On 5 October 1992, three weeks after the last murders, the bodies of the final three victims were found by
mushroom pickers. On 19 October 1992, Golovkin was detained under suspicion by the police. During the interrogation, he behaved calmly and denied guilt. Investigators Kostaryov and Bakin decided to release Golovkin, instead setting up secret
surveillance on him; however, a policeman violated the order and put Golovkin in
solitary confinement for the night. In the morning, Golovkin was questioned, and he confessed to the last three murders to Kostaryov. The next day, police searched Golovkin's garage, discovering a baby bath with a burnt layer of skin and blood, clothes, and body parts. Golovkin then confessed to a total of 11 murders, revealing where he had disposed of the bodies of his victims. Golovkin was found to be
sane, but with
schizoid disorder and
psychopathy, and on 19 October 1994, Golovkin was sentenced to
death. On 2 August 1996, Golovkin was executed at
Butyrka Prison by a single shot to the back of the head. He was the last person to be executed by Russia before a moratorium on
capital punishment was issued by President
Boris Yeltsin. {{blockquote|Sexual "serial" murders have common characteristics that are always associated with the intimate life of the perpetrator, his psycho-traumatic sexual experiences, his feelings of sexual inadequacy and inferiority, which allows one to call such murders sexual. In the life of each, such killers had serious failures in sexuality, and the overwhelming majority did not feel like men. So,
Chikatilo was impotent, Golovkin (who killed 12 boys and teenagers) and Ershov (who killed 4 women with an axe) were virgins, and cannibal killer Dzhumagaliev was disgusted by sexual intercourse, etc. In a word, almost all serial sex killers were sexually incompetent or felt they were. ==Victims==