A famous Lithuanian actor who spent 16 hours with his kidnapper told me how things went: I became his kind of assistant.



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Specialists who study kidnappings say that there are 4 typical reasons for the kidnapping of hostages around the world: political or religious, financial (for ransom, short-term gains and domestic) through family conflicts. The easiest reason is when the hijackers just want to make money. In this case, both the attackers and the hostages realize that it will be better for everyone if the hostages survive.

When asked how often the so-called Stockholm Syndrome occurs, a phenomenon in which hostages begin to feel respect, even love for their kidnappers, during kidnapping, more experienced professionals say that such a particularly complex phenomenon is possible only if the kidnapper and the kidnapper the victim have identical psychological disorders.

The most famous hostage drama

Probably the most complex and covered drama of hostage release took place almost two decades ago, on October 8, 2001 in Panevėžys. Aleksandras Špilevojus, a stage and film actor who has survived the hostage drama this time around and is now a well-known actor in the Lithuanian series, and artistic director of the Panevėžys J. Miltinis Dramatic Theater, is almost the only one of the former hostages. who almost agrees to talk about it. A 16 hour kidnapping story.

The early morning of October 8, 2001 in Panevėžys, Ramygalos Street, was indistinguishable from the autumn of other days. As usual, the children ran to school the next morning. Among them is A. Špilevojus, 13 years old. In those days, the press and television news programs announced that the police across Lithuania were looking for a particularly dangerous duo of murderers and armed robbers: Romas Zamolskis, 31, and Virginijus Savickis, 26. At that time, the media announced that both men had fled from the Žiegždriai psychiatric hospital (Kaunas district).



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