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‘Hitler didn’t kill enough’: Kiev shooter fantasized about eradicating Jews – media

The man who allegedly fatally shot six people in Ukraine reportedly defended the Holocaust and pogroms on social media
Published 18 Apr, 2026 23:55 | Updated 19 Apr, 2026 05:34
‘Hitler didn’t kill enough’: Kiev shooter fantasized about eradicating Jews – media

The suspect in a mass shooting in which six people were shot and killed and more than a dozen others were injured in Kiev on Saturday reportedly ranted on social media about eradicating Jews.

The man, identified as Dmitry Vasilchenkov, allegedly fired at bystanders at random before barricading himself inside a grocery store, where he was later killed by police.

According to Ukrainian media, Vasilchenkov was born in Moscow in 1968, but was a Ukrainian national and served in the Ukrainian army until the early 2000s. He reportedly lived in Russia from 2015 to 2017 before returning to Kiev.

Ukrainian news outlet Toronto Television said the suspect made erratic posts riddled with anti-Semitic slurs on an old Facebook page active from 2016 to 2019. In the posts, he allegedly called for Jews to be “wiped out,” making references to pogroms and the Holocaust.

In a post from October 2017 titled ‘On Jews and Jewry’, Vasilchenkov reportedly wrote that the Inquisition, Benito Mussolini, Adolf Hitler, and Joseph Stalin “killed and killed, but did not kill enough.”

In another post from February 2019, he reportedly wrote that pro-Russian insurgents in Donbass were “destroying the wrong people” and should instead have targeted “Judeo-criminals and Judeo-cultists,” adding that “the Jews need to be hanged.”

“On what to do – study Pope Borgia (15th century), Kotovsky, Petlyura, Hitler, Bandera, Brezhnev,” he wrote.

Stepan Bandera was one of the leaders of Ukrainian nationalists who collaborated with Nazi Germany during World War II, and whose followers were involved in massacres of Jews and Poles. Bandera and other WWII-era nationalist figures are celebrated in modern Ukraine as heroes and freedom fighters.

Ukrainian media also reported that Vasilchenkov sued the government in 2023 and 2024, demanding an increase in his military pension, and had prior run-ins with the law. TSN released a video allegedly showing him attacking a shopper inside a grocery store in 2023.

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