Antti Taskinen


Antti Olavi Taskinen is a Finnish double-murderer, who is responsible for the deaths of at least two men in Tampere and Heinola. He was sentenced to life in prison on May 31, 2006.
Taskinen was suspected to have killed his first victim, a 20-year-old student from Tampere, in August 1996. The victim died of a Dolcontin overdose. This was initially considered an "aggravated involuntary manslaughter" by the District Court, but later overturned in the Court of Appeal.
On February 1997 Taskinen was spending time in Tampere with a 30-year-old man. The man died, and a massive Abalgin overdose was found from his blood. Before his death the victim had made a testament in favor of Taskinen. This was considered a manslaughter by both the District Court and the Court of Appeal.
On November 2005 Taskinen murdered his final victim, Markku Heimo Juhani Franssila. He was a rich 54-year-old business manager, who had a villa in Heinola, where the murder took place. The men had lived in a registered partnership for the last four months. Franssila had died of an Abalgin overdose. The motive for that murder was the inheritance Taskinen would have been given.
Taskinen was arrested on January 2006. He was suspected for the murder of Franssila. The police soon started to suspect him of two earlier homicides too. He was found guilty, and on May 31, 2006 sentenced to life imprisonment for aggravated involuntary manslaughter, a manslaughter and a murder. Taskinen appealed the decision, and the hearing in the Court of Appeal started in February 2007. The court upheld the convictions on murder and manslaughter, but overturned the charge on "aggravated involuntary manslaughter", stating the death might have been caused by a heroin overdose. The sentence of life imprisonment remained.
In May 2007 Taskinen tried to appeal to the Supreme Court, but no leave to appeal was granted, rendering his sentence final. Taskinen immediately sought pardon from the President, but the pardon was denied in July 2007.