Serial killer Army captain given seven life terms for murders of women and girls in Cyprus
An army captain in Cyprus has been sentenced to seven life terms in prison after he pleaded guilty to the murder and kidnapping of foreign women and girls.
The three-judge panel said serial killer Nicholas Metaxas appeared to have mounted a “campaign of murder” in choosing defenceless women, most of whom came to Cyprus looking for work.
The judges said Metaxas “didn’t even hesitate to kill children” over a two-and-a-half-year period during which prosecutors said he sought out many of his adult victims on online social networks using the handle Orestes35 and had sex with them.
Five life terms will run consecutively, while two will run concurrently.
The killing spree is believed to be the east Mediterranean island nation’s first serial killer case.
Metaxas killed four Filipino women and the daughter of one of them, as well as a Nepalese woman and a Romanian mother and her daughter.
The judges said there could be no mitigating circumstances in such a case.
Earlier, Metaxas pleaded guilty and tearfully apologised to the families of his victims for the “unjust pain” he has caused them.
Reading from a prepared statement, Metaxas said he does not “have any clear answers” why he committed the killings and that he has “struggled” to figure out the “why and how”.
The 35-year-old officer said his cooperation with police investigators was the least he could do to ease the pain he caused to the families of the victims and his own family.
“I cannot go back in time and undo what I have done,” Metaxas, clad in a bulletproof vest and surrounded by armed police, told a packed courtroom.
He asked authorities for a scientific panel to interview him in order to delve into his psyche and find the reasons for his actions.
He did speak of unspecified events in his past “decades ago” that he tried to forget.
He looked down throughout his court appearance as a state prosecutor said six of the victims died of strangulation and the seventh of a massive head injury.
The case came to light on April 14 when the decomposing body of Mary Rose Tiburcio, 38, from the Philippines, was found by chance down a flooded shaft that was part of an abandoned copper mine.
Four days later, the body of 28-year-old Arian Palanas Lozano, also from the Philippines, was pulled out of the same mineshaft.
Investigators homed in on Metaxas after scrutinising the online communications of both women.
Metaxas, a divorced father of two children aged six and nine, initially refused to cooperate with investigators.
But as the evidence increased, he buckled and confessed in a 10-page handwritten note to the seven killings.
His victims included Romanian Livia Florentina Bunea, 36, and her eight-year-old daughter Elena Natalia; Maricar Valtez Arquiola, 31, from the Philippines; Ashita Khadka Bista, from Nepal; and Ms Tiburcio’s daughter, Sierra Grace.
Metaxas led police to where he disposed of his victims’ bodies; the bound remains of Ms Bunea, her daughter and Ms Arquiola were placed in suitcases and thrown into a toxic lake that was part of the same abandoned mine.
Ms Bista’s skeletal remains were found down a dry well inside an army firing range.
Ms Tiburcio’s daughter was found in another lake, wrapped in a sheet and weighed down by a rock.
Metaxas had told investigators under questioning that what prompted him to strangle Ms Tiburcio and Ms Bunea was his “hatred” of them and desire for “vengeance” over his suspicions that they prostituted their daughters.
He said he choked the children to death as they slept “so that they would no longer have to suffer”.
Prosecutors said investigations found that both mothers were very loving and cared for their children.
Metaxas also told investigators that he strangled Ms Maricar and Ms Lozano as he climaxed during sex with them.
He said he killed Ms Bista, who died of a head injury, in anger after she spat at him for videoing their sexual encounter.
All Metaxas’ victims except Ms Bista had been reported missing to police shortly after their disappearance.
The disappearance of Ms Bunea and her daughter in October 2016 was the subject of an investigative report by a local TV reporter, who said police claimed they had good reason to believe that the mother and daughter had crossed into the breakaway north of the ethnically split island.
Police failures to probe those missing persons cases resulted in the resignation of the justice minister and the firing of the police chief.
Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades said lives could have been spared had police acted swiftly in investigating those initial reports.