Ola Kravchenko murdered Tair Rada.
(98% probability)Ola Kravchenko murdered Tair Rada.
(98% probability)On 6th December 2006, Tair Rada, a 13-year-old Israeli schoolgirl, was found dead, covered in her own blood and her throat sliced, inside a locked bathroom stall in her school, Nofey Golan, in the town of Katzrin.
Initial suspects were Roman Zdorov, a floorer temporarily working at the school and a new immigrant to Israel from Ukraine, as well as Tair’s schoolmates. During the police investigation, Zdorov confessed to the crime but recanted soon after. Zdorov was convicted of the murder on 14th September 2010.
In 2012, Adir Habani told the police that his ex-girlfriend, Ola Kravchenko, had confessed to him on the day of the murder that she had killed Tair, and shown him bloodied clothes and a knife.
Adir’s testimony became public in 2016 with the international release of the documentary series Shadow of Truth and has continued to receive international attention with a true crime podcast in 2021.
Following the emergence of new evidence, and awaiting a rare retrial ordered by the Supreme Court, Zdorov was released on house arrest on 26th August 2021.
During the retrial, which started on 12th October 2021, an old piece of evidence, a hair found at the crime scene, was found to strongly match Adir Habani. This evidence dramatically increases the likelihood that Ola murdered Tair since Habani has an alibi and he claims that Ola wore his clothes while committing the murder. However, this analysis intentionally ignores this evidence, in order to demonstrate what a probabilistic analysis could have found using only the evidence available in 2012.
Ola Kravchenko murdered Tair Rada.
Roman Zdorov murdered Tair Rada.
Between 1-4 Nofey Golan students murdered Tair Rada.
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As no clear motive exists for Zdorov or the Schoolmates, and no statistics exist for the unique circumstances of Tair’s murder in a school, in order to arrive at initial likelihoods for each of these hypotheses, Rootclaim looked at statistics on the identity of school shooters in the U.S. and assigned these to the schoolmates and Zdorov hypotheses. We then increased Zdorov’s odds of murdering due to being male and a temporary worker, and adjusted according to how many students were studying at Nofey Golan at the time. As Ola is known to harbor a strong urge to kill random people, her hypothesis was assessed based on the specific likelihood of her wanting and being able to murder Tair. Given the rarity of school murders in Israel, the coincidence of one happening in proximity to Ola puts her as the most likely murderer, prior to examining the specific evidence of the case.
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Zdorov’s investigation and the search of his belongings resulted in findings indicating behaviors that increase the likelihood of his guilt: he kept a knife collection, read an article on how to neutralize an enemy with a knife, and claimed to have thrown away the pants he was wearing the day of the murder.
Yet, just as a bigger fishing net catching more fish is not indicative of more fish in the area, the wider and more thorough the search and investigation, the less weight should be attributed to each piece of evidence arising from it. Thus, as Zdorov’s physical and digital life was combed through, we would actually expect to see evidence of similar level, even from someone innocent. As such, Zdorov’s behavior as a whole only slightly raises the likelihood of his guilt.
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Although some minor claims of strange behavior or lying have been made against them, Tair’s schoolmates did not exhibit any unexpected behaviors after Tair’s murder. Moreover, despite 10 or more students being interrogated, no confessions were made nor were any substantially incriminating statements or evidence given to the interrogators. Neither were such statements made in the years since the murder. Studies, and our own analysis of teen murderers, found children to be likely to confess under investigation, as well as spontaneously confess to friends. The lack of confessions or suspicious activity by the schoolmates, significantly reduces the likelihood for their hypothesis.
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After Zdorov’s arrest, he was interrogated intensively by police investigators, and a Russian-speaking undercover informant, Arthur, was planted in his prison cell with the promise of financial rewards if he could elicit a confession from Zdorov.
Zdorov eventually confessed and reenacted the murder on 19th December 2006. A day later, he recanted his confession, claiming that he was under extreme pressure and that the argument between him and Tair that he claimed led to him murdering her never occurred. The weakness of his confession and his overall pattern of behavior are consistent with a false confession given in order to obtain a lighter sentence, which reduces the likelihood of his guilt.
Zdorov’s confession has elements that may be claimed to make it more genuine, and others that make it less so. We therefore used general statistics of false confessions, which resulted in a substantial increase of the Zdorov hypothesis.
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Adir Habani, Ola’s ex-boyfriend, testified to the police in 2012 that Ola had confessed to him about murdering Tair the day the murder was committed. He recounted Ola’s story of how she entered the school as well as showing him the bag in which she kept her blood-stained clothes and knife. The police dismissed this at the time as the ramblings of a vengeful ex. However, the testimony’s high level of accuracy, the rarity of false accusations of a confession, and two further claims of Ola confessing, increase the likelihood that Adir’s testimony is true. Overall, this substantially increases the likelihood of the Ola hypothesis.
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A peace symbol was carved onto the door of the toilet stall in which Tair was murdered. The symbol has been found in Ola’s jewelry and art around the time of the murder, slightly increasing the likelihood that Ola is the murderer.
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No forensic evidence was found that linked Zdorov to Tair’s body or to the crime scene. Similarly, none of Tair’s DNA was found on Zdorov’s belongings, despite the extraordinary effort to find her DNA. As such, this reduces the likelihood of the Zdorov hypothesis.
The crime scene similarly did not include forensic evidence of Ola (other than Adir’s hair which is purposefully ignored). However, since she is claimed to have come prepared, and was not thoroughly investigated, the Ola hypothesis is reduced by a smaller factor.
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