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Małgorzata Rozumecka is said to have grown up in a loving family and never caused any trouble for her parents. In 1997, she was 22 years old and was a rehabilitation student. She then started working in the Era, but as soon as she gained some knowledge on the subject, she decided to earn money in a different way. It cannot be denied that these were the times when cell phones were a real luxury and not everyone could afford them. Rozumecka decided to sell phones under fictitious names to enable buyers to make free calls. While working, she met Piotr Aniołkiewicz, to whom she allegedly made a tempting job offer. Bogusław Linda – a well-known Polish actor – was to be interested in buying 32 mobile phones for his film club. This number of phones was then to be worth 50,000. zloty. The vision of a high commission allegedly convinced the man to cooperate with Małgorzata Rozumecka. But he hadn’t foreseen how business with this woman would end for him.
“I certainly didn’t kill anyone. What if I say they died by accident?”
Piotr Aniołkiewicz, together with Paweł Sulikowski, whom he brought into the case, went with boxes of telephones to Komorów near Warsaw. However, instead of the actor and his villa, there was a forest, and a pit was dug on its edge. The men were shot and the bodies were thrown into the pit and covered up haphazardly. It is not known what exactly happened there, but soon after that, Małgorzata Rozumecka sold the phones for PLN 36,000. PLN to traders at the bazaar in front of the Palace of Culture. The police found out about the murder from a random passerby who noticed traces of blood on the ground while walking. They found the prime suspects very quickly, but neither of them wanted to say what happened there.
Małgorzata Rozumecka was accused of planning a crime and murder in cold blood, engaging her 16-year-old brother Paweł, friends (Marcin Tomczak and Krystian Majchrowski) and tax taker Adam Bojanowski. The court agreed to disclose the image of the defendants and their personal data, and the trial was held in one of the Warsaw courts, before which there was a crowd of journalists, victims’ families and residents of the capital, who demanded a fair sentence.
I certainly didn’t kill anyone. This was not planned. We just wanted to overthrow Piotr Aniołkiewicz
Rozumecka said during the trial.
The accused testified reluctantly. When asked about the course of events, she hid her memory deficiencies or took advantage of the privilege of not answering questions.
I don’t know why I lured them to Komorów. I can not tell. Nobody wanted to kill them. What if I say they died by accident? That when you pull the trigger on the pistol, he shoots several bullets at once?
– she said in conversations with journalists.
After several months of the trial, many contradictory testimonies and mutual accusations, in August 1999, Małgorzata Rozumecka was sentenced to life imprisonment, which was later upheld by the Court of Appeal.
She was the organizer, she planned everything, she gave orders, she was the leader
– said judge Jan Krośnicki in the oral justification of the judgment.
Paweł Rozumecki, Małgorzata’s brother, fled Poland shortly after the incident. Initially, he stayed in Mexico, and later moved to the United States. However, in 2006 he was arrested in New York for breaking immigration laws and deported to Poland. On July 15, 2008, he heard a sentence of 25 years’ imprisonment.
“Polish queen of crime”
Małgorzata Rozumecka also earned the title of “the queen of crime”, which was attached to her not because of a murder, but an attempt to escape from the hospital in Tworki, where she was under psychiatric observation. Her father then arranged for her the keys to the emergency doors of the hospital, a forged passport, a plane ticket to Mexico, and a car that was waiting for her outside the hospital. It was unfortunate that at that time the area was patrolled by policemen looking for burglars. Instead of them, however, they found Małgorzata Rozumecka, who was squeezing through a hole in the fence.
Later, in his testimony, Rozumecka was also mentioned by a crown witness, Jarosław Sokołowski, pseudonym Masa: “She was strange, she loved the gangster world, she hung around with us. She once wanted to give me a dozen or so thousand zlotys for killing a man who allegedly was lurking on her head” .
What exactly happened in Komorów on June 18, 1997 is still unknown. Who was in the forest clearing, who was shooting, whether the convicts deliberately intended to kill their victims, or maybe only to scare them.
Unfortunately, nothing is known about the course of events in the clearing, because those who could tell it are dead, and the accused say what is convenient for them …
– said the prosecutor Karol Napierski, which seems to be a good summary.
Source: Gazeta

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