Astini Sumiasih (September 22, 1955 – March 20, 2005), better known by her pseudonym Mrs. Astini, was an Indonesian serial killer who killed three neighbors from whom she had borrowed money between 1992 and 1996, dismembering their bodies afterwards. For her crimes, she was sentenced to death and subsequently executed by firing squad in 2005.[2]

Astini Sumiasih
Born(1955-09-22)September 22, 1955
Jombang, Indonesia
DiedMarch 20, 2005(2005-03-20) (aged 49)[1]
Surabaya, Indonesia
Cause of deathExecution by firing squad
Other names"Mrs. Astini"
Conviction(s)Murder x3
Criminal penaltyDeath
Details
Victims3
Span of crimes
1992–1996
CountryIndonesia
State(s)East Java
Date apprehended
1996

Murders edit

Born in Jombang on September 22, 1955, Sumiarsih was a mother of three living in Malang together with her husband and three children.[3] She was generally known as a friendly, yet temperamental woman who frequently borrowed large amounts of money from her neighbors, which she was often unable to pay back.[2]

In August 1992, one of her neighbors, Rahayu (or Ibu Sukur), went to her home and demanded that she give her 1,250,000 rupiah, but when Sumiasih told her that she didn't have the money, she started insulting her.[2] Angered by her harsh remarks, she killed Rahayu on the spot and then dismembered her body. On November 1, 1993, she repeated the act with another neighbor, Sri Astutik Wijaya, whom she owed between 250,000 and 300,000 rupiah.[2]

In February 1996, she was approached by yet another neighbor, Puji Astutik, who demanded that she return 20,000 rupiah she had borrowed. When she informed her that she didn't have the money, she started insulting her, and in an emotional fit, she grabbed a piece of iron and hit her on the head, killing Astutik on the spot.[2] She then dragged the body to the kitchen and wrapped it up in a floormat, before she proceeded to dismember it into ten pieces. Astutik's body parts were then put in a plastic bag and scattered around trash bags and rivers around Surabaya.[2]

Arrest, trial and imprisonment edit

Some months later, a plastic bag containing a severed head was found in Wonorejo and immediately reported to the police. The head itself was brought to Soetomo Hospital, and when news of the discovery spread, a man contacted the doctors, claiming that his older sister Puji had gone missing.[2] When the man was allowed into the morgue, he immediately recognized the head as that of his missing sister. Upon this discovery, the man and his relatives were questioned thoroughly, revealing to police that Astutik was last seen visiting the house of their neighbor, Astini Sumiasih.[2]

As a result, Sumiasih was immediately arrested and brought for interrogation, where she readily admitted to the crime, as well as her two previous murders. She was brought to trial before the Surabaya District Court and officially sentenced to death on October 17, 1996, and sent off to the Women's Correctional Institution in Malang to await execution.[2] Over the following years, she repeatedly submitted requests for clemency to the Supreme Court and the President, all of which were repeatedly denied. While sitting on death row, she was often visited by Pastor Anderas Nurmandala, who later aided her children in graduating from high school.[4]

Execution edit

After her last petition for clemency was denied in 2004, Sumiasih was remanded for a five-day isolation period to the Medaeng Detention Center in March 2005, where she was visited by her husband and children.[2][5]

On March 20, 2005, accompanied by her lawyer and the prosecutorial team, Sumiasih was escorted to an undisclosed location near Surabaya, where she was subsequently executed by the East Java Regional Police Mobile Brigade. She was shot six times directly into the heart, dying on the spot.[2][5] Her body was then transported for an autopsy at the Soetomo Hospital, and afterwards buried at the public cemetery in Surabaya, according to her family's wishes.[6]

Aftermath edit

Following her execution, a debate over the cruelty of the death penalty was enacted in the country and whether Sumiasih's sentence should've been reduced. Her house was rented out to several families, who supposedly reported that it smelled of blood.[7]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Astini's life ends in the firing squad hands". 21 March 2005.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "The Death of a Butcher". Liputan 6 (in Indonesian). March 29, 2005.
  3. ^ "Sumirsih: I'm sorry, my son..." Kompas (in Indonesian). July 17, 2008.
  4. ^ Syamsul Anwar Khoemaeni (April 29, 2015). "The Story of a Death Convict's Companion". Okenews (in Indonesian).
  5. ^ a b "Astini Executed". Liputan 6 (in Indonesian). March 20, 2005.
  6. ^ "'We Are Satisfied, The Life Debt Was Paid'". Nasional Tempo (in Indonesian). March 20, 2005. Archived from the original on June 9, 2021. Retrieved June 9, 2021.
  7. ^ "Astini's House of Horrors". detik.com (in Indonesian). March 18, 2005.