Because of the accidental choice of the victims
which included children and elderly people, as well as the horror
his crimes evoked in the citizens of Kraków, Kot was remembered as
the Kraków’s vampire and a monster. Before his detention, Kot
acted as a normal young citizen, who passed the school-leaving
examinations in high school and planned to become a student at an
Officer Candidate School.
After the trial, in which he pleaded guilty of
the crimes he was charged with, the killer was sentenced to death,
which was announced on July 14, 1967. The death penalty was
executed on May 16, 1968.
Early life
Kot spent his whole life in Kraków. He and his
8 years younger sister were looked after by their unemployed
mother. Kot had no problems at school, although there was an
unsuccessful attempt at getting accepted into a technical college
of communication. He also suffered from a nervous breakdown
because of failing one of the subjects at college.
Eventually, he became a student of the
technical college of energetic, where he passed the school-leaving
examinations. Apart from the school organizations he was a member
of, including ZMS, LOK and ORMO, Kot thrived in the shooting
section in the “Cracovia” club.
Hobbies and interests
Kot’s inclinations were given away by his
particular interest in every kind of weapon that could inflict
pain and death on human beings. He was in possession of a
substantial amount of knives, studied human anatomy and enjoyed
the taste of animal blood as well as the act of killing the
animals himself. In addition to that, Kot was versatile in the use
of firearms and remained in close contact with the coach of his
shooting section, who sent a letter to the Ministry of Justice in
protest against Kot’s detention.
Criminal record
In September, 1964 Karol Kot attacked for the
first time. The victim of this first grave crime was an elderly
woman whom he stabbed in church. He drove the knife from behind
when, unsuspecting, she knelt down to pray. Fortunately, the woman
survived.
The second attempted murder occurred shortly
after, on 23 September, when Kot spotted an old lady coming out of
the tram. He followed her and stabbed her in the back when the
time was right. This attack was unsuccessful as well.
He finally managed to kill a person six days
later, on 29 September. Similarly, his victim was an old lady whom
he spotted near the church and followed her to Jan Street where he
stabbed her to death, driving a knife from behind and aiming at
the heart.
On 13 February 1966 Kot stabbed to death an
11-year-old boy near Kościuszko Mound where a toboggan contest for
children took place. In April 1966 he attempted a murder of an
8-year-old girl. Kot came to the tenement in Sobieskiego Street
and noticed a girl who came downstairs to collect letters from the
mailbox. He grabbed her and inflicted 8 stab wounds to the
stomach, chest and back. When he escaped, the girl managed to go
home and shortly after was taken to hospital where the doctors
managed to save her life.
Apart from that, Kot tried to kill people by
poisoning. He bought some arsenic and went to a bar called “Przy
Błoniach.” He ordered some beer and a jelly, took a bottle of
vinegar from the counter and sat at the table. When he was certain
that nobody was looking, he inserted some arsenic into the vinegar
bottle hoping that somebody will use it later on and get poisoned.
He would often leave bottles of beer or soda poisoned with arsenic
in popular places but nobody would ever drink them. During the
trial, the expert witnesses stated that the amount of arsenic used
by Kot was enough to kill anybody who would drink the beverage.
Trial and sentence
Kot was arrested before his matura exam but he
was allowed to write the examination in order to prove that he was
sane and he will not plead insanity during the trial. He was
charged with 2 murders, 10 attempted murders and 4 arsons.
A lot of expert witnesses were appointed in
order to find the cause of Kot’s psychopathic behaviour. They
discovered that Kot has shown strange inclinations since his early
childhood. During the summer he would go to the slaughterhouse and
watch the pigs being butchered. Watching it as well as drinking
the pig’s still warm blood was a source of pleasure for him. Kot
soon started to kill animals himself and he indulged in studying
anatomy books and imagining wounds that can be inflicted on
people.
After a series of psychological observations
and examinations, the doctors asserted that Kot was completely
sane and he can attend the trial with full consequences of his
actions. The verdict was declared on 14 July 1967. Kot was
declared guilty and sentenced to death as well as he lost citizen
rights. The sentence was carried out on 16 May 1968.
Moral grounds
When asked in an interview whether he was aware
of the notion of murder being a crime and an evil deed, Kot
shortly presented his moral standards. According to him, what
determines moral appropriateness of people’s actions is the fact
that they bring an individual satisfaction and a sense of
fulfilled duty; he therefore considered himself a murderer, but
not an evil person. Apart from that, he mythicized himself into
being a chosen one, the rare person able to comprehend the act of
drinking blood as something sacred and empowering.
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