
A wounded protester is rushed to a vehicle following violence in Independence Square in Kiev February 20, 2014
"I was shooting downward at their feet," says a man the broadcaster decided to identify as Sergei. "Of course, I could have hit them in the arm or anywhere. But I didn't shoot to kill."
According to Sergei, he took up a position in the Kiev Conservatory, a music academy located on the southwest corner of Kiev's Independence Square, on February 20.
One day prior, he had met up with a man who offered him two guns. The first was a 12-gauge shotgun, while the other was a hunting rifle - a Saiga that fired high-velocity rounds.
He chose the Saiga and hid it at a post office that, along with the conservatory, was under the protesters' control. Sergei told the BBC he was later escorted to the Conservatory, where, with a second gunman, he spent 20 minutes before 7:00 am firing on police.
Comment: It's likely that the "stranger" who offered this man weapons was an intelligence agent who was part of a plan to force the police to defend themselves, so that they could then be blamed for "attacking" the protesters.
Other witness testimony has corroborated his account.














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