
"When I came in (went to prison), I didn't do anything," Sobhraj, 78, told AFP on board a plane for his deportation to France after being released.
"I am innocent in those cases, ok? So I don't have to feel bad for that, or good. I am innocent. It was built on fake documents."
He added: "The district judge, without calling a single witness ... and without giving notice (to) the accused to present an argument, he wrote the verdict."
Here is all you need to know about the Bikini Killer:
- Sobhraj is born in Saigon on April 6, 1944, to an Indian father and a Vietnamese mother who later remarries a Frenchman. In 1963, he embarks on a life as an international crook, which will take him to Greece, Turkey, Iran, Pakistan and Afghanistan.
- In 1970, he moves to India, where he is arrested a year later for a jewellery heist. He flees while out on bail and goes to Greece, where he also manages to escape after being arrested.
- He arrives in Bangkok in 1975 with his Canadian girlfriend and an Indian associate. He hangs out with tourists, passing himself off as a trader in precious stones.
- In October, the body of a young woman is found on a Thai beach in Pattaya, wearing a bikini. Other victims follow, beaten, strangled or burned to death. Sobhraj, who will become known as the "Bikini killer" allegedly uses his victims' passports for mysterious trips linked to trade in precious stones and drugs.
- In July 1976, he is arrested in India after trying to drug a group of more than 20 French tourists in a New Delhi hotel. He is also accused of the murder of another French tourist, Luc Salomon, who had been poisoned in a Mumbai hotel.
- In May 1982, he is handed a life sentence by an Indian court for the 1976 murder of an Israeli tourist, Alan Jacob, but is acquitted on appeal a year later for lack of evidence.
- In late 1985, India agrees to Thailand's request to extradite Sobhraj for the murders of a Turkish tourist and a young American woman, Teresa Knowlton.
- Accused of at least 15 murders across 10 countries, by the time he leaves Indian jails, his alleged crimes have fallen under the statute of limitations in Thailand. Upon release, he goes to France and lives there quietly until 2003 before returning to Nepal.
- Nicknamed the "Serpent" for his skill in slipping and sliding out of the judicial dragnet, Sobhraj then returns to Nepal to set up a shawl export company under a false identity. He is quickly recognised and arrested in Kathmandu for the 1975 murders of two tourists, a Canadian backpacker Laurent Armand Carriere and American Connie Joe Bronzich. He receives a life sentence in August 2004.
- On December 21, 2022, Nepal's top court orders the release of Sobhraj from prison on health grounds. He is released on December 23, and is due to be deported to France within 15 days.
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