Prison murders, incarceration On November 11, Sulimov got into a quarrel with his cellmate, as the latter refused to help clean up the dirty cell. Later in the evening, while the man slept, Sulimov pressed his boots against his head and neck, and used some rope to strangle the man. The rope broke, and so, Sulimov dragged the man from the top bunk down to the floor, grabbed a string of
linen and successfully choked the man to death. For this, and the attempted murder he was originally jailed for, Sulimov received a 10-year sentence on April 4, 1984, by the Tallinn District Court. After spending two years in the
Rummu Prison, he was transferred to a mental asylum in 1986. On February 16, Sulimov and two other inmates attacked another prisoner in the smoking area, with Juri using a sharpened object to inflict 10 wounds to the man's vital organs, killing him. Sulimov was found guilty of this killing as well, and was given an additional 15 years imprisonment. Shortly after the verdict was announced, he was sent to a
corrective labor colony in the
Lithuanian SSR. However, on March 3, 1987, the
Vilnius District Court ordered that he be psychiatrically examined, with the prison psychologists ruling that Sulimov was mentally unstable. Shortly after, he was transferred to a closed psychiatric hospital, where he remained until April 29, 1992, when he was taken to the Tallinn Psychoneurology Hospital for further treatment. At a June 1, 1993, court hearing, Sulimov was allowed to spend time in a psychiatric facility with a less strict regime, after examinations proved that he was sane, but suffered from an intellectual disability and possible psychopathic personality, which resulted in poor impulse control. Despite these warnings, Sulimov was sent to a general psychiatric hospital in
Ahtme on June 13, 1993, and was allowed to temporarily leave on May 11, 1994.
Release, new crimes and final murder On the day of his release, Sulimov got drunk and threatened a passer-by, stealing a bag with loot amounting to 80
kroons. A week later, he was fined 100 kroons for petty hooliganism. In June, he stole five cartridges and
ammonite, which he fashioned into two explosive devices and a pistol, but was caught and returned to the psychiatric hospital. On June 14, he was officially released from the Ahtme Psychiatric Hospital, after experts concluded that he had been officially "cured" and capable of understanding the gravity of his actions, and was only to be monitored by a ward psychiatrist in isolated periods. After his release, Sulimov found a job in the engineering industry, where he aided in developing explosive devices, and even found himself a girlfriend, a fellow drunkard like himself. On July 9, 1994, Sulimov and his girlfriend were invited to a house party by an acquaintance whose wife and children were not at their home in Kohtla-Järve. While in an intoxicated state, the man told his guests to turn down the TV so he could sleep. Irritated by this remark, Sulimov went to the bedroom where the man was sleeping and proceeded to suffocate him with a pillow. His girlfriend stumbled into the room, and after realizing that the man was dying, she unsuccessfully tried to resuscitate him. Understanding that he had killed him, Sulimov poured cologne on the body and lit it on fire with some matches. While the room was burning down, the pair stole several items from the household, amounting to 410 kroons. Not long after the crime scene was discovered, Sulimov was quickly identified as the perpetrator and promptly arrested. ==Sentencing and imprisonment==