Who are the most wanted men of Pirin Interpol – 【Criminal News】 • crimes, accidents and incidents



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Four criminals from the Pirin region continue to top Interpol’s list of Bulgaria’s Most Wanted Criminals, where the names of 47 Bulgarians are listed, writes struma.com.

Those wanted on the red ballots in the region are: Vili Georgiev from Blagoevgrad, Anton Zhivkov from Sandanski and the duo Angel Hristov and Plamen Galev, better known as the Galevi brothers.

Vili Krasimirov Georgiev, a 31-year-old Blagoevgrad resident, hid from the 18-year sentence for brutal beating, which ended with the death of student Stoyan Baltov in front of the Amnesia nightclub in Sofia years ago. On December 23, 2014, Vili Georgiev and his accomplice in the crime, Svetlozar Stoilov, disappeared after hearing their 18-year sentence for the deliberate murder of student Baltov.

Only the third convict, Alexander Danailov, is in prison. In addition to the sentence, the Blagoevgrad resident and his friend must pay BGN 400,000 in damages to Baltov’s family. His escape was a great scandal.


The 54-year-old criminal Anton Petkovski-Nashko is wanted for the execution of the contract of the Blagoevgrad businessman Angel Hristov and for the liquidation of his accomplice Emil Nikolov-Madaka. The murder was discovered in 2001 after a DNA test, and the double murderer disappeared shortly before hearing the confirmation of the life sentence in the last instance. Petkovski was last seen in 2012.

Interpol also published the names, photos and details of Angel Hristov and Plamen Galev, known as the “Galevi brothers”, who were released at the request of the Bulgarian authorities. The two were announced with a red ballot and are wanted for leading an organized criminal group. The Galevi brothers have been missing since 2012, when the Supreme Court of Cassation confirmed their effective sentences of 7 and 5 years each, which they had to serve in a prison dormitory. His properties worth more than 4.5 million. BGN were confiscated in favor of the state by a 2020 court decision.



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