The
Soviet Union had invaded Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia in June 1940. During the
Soviet occupation of the Baltic states political repression followed with
mass deportations of around 130,000 citizens carried out by the Soviets. A decision was made to carry out the massacre after the
June Uprising in Lithuania (1941), in which the
Lithuanian Activist Front deposed the Soviet government in Lithuania, and
Nazi Germany invaded the Soviet Union. The Soviet authorities were unable to evacuate the
political prisoners at the
Telšiai prison, but did not want to abandon them to be freed by the local population or by the Germans. Therefore, a punishment squad of the
Red Army led by Dontsov was called in to "liquidate" them. Most of the prisoners were put into trucks during the night of June 24 and taken to the Rainiai forest where they were tortured and killed. Many of the victims were so mutilated that only twenty-seven bodies could be identified after they were
exhumed just three days later. According to the coroner's examination published by the Lithuanian newspaper
Ūkininko patarėjas after the exhumation, both the report and the testimonies of witnesses, concurred that the Soviets cut off tongues, ears, genitals, scalps, put genitals into mouths, plucked out eyes, pulled off fingernails, made belts of victims' skins to tie their hands, burned them with torches and acid, crushed bones and skulls, all while the prisoners were still alive. The organizers of the massacre included
Pyotr Raslan, Boris Mironov,
Nachman Dushanski, political leader of 8th border army
Mikhail Kompanyanec,
NKVD Kretinga county deputy director Yermolayev, and NKVD lieutenant Zhdanov. ==Victims==