To the convoy about criminal symbols for official use
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Tattoos of convicts, their forensic significance. Methodological development. Bronnikov A.G. Moscow, Scientific Research and Editorial Publishing Department, 1980
A collection of slang words and expressions used by the criminal element. Nikonorov M.G., 1978. It is an internal departmental publication.
The collection of two rare specialized publications includes an extensive dictionary of various expressions, mostly from thieves' jargon, as well as an interpretation of common elements of tattoos and their meaning in the system of criminal values.
The publications are intended primarily for workers involved in the re-education of persons held in places of deprivation of liberty.
Arkady Bronnikov is a renowned Perm criminologist, Candidate of Law, associate professor, retired police colonel, veteran of the Great Patriotic War. Bronnikov is considered the leading expert in Russia on the study of prison tattoos.
Having been a senior specialist in the criminology department at the USSR Ministry of Internal Affairs for more than thirty years, Bronnikov visited many correctional institutions in the Urals and Siberia, where he interviewed and photographed thousands of convicts.
Bronnikov's work, presented in the Stargift collection, has repeatedly contributed to the disclosure of criminal cases throughout Russia, the identification of criminals, thanks to the unique collection of tattoos described in it.
Bronnikov notes very interesting details of the interpretation of the meanings of various symbols depicted by prisoners on tattoos. For example, the "ring" on the index finger means: "Don't trust anyone but yourself"; ;skull and crossbones, pistol, knife and the letter "K" denote the killer. If the abbreviation "Elephant" is stuffed on the criminal's right leg, it means "From an early age, Only Misfortunes," etc.
The collection of M.G. Nikonorov includes about 3,000 words and various expressions, mostly from thieves' jargon. The author gives examples of words used with a subsequent explanation of the meaning: "... A bastard is a bad person. Padlo batistovoe is a very bad person...".
Material: paper.
Sizes: 22.5 × 17.8 × 1 cm .