BUCHA, Ukraine — When the troopers of Russia’s sixty fourth Motorized Rifle Brigade arrived in Bucha in mid-March, they introduced a brand new stage of demise and terror to the town.

Over the following 18 days, in only one nook of this Kyiv suburb the place the brigade took management, 12 folks had been killed, together with the entire inhabitants of six homes the place the troopers arrange camp.

Olha Havryliuk’s son and son-in-law, together with a stranger, had been shot within the head within the yard of their home. The Russian troopers smashed the Havryliuks’s fence, parked their armored automobile within the backyard, and moved into the home. They cooked within the neighbor’s backyard, killing and plucking chickens and roasting them on a barbecue whereas the lads lay lifeless yards away throughout the alley.

By the point the troops pulled out on the finish of March, two brothers, Yuriy and Viktor Pavlenko, who lived on the finish of the road, lay lifeless in a ditch by the railway line. Volodymyr Cherednychenko was discovered lifeless in a neighbor’s cellar. One other man, caught by the Russian troopers as he ran alongside the practice monitor and brought right into a cellar of a home on the finish of the road, was additionally discovered shot lifeless.

The story of Bucha and its horrors has unfolded in chapters as new revelations of Russian atrocities emerge, fueling outrage amongst Ukrainians and throughout a lot of the world. However prosecutors and army intelligence officers had been investigating early on, amassing proof to attempt to establish the perpetrators answerable for the mass killings, torture and rapes within the as soon as tranquil suburb.

Working with warfare crimes and forensic specialists from around the globe, Ukrainian investigators have reached some preliminary conclusions, focusing particularly on the sixty fourth Brigade. They’ve already recognized 10 troopers from the unit and accused them of warfare crimes.

Ukrainian officers say that the brigade was fashioned after Russia struggled in a 2008 warfare with Georgia, and that it was awarded an honorary title by President Vladimir V. Putin final month for its efficiency in Ukraine.

But the brigade took little half in any combating, coming in after different items had seized management of Bucha after which tasked with “holding” it. The troops established checkpoints all through the city, parking their armored autos in folks’s yards and taking on their houses.

“They imprisoned our folks,” stated Ruslan Kravchenko, the chief prosecutor for the Bucha district, describing the actions of the accused troopers. “They tied their fingers and legs and taped their eyes. They beat them with fists and toes, and with gun butts within the chest, and imitated executions.”

The identify of the sixty fourth Brigade and a listing of 1,600 of its troopers had been discovered amongst pc information left behind within the Russian army headquarters in Bucha, offering investigators with an immense useful resource as they started their investigation. Dmytro Replianchuk at Slidtsvo.data, a Ukrainian investigative information company, quickly discovered the social media profiles of dozens of the names, together with officers.

Three victims who survived beatings and torture have been in a position to establish the perpetrators from the images, Mr. Kravchenko stated.

One of many victims was Yuriy, 50, a manufacturing facility employee, who lives close to probably the most infamous Russian bases, at 144 Yablunska Road. On March 13, a unit of the sixty fourth Brigade got here to go looking his home. He stated that he had recognized the troopers when proven pictures by prosecutors. The troopers had been tough and uncouth, he stated. “You may see they had been from the Taiga,” he stated, referring to the Siberian forest. “They simply speak to bears.”

Yuriy managed to keep away from suspicion, however on March 19, the troopers returned and detained his neighbor Oleksiy. Like a number of others interviewed for this text, the lads requested to be recognized by solely their first names for his or her safety.

Oleksiy declined to be interviewed however confirmed that he had been detained twice by the Russian unit, interrogated in a basement for a number of hours and put by means of a mock execution when the troopers fired a gun behind him. Nonetheless shaken, he stated, “I simply need to attempt to neglect all of it.”

Created to ‘Scare the Inhabitants’

Based mostly in Russia’s far east, close to the border with China, the sixty fourth Brigade belongs to the Japanese Army District, lengthy seen because the a part of the Russian Military with the bottom ranges of coaching and gear.

The brigade has ethnic Russian commanders however consists largely of troopers drawn from minority ethnic teams and deprived communities, in line with Col. Mykola Krasny, the pinnacle of public affairs of Ukrainian army intelligence.

In radio conversations that had been intercepted by Ukrainian forces, a few of the Russians expressed shock that village roads in outlying areas of Kyiv, Ukraine’s capital, had been paved with asphalt, he stated.

“We see it as a deliberate coverage to draft troopers from depressed areas of Russia,” Colonel Krasny stated.

Not rather a lot is thought in regards to the brigade, however Colonel Krasny claimed that it was notable for its lack of morality, for beatings of troopers and for thieving. Drawn from a regiment that had served in Chechnya, the brigade was established on Jan. 1, 2009, shortly after Russia’s warfare in Georgia, Colonel Krasny stated. The objective was clear, he added: to construct up a fearsome military unit that might instill management.

“The results of those politics was what occurred in Bucha,” he stated. “Having no self-discipline, and these aggressive habits, it seems prefer it was created to scare the inhabitants.”

He claimed that the Russian troopers’ deprived backgrounds, and the truth that they may act with impunity, prompted them “to do unspeakable issues.”

It was not solely the enemy who suffered their brutality. The Russian Military has lengthy had a fame for hazing its personal troopers, and on a cellphone left behind in Bucha by a member of the sixty fourth, investigators discovered current proof of the observe: a video wherein an officer is speaking to a subordinate after which out of the blue punches him within the aspect of the pinnacle whereas different troopers stand round speaking.

The Russian authorities didn’t reply to a request for touch upon the accusations towards the sixty fourth Brigade however has repeatedly claimed that allegations of its forces having dedicated atrocities in Bucha and elsewhere are false.

Western analysts who’ve studied the Russian Military stated that the conduct of troops in Bucha was not a shock.

“It’s in step with the best way they contemplate responding,” stated Nick Reynolds, a researcher of land warfare on the Royal United Companies Institute, a army analysis group in London. “Reprisals are half and parcel of how the Russian army does enterprise.”

The ‘Dangerous Guys’ Will Come

Killings occurred in Bucha from the primary days that Russian troops appeared. The primary items had been airborne assault troops, paratroopers and particular forces who fired on automobiles and civilians within the streets and detained males suspected of being within the Ukrainian Military or territorial protection.

The extent of the killings, and the seeming lack of hesitation amongst Russian troopers to hold them out, has led Ukrainian officers to surmise that they had been performing beneath orders.

“They couldn’t not know,” Bucha’s prosecutor, Mr. Kravchenko, stated of senior army commanders. “I feel the phobia was deliberate.”

Most of the documented killings occurred on Yablunska Road, the place our bodies lay for weeks, seen on satellite tv for pc photographs. However not far-off, on a nook of Ivana Franka Road, a specific type of hell performed out after March 12.

Residents had already been warned that issues would worsen. A pensioner, Mykola, 67, stated that the Russian troops who first got here to the neighborhood had suggested him to go away whereas he might. “‘After us, such dangerous guys will come,’” the commander instructed him, he recalled. “I feel that they had radio contact and so they knew who was coming, and so they had their very own opinion of them.”

Mykola left Bucha earlier than the sixty fourth Brigade arrived.

The spring flowers are pushing up in every single place in Bucha, fruit bushes are in blossom, and metropolis employees have swept the streets and stuffed in a few of the bomb craters. However on the finish of Ivana Franka Road, amid smashed automobiles and destroyed houses, there may be an eerie desolation.

“From this home to the tip, nobody is left alive,” stated Ms. Havryliuk, 65. “Eleven folks had been killed right here. Solely we stayed alive.”

Her son and son-in-law had stayed behind to take care of the home and the canines, and had been killed on March 12 or 13, when the sixty fourth Brigade first arrived, she stated. The demise certificates stated that that they had been shot within the head.

What occurred over the following two weeks is tough to fathom. The few residents who stayed had been confined to their houses and solely often dared to exit to fetch water from a effectively. A few of them noticed folks being detained by the Russians.

Nadezhda Cherednychenko, 50, pleaded with the troopers to let her son go. He was being held within the yard of a home and his arm had been injured when she final noticed him. She discovered him lifeless within the cellar of the identical home three weeks later, after the Russians withdrew.

“They need to be punished,” she stated of his captors. “They introduced a lot ache to folks. Moms with out kids, fathers, kids with out mother and father. It’s one thing you can’t forgive.”

Neighbors who lived subsequent door to the Havryliuks simply disappeared. Volodymyr and Tetiana Shypilo, a trainer, and their son Andriy, 39, lived in a single a part of the home, and Oleh Yarmolenko, 47, lived alone within the different aspect. “They had been all our kinfolk,” Ms. Havryliuk stated.

Down a aspect alley lived Lidiya Sydorenko, 62, and her husband Serhiy, 65. Their daughter, Tetiana Naumova, stated that she spoke to them by phone midmorning on March 22.

“Mom was crying the entire time,” Ms. Naumova stated. “She was normally an optimist, however I feel she had a nasty feeling.”

Minutes later, Russian troopers got here in and demanded to go looking their storage. They instructed a neighbor to go away, capturing on the floor by her toes.

“By lunchtime that they had killed them,” Ms. Naumova stated.

She returned to the home along with her husband, Vitaliy, and her son Anton final month after the Russian troops withdrew from Kyiv. Her mother and father had been nowhere to be discovered, however they discovered ominous traces — her father’s hat with bullet holes in it, three swimming pools of blood and a chunk of her mom’s scalp and hair.

There was additionally no signal of the Shypilos or of Mr. Yarmolenko, besides trails of blood the place our bodies had been dragged alongside the ground of their home.

Ultimately, French forensic investigators solved the thriller.

They examined six charred our bodies present in an empty lot up the road and confirmed that they had been the lacking civilians: the Sydorenkos, the three Shypilos and Mr. Yarmolenko. A number of bore bullet wounds however three of them had had limbs severed, together with Ms. Naumova’s mom, the investigators instructed the households.

Her father had a number of gunshot wounds to the pinnacle and chest, her mom had had an arm and a leg reduce off, she stated.

“They tortured them,” Ms. Havryliuk stated, “and burned them to cowl their tracks.”