Murderpedia has thousands of hours of work behind it. To keep creating
new content, we kindly appreciate any donation you can give to help
the Murderpedia project stay alive. We have many
plans and enthusiasm
to keep expanding and making Murderpedia a better site, but we really
need your help for this. Thank you very much in advance.
Alexander KUZMINYKH
Shortly before midnight, 10 September 1998, Vepr was in port
at Severomorsk. Alexander Kuzminykh, a 19-year-old seaman who was being
detained on punishment charges, broke out from his quarters, killed his
guard by stabbing him with a chisel, then seized his AK-47 assault rifle
and shot dead five more sailors. He then took two hostages, whom he
later killed.
He barricaded himself in the torpedo room, and for 20 hours,
repeatedly threatened to set a fire to detonate the torpedoes. While
Vepr had no nuclear weapons and her reactor was shut down, the
detonation of her torpedoes while she was tied up at the dock would have
ruptured her reactor, creating what the regional director of the Federal
Security Service (FSB), Vladimir Prikhodko described as "a nuclear
catastrophe ... a second Chernobyl."
Attempts to persuade him to surrender failed. Kuzminykh's mother was
flown to the naval base but was unable to persuade her son to give
himself up. The situation remained a standoff until early on the morning
of 12 September, when a special FSB anti-terrorist commando unit stormed
the torpedo room. Early reports indicated that he had been killed by the
FSB, but later reports indicated that he committed suicide. FSB officers
regretted that "there was no way to preserve Alexander Kuzminykh's life."
Kuzminykh was found fit when he was conscripted at a St. Petersburg
enlistment office, even though he had suffered from a mental disorder
and had been inhaling intoxicants. When Kuzminykh volunteered for the
submarine service he passed additional medical and psychiatric tests
with high marks.