DAYS after being drafted into the National Guard, Antonis Prokopiou Kitas, better known as ‘Al Capone’, went AWOL taking his army-issued rifle with him.
Kitas had joined the commandos – unit of the ‘hard cases’, especially back in the day.
But the devil-may-care attitude soon gave way revealing Kitas’ true nature. Tragically, that was not before he had murdered and raped two women, resulting in his conviction and sentencing to life imprisonment in 1994.
Psychiatrist Yiangos Mikellides, who was working for the state psychiatric services in the 1980s, recalls the army incident. He unequivocally calls Kitas a psychopath.
“He has no moral inhibitions, no remorse. It’s in his DNA,” he told the Sunday Mail.
Mikellides dismissed the notion that Kitas’ upbringing may have played a part in his turning into a psychopathic killer:
“As far as I know, his father was an OK fellow. There’s nothing to suggest Kitas was raised badly. The man has severe personality disorder. He has no control over his emotions.”
A psychiatric evaluation of Kitas carried out during his murder trial in 1994 noted: “His psychic condition allows him to comprehend and communicate normally. He is fully cognisant of, and is responsible for, his actions and their consequences.”
Kitas himself never played the insanity card.
It’s an assessment with which forensic pathologist Marios Matsakis agrees with.
Matsakis served as the forensic expert and key witness for the prosecution in Kitas’ trial for the murder of 28-year-old Christina Ahfeldt in 1993. She was raped, battered to death and buried at the Kotsiatis dumpsite.
Though not a qualified psychiatrist, he also believes that Kitas is fully aware of his actions – but simply doesn’t care.
“Yes I remember he was deemed fit to stand trial. How would I describe him? He’s a monster in human form, a sadistic animal,” Matsakis told the Sunday Mail.
“He’s got a sick criminal mind: no conscience, no compunction, no morality, and no respect for human life.”
Matsakis recalls Kitas’ reaction – or lack thereof – while testifying in court.
“I was describing the crime in gory detail…everyone in court was of course shocked, but he just sat there, looking indifferent.”
Yet despite Kitas being constantly in the news – most recently over the theft of the former president’s remains – Matsakis does not believe the lifer to be a criminal genius.
“Neither is he simple-minded. Bottom line, this man is not fit to live among other human beings. My opinion is that he cannot be rehabilitated. He’s a danger to society. They should lock him up and throw away the key.
“And I say this fully aware of the risks,” Matsakis added, noting that during the 1994 trial he received death threats from persons unknown.
Nonetheless, it is precisely while “behind bars” that Kitas has pulled off some of his more astounding capers.
“That’s why I say criminals such as these should be put in isolation for the rest of their lives. Instead, he’s been allowed to roam freely. This is not the Central Prisons, it’s the Central Hilton,” Matsakis said.
The convict has a history of attempted escapes. In 1986, Kitas was serving a sentence in the prison’s juvenile wing when he and four other inmates broke out from the open prison. He was later caught and returned to complete his term.
On 13 October 1993 he escaped police custody, after being arrested for a jewellery shop robbery. Police took him to his house in Athienou because he wanted to get a change of clothes, but when they arrived there Kitas bolted from a back door. He was later recaptured.
While under arrest for the robbery, Kitas fed police information regarding two women who had gone missing that year, Ahfeldt, 28, and Oksana Lisna, 20.
First Kitas said he had information about Ahfeldt, a Swedish mother of two living in Ayia Napa, where she was married to a Cypriot nightclub owner.
Kitas volunteered to help police find her body, which was finally discovered in the landfill rubbish site at Kotsiatis.
Day after day in the stinking heat, police and municipal workers – most of them wearing masks in a futile attempt to mask the stench – trawled through pile upon pile of rubbish with diggers. Supposedly directing operations was Kitas, often dressed in his trademark, baggy pyjama-style trousers, and apparently thoroughly enjoying all the attention. It took 29 days before Ahfeldt’s badly decomposed body was finally uncovered.
By then Kitas was prime suspect and he was charged along with Michalis Iakovides of kidnapping, raping and strangling the 28-year-old before dumping her body.
The pair was also found guilty of abducting, raping and strangling Lisna, a 20-year-old Ukrainian dancer who worked in Ayia Napa. Her body was found dumped at the bottom of a well in Larnaca. Equally tragic, no family member ever came to claim her body and her final resting place is a grave in a corner of a Larnaca cemetery.
Before he and his accomplice were sentenced in 1994, Kitas’ behaviour in court turned increasingly bizarre. He frequently announced he was going on hunger strikes, which always proved short-lived. He appeared in court with his pyjama trousers sodden with urine, and he once attempted to commit suicide by swallowing razor blades.
Snarling at reporters and prone to outbursts while in policy custody, Kitas was not one to merit a congeniality award. In one instance, he told a journalist point-blank to ‘f*** off’ for having looked at him the wrong way.
The escapes saga resumed in March 1999 when a prison warden was arrested after ‘Capone’ bribed him to help him break out of jail.
In April 2006 Kitas married a Chinese national at Aradippou town hall.
In December 2008 he fled from Nicosia’s Apollonion hospital, where he had been staying for six months, apparently recuperating from gastric reflux. Capone was paying for his treatment privately. A private room, excluding medical costs, is around €250 a day, which would have amounted to a total in the region of €45,000. Prison authorities said at the time it was not within their jurisdiction to investigate where a convict got the money to pay for treatment. It is widely believed, however, that Kitas was able to finance this with cash raised from betting.
In the early morning hours of December 12, Kitas fled from his hospital room. Hours later, he was involved in a shootout with police in Nicosia during which he suffered a gunshot.
He stayed on the run for almost a month, and was finally recaptured on January 5, 2009.
Journalist Michele Kambas, who covered the Kitas murder trial in 1994, recalls her impressions
At first I thought Kitas was just another petty criminal. Nobody took him seriously. That changed the day police found Oksana Lisna’s body at the well in Larnaca. Kitas was led there, journalists in tow, and we all thought it was a wild goose chase. He appeared to relish the media attention and spoke to many journalists.
That changed when I peered into the well, broken open by a digger, and saw a crumpled lifeless body in the pit, hollow eyes just staring straight out at me. Oksana lay in muddy water, but her outline was very clear. The digger had ripped off her arm.
When police suspicions turned on Kitas for Lisna’s killing and that of Christine Ahfeldt, his behaviour changed. His mood would swing from being a bit of a friendly joker to being quite menacing. He would frequently lash out at journalists in court and had a habit of making threatening comments to female reporters. On one occasion he swore at me after passing a comment which I neither understood nor responded to.
Thoughout his trial, he never showed any remorse and appeared quite oblivious to the enormity of what he had done.
In retrospect, the media also focussed too much on Kitas’ shenanigans – going ballistic in court because he was not allowed to see his then Romanian wife, and his repeated hunger strikes – rather than what he had done to his two victims and their families.