Putin pardons a second cannibal killer in a week as reward for fighting against Ukraine

Vladimir Putin has pardoned a smiling cannibal and freed the mass murderer from his 22-year prison sentence after he was injured in the battle against Ukraine.

Denis Gorin, 44, is the latest brutal criminal to be released from prison and allowed back into society.

It follows the release of a Satanist cannibal killer, which was revealed earlier this week.

Gorin first killed him in 2002, cutting off the body’s ears and chunks of flesh, which he later ate.

His victim – the first of four – had been stabbed more than fifty times.

Gorin was convicted of killing and devouring two children

Denis Gorin, 44, is the latest brutal criminal to be released from prison and allowed back into society. Pictured left: Gorin in military uniform with war wounds and bandages, but smiling, in Sakhalin, Russia’s largest island

Gorin is now in hospital recovering from war wounds after being pardoned by Putin (File Photo)

Gorin is now in hospital recovering from war wounds after being pardoned by Putin (File Photo)

He was sentenced to ten years in prison and released early for ‘good behavior’.

In November 2010, he murdered a man named Alexander, 36, for which he was eventually convicted in 2017 after the body was found.

Gorin admitted to stripping the bodies, cutting off the flesh and eating them before dumping the remains in a river.

Gorin “cut soft tissue from the victim’s limbs with a knife he had with him and which he later consumed as food,” the court ruling said.

He kept the human flesh in his fridge and later cooked it, the court heard.

Dennis Gorin.  Gorin first killed him in 2002, cutting off the body's ears and chunks of flesh, which he later ate.  His victim – the first of four – had been stabbed more than 50 times (File Photo)

Dennis Gorin. Gorin first killed him in 2002, cutting off the body’s ears and chunks of flesh, which he later ate. His victim – the first of four – had been stabbed more than 50 times (File Photo)

Earlier this week it was revealed that Putin had pardoned Nikolay Ogolobyak, 33, who dismembered teenagers

Earlier this week it was revealed that Putin had pardoned Nikolay Ogolobyak, 33, who dismembered teenagers

In 2012, he and his brother brutally beat their cousin’s alleged abuser to death.

In fact, the victim was an innocent man and not the alleged abuser.

Another murder in 2012 was also taken into account as he was jailed for 22 years.

But now he is in hospital recovering from war wounds after being pardoned by Putin.

“He is in Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk, in hospital, with a moderate injury,” his neighbor told Sibir.Realii.

A photo shows the cannibal killer in military uniform with war wounds and bandages, but smiling, in Sakhalin, Russia’s largest island.

Earlier this week it was announced that Putin had pardoned Nikolay Ogolobyak, 33, who dismembered teenagers.

He was a self-confessed cannibalistic Satanist and was convicted of killing and devouring two children.

He was the eldest of a sect of Satanists in Yaroslavl and all four were convicted of grotesque crimes.

The Satanists killed three girls and a boy aged between 16 and 17 after performing animal sacrifices and digging up human graves.

Each of the teenagers was drugged and stabbed with daggers 666 times, chopped up and then cooked on a bonfire in a disgusting Satanist ritual carried out over two nights.

The criminals, including Ogolobyak, recited a Satanist text found on the Internet.

Their limbs, hearts, scalps, breasts and genitals were cut off and found in a pit, along with the body of a small rodent crucified on an inverted cross.

Anna Gorokhova, 16, Olga Pukhova, 15, Vavara Kuzmina, 16, and Andrei Sorokin, 16, went missing in June 2008 and their bodies were not found until mid-August.

After a two-year criminal investigation, they were declared victims of ‘brutal ritual child murders’ by a Russian court.

Ogolobyak was found guilty of murdering two people.

Putin has pardoned thousands of rapists, murderers and maniacs who fought for him in Ukraine.

Those who survive six months, or are discharged sooner after being injured, will have their criminal records cleared.

The scale of the release of hardened criminals is a cause of great concern in Russia.