Ex-wife of maniac Ryno told about the kidnapping of their daughter by her ex-spouse
Maniac Arthur Ryno, who served time for the murder of 37 people, kidnapped his four-year-old daughter from a kindergarten and gave her to his relatives, but his ex-wife Valentina was able to return the girl thanks to chance. The woman told Izvestia on Saturday, September 21.
Valentina said that she does not communicate with her former spouse because she is afraid of him.
"He just took her from the kindergarten, and that's all. I wrote to him, tried to find out something, where he is, but he just did not answer my messages. Answered once something of the sort: "I'll bring you the other day", - shared the former spouse of Ryno.
She explained that the teachers in the garden are aware of the situation in the family, but did not prevent the man from taking the child, because by law they do not have the right to do so. Valentina said that her ex-husband had previously threatened to take the girl, but never moved to action. The woman noted that she and Ryno have been divorced for more than a year, but the court has not yet determined where their common daughter should live.
Having kidnapped the girl, the man gave her to his mother, who turns the child against Valentina. The girl's mother showed a video in which the child in the footage says that she does not want to return to her mother.
In the end, the girl spent four days at her father's relatives' house, and Valentina was able to pick her up by chance, suggesting that the child might be kept at Ryno's mother's dacha. Taking a group of friends with her, Valentina went to this dacha. Her friends did indeed find the girl in the playground, and her mother called the police.
Valentina said that her daughter had not attended kindergarten for two weeks and the two of them had temporarily moved out of the house so that Ryno could not find them.
Artur Ryno was a student at an icon painting school in Moscow when he and his friend Pavel Skachevsky formed a skinhead gang. The group consisted of nine men between the ages of 17 and 22. They carried out ethnically motivated attacks on lonely people. In April 2007, Ryno and Skachevsky, who were 18 years old at the time, were detained on suspicion of murdering a 45-year-old businessman from Armenia. Ryno confessed to killing 37 people.
Later, on April 8, Moscow City Court sentenced Ryno and Skachevsky to 10 years in a strict regime colony. The court took into account that they committed the crimes while they were still minors, so this punishment, according to the law, is the maximum possible for them.