Posted on 11/14/2009 11:40:24 AM PST by Steelfish
Body Parts Sold To Kebab Stand, Police Say Three Russians also suspected of killing man, eating parts themselves
MOSCOW - Russian police have arrested three homeless people suspected of eating a 25-year-old man they had butchered and selling other bits of the corpse to a local kebab house.
Suspicions were raised when dismembered parts of a human body were found near a bus stop in the outskirts of the Russian city of Perm, 720 miles east of Moscow.
Three homeless men with previous criminal records have been arrested on suspicion of setting upon a foe with knives and a hammer before chopping up his corpse to eat, local investigators said in a statement.
"After carrying out the crime, the corpse was divided up: part was eaten and part was also sold to a kiosk selling kebabs and pies," the prosecutor's main investigative unit for the Perm region said.
(Excerpt) Read more at msnbc.msn.com ...
Russian Kebap? I can only imagine.
The other, other white meat. Wonder if it’s Halal?
Human meat cannot possibly taste any good. Unless they were Vegan perhaps.
Sveenya Todski?
Say does it taste like chicken????
True, but Vegan may be ok to make jerky???
Mishka Bob.
Donner Party Missing Diary :”Tastes like chicken!”
I didn’t think anything could be worse than a Possum Sandwich stand in South Carolina. I was wrong.
I read about something similar during the seige of Lenningrad. People were starving and didn’t look too close at the meat they found on the black market.
Manwich? Buddycue? Having someone over for dinner? Parts is parts? You’ll always be a part of me? He had such good taste?
The one liners just write themselves!
It’s actually very tasty (the non-human kind). Usually made by Azerbaijani-types. Yum, now I’m hungry.
Cannibalism is a wonderful metaphor for Communism.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.