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Maksim Gelman

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Maksim Gelman (born May 31, 1987) is a Ukrainian, and also a naturalized American citizen responsible for a 28-hour killing spree lasting from February 11 to 12, 2011 in New York City, which involved thestabbing and killing of four people and the wounding of at least five others.

Background

Gelman's father had immigrated from Ukraine to the United States in 1992 on a refugee status. Maksim and his mother Svetlana joined him two years later and they all moved to New York. Mother and son stayed in the United States even after Maksim's father returned to Ukraine upon gaining U.S. citizenship. Maksim became a U.S. citizen in 2005.
Maksim Gelman attended Abraham Lincoln High School in Brooklyn, according to a former student there, though it is unclear whether he managed to graduate. He was known around the school as being a skateboarder. His unpopularity caused him to not have many friends or girlfriends, which reportedly amplified psychotic tendencies. He built a record with law enforcement after being arrested many times, mostly for graffiti-related offenses. Among graffiti artists, the few who knew of him viewed him as a largely unwanted troublemaker. Gelman, besides being a small-time dealer and user of crack cocaine, prescription pills and PCP, had been arrested for a number of charges, including possession of the drug and for graffiti vandalism.

Timeline of attacks

Police reports state that on the morning of February 11, 2011, Gelman stabbed and killed his mother's companion Aleksandr Kuznetsov, in Brooklyn, after an argument with his mother about driving Kuznetsov's vehicle. His mother was not physically hurt.
According to the reports' timeline, Gelman then went to the house of a female acquaintance named Yelena Bulchenko, where he killed her mother Anna. He then allegedly he left the crime scene. Yelana unaware of the events who just recently left her friends house at the time of the murder of her mom went inside the house and found her mother dead on the ground.She then called 9-1-1 but at the same time Maksim was on his way to check back if she returned home. Upon arrive he spots her outside on the phone, he got out the car and she yells "mak?" He said nonthing and hid the knife in his pocket while approaching her. She takes of running while neighbor trys to help her but to no avial then he allegedly
stabbed her eleven times, killing her, before speeding off in Kuznetsov's car. He rammed another car, stabbed and injured its driver, Arthur DiCrescento, and carjacked his vehicle. Gelman later ran down 62-year-old pedestrian Stephen Tannenbaum, who subsequently died of his injuries.

Gelman next stabbed and wounded a number of individuals in various stages during the rampage, including Shelden Pottinger, whose vehicle Gelman stole and drove off on. Finally, after boarding a northbound 3 train at 34th Street - Penn Station, he stabbed Joseph Lozito, a ticket seller at Lincoln Center. According to some reports, Gelman started banging on the door of the motorman's cab, demanding to be let in, at which point two police officers assigned to the manhunt arrived and subdued him after a struggle with Lozito's help.
According to other accounts, "Lozito actively defended himself", engaging Gelman in a physical confrontation that allowed transit officers Terrance Howell and Tamara Taylor, along with off-duty Detective Marcelo Razzo, to subdue and restrain Gelman, who was apprehended at Times Square - 42nd Street. The view of events given by Lozito and many witnesses onboard the train state that after beginning to stab Lozito multiple times, Lozito used a single leg takedown that he had learned from watching the UFC, he then disarmed and subdued Gelman and it was only then after Gelman had been subdued that the two transit officers emerged from the cab of the train to arrest Gelman but proceeded to claim that they were the ones who subdued him.

Trial

On February 13, 2011, Gelman was arraigned in a Brooklyn courtroom on charges of murder and assault, where he was represented by public defender Michael Baum. While being led from the police precinct to the courthouse, in front of a crowd of onlooker and reporters, Gelman reportedly showed no remorse, saying that he had been "set up."
Although no motive for the murders has been yet offered by the authorities, it has been speculated in the media that the rampage was triggered by Gelman's advances being scorned by Yelena Bulchenko.
On November 30, 2011, Gelman pleaded guilty to all charges.


Sentencing

On January 18, 2012, Gelman appeared in the New York Supreme Court, Kings County, for hissentencing. Sitting in court next to his attorney, Edward Friedman, Gelman was reported as being "unruly", laughing or yelling at the judge and the family and friends of some of his victims. At the conclusion of the trial, New York State Supreme Court Justice Vincent Del Guidice sentenced Gelman to 200 years in prison, telling Gelman, "You are a violent sociopath."Cameras were allowed in the courtroom and photos showing Gelman's reaction at the time of sentencing were widely distributed.
 
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NEW YORK — Already serving 200 years in prison for killing four people in a bloody rampage, Maksim Gelman grinned on his way into court Wednesday, swore at a man he assaulted during the crime spree, and defiantly made light of the proceeding as he was sentenced to 25 more years.
Gelman made an abrupt marriage proposal to a reality TV star and directed profanities at the subway rider he knifed in the head and arm at the end of his series of assaults and carjackings last year.
Joseph Lozito, a mixed martial arts fan who says he drew on moves he'd seen on TV to knock Gelman to the floor after being attacked, took Gelman's insults in stride. Seeing Gelman in court for the first time since the attack a year ago, Lozito said what he saw was "still the soul of a coward."
"I hope you rot in your cell. And you have hell to look forward to, so enjoy it," Lozito said to Gelman.
Gelman, 24, attacked Lozito in a final burst of violence during a 28-hour crime spree that started with an argument over the use of Gelman's mother's car, spanned two of New York City's five boroughs and victimized his relatives, acquaintances and total strangers.
Gelman pleaded guilty to murder and other charges in Brooklyn, where he blamed his victims and was disrespectful to the judge while being sentenced last month to 200 years behind bars. The subway stabbing was handled separately because it happened in Manhattan, where Gelman pleaded guilty last month to attempted murder.
Wednesday, Gelman seemed to relish his role as the villain.
Given his chance to speak, he said all he wanted to say was "Kim Kardashian, will you marry me?'" and then finished his brief remarks with some obscenities directed at Lozito.
Manhattan state Supreme Court Justice Richard Carruthers noted that the sentencing was a formality, given Gelman's massive sentence in Brooklyn. But still, the judge said, it provided a look at a "wicked man."

"We've been subjected today to something of this man's evil, unrepentant nature," Carruthers said. "Remove him."
Born in Ukraine, Gelman became a U.S. citizen about five years before the attacks, police said. He had a record of mostly nonviolent arrests on such charges as drug possession or making graffiti, though some of his arrest records were sealed.
The bloody trail began Feb. 11, 2011, in Gelman's family's Brooklyn apartment, where he killed his stepfather, Aleksandr Kuznetsov. Kuznetsov, 54, had intervened in Gelman's argument with his mother over the car, police said.
Gelman then went to the Brooklyn home of Yelena Bulchenko, a female acquaintance whose friends have said he imagined was his girlfriend. He killed Bulchenko's 56-year-old mother, Anna, then waited hours for the daughter to return and killed her, stabbing her 11 times.
Gelman drove away, rear-ended another car and stabbed its driver when he confronted Gelman, police said. The driver survived.
Stealing the wounded man's car, Gelman drove off and plowed into Stephen Tanenbaum, 62, a pedestrian who died from his injuries, police said. After abandoning the car, Gelman later hailed a livery cab and attacked its driver, then approached another car, attacked a man inside and hijacked the car, police said. Both men survived.
About seven hours later, passengers on a subway in upper Manhattan alerted police after noticing that a man on the train matched photos of Gelman they had seen in newspapers. Gelman hopped off that train and got on another, where he hacked at Lozito with a large kitchen knife, yelling, "You're going to die," according to a court complaint.
Lozito, a Lincoln Center ticket seller who has never trained in mixed martial arts but has watched the ultimate-fighting sport since 1993, said he fought back with a move known as a single-leg takedown.
"When you attacked me and I took you down, you went down real easy," he told Gelman in court.
"You didn't take me down," Gelman said in the first of several outbursts.
Lozito, 41, said outside court that he'd shaken off Gelman's remarks as "irrelevant."
As they grappled on the train, police were in the driver's compartment, having heard reports that Gelman might be on board. Gelman had in fact pounded on the door to the compartment, claiming he was an officer, police said.
Police said that after Lozito was stabbed, one of the officers threw open the door and overpowered Gelman, knocking the knife from his hand.
Lozito, who has moved to New York's Long Island from Philadelphia since the attack, sued the city and police late last month. He says they didn't act fast enough. The city Law Department said Wednesday it was reviewing the suit and preparing a response.
After the attack, another passenger, Alfred Douglas, pressed his hands and then a paper towel or napkin to Lozito's wounds to try to stop the bleeding before paramedics got to the train, Lozito noted Wednesday.
"To me, he's the unsung hero" of the attack, Lozito said.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/...25-years-brooklyn-murder-spree_n_1279713.html
 
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I just recently watched a tv show about this case.
 
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