an investigator opened the closet door, Onoprienko
dove for a pistol he had previously hidden inside. Regardless of
his efforts, he was quickly subdued and unable to get to it in time.
The pistol, as it would turn out, was the second piece of evidence
─ it had been stolen from a murder scene in Odessa.
Realizing the seriousness of the situation, investigators escorted
Onoprienko back to police headquarters and began a comprehensive
search of the premises. By the end of the day, 122 items,
belonging to numerous unsolved murder victims were recovered from the
scene, including a sawed-off Tos-34 rifle.
As the search at Ivana Khristitelya Street was winding down, Anna
came home. “She understood that something serious had
happened, and asked me what was going on,” Kryukov said.
“There was nothing to do. I took her aside and said, 'Do you
remember those killings in Bratkovichi?' and she broke down crying.
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