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Ulvi Kulac

Türkischer Serienmörder und Frauenhasser des 20. Jahrhunderts

Ulvi Kulac is one of the most feared serial killers in Turkish criminal history, known for his crimes against women in Istanbul during the 1980s and 1990s. His systematic targeting of vulnerable women and the brutality of his murders exposed significant gaps in Turkish police investigations and victim protection at the time. Kulac was eventually convicted of multiple murders and sentenced to life imprisonment.

By
Susanne Sperling
Serienmörder
Istanbul
Türkei
1980er-90er Jahre
Frauenhass
Gewaltverbrechen
Kriminalgeschichte

Who is Ulvi Kulac?

Ulvi Kulac ranks among the darkest chapters in Turkish criminal history. As a serial killer driven by pathological hatred toward women, he left a trail of fear and terror across Istanbul. His crimes in the 1980s and 1990s revealed not only the brutality of a single perpetrator, but also significant gaps in Turkish police investigations and victim protection during that era.

Early Years and Psychological Profile

Little is publicly known about Kulac's childhood and family, but criminal psychologists who analyzed the case point to a severely disturbed relationship with women. His hatred was not random but systematically directed at women he often perceived as sex workers or socially marginalized. This victim selection was characteristic of an offender with misogynistically motivated violence, as frequently documented in serial killer profiles.

Kulac was intelligent enough to conceal his crimes for an extended period, yet he also displayed classic characteristics of a disorganized killer with spontaneous, impulsive eruptions of violence. His arrests did not immediately lead to convictions for all his crimes, as evidence loss and inadequate investigative methods posed significant problems.

The Victims and Crime Pattern

The known victims of Ulvi Kulac were predominantly women from Istanbul's underground scene. He selected victims considered particularly vulnerable—women without strong social networks, whose disappearances were not immediately noticed or taken seriously. This victim selection is typical of robbers and serial murderers who deliberately target easily accessible and poorly protected individuals.

Published
May 8, 2026 at 12:19 AM
Read Time
3 min

The crimes were characterized by extreme violence, sexual components, and in several cases, mutilation. Kulac often left traces at crime scenes, but these were not always properly documented or connected. This led investigators to initially fail to recognize that a serial killer was responsible for multiple murders.

Investigation and Arrest

Turkish police took years to establish connections between the murders. Only when additional murders occurred and witness reports increased did the hunt for Kulac intensify. His arrest marked a turning point in public perception of security conditions in Istanbul at that time.

Investigations into the murders in Turkey revealed institutional weaknesses: insufficient databases for linking cases, lack of specialization in violent crimes, and the socially low status of victims led to enormous delays in solving the cases.

Trial and Conviction

Kulac was eventually brought to court and sentenced to multiple life sentences. The trials were highly prominent in Turkish public discourse and sparked debates about gender violence, victim protection, and police efficiency. Although several crimes were definitively proven, there is speculation that he may have claimed more victims than officially known.

Legacy and Criminological Significance

The Ulvi Kulac case had profound effects on Turkish criminal police and led to reforms in investigative techniques. He is cited in criminology textbooks as an example of a disorganized serial killer with misogynistic motivation and has shaped discourse about serial murders in Turkey. The realization that socially marginalized victims receive less protection remains an important lesson from this case.

Read more

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Susanne Sperling

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