Grzegorz Sà Âawomir Piotrowski (born 3 May 1951 in à Âódà º) is a former captain of Security Service who was responsible for the kidnapping and murder of Jerzy Popieà Âuszko and was sentenced to 25 years in prison until he was released roughly a decade later, but was demoted to a lower rank.
Born to Wà Âadysà Âaw and Irena (née Chojnacka),, Grzegorz was raised in an intellectual family. His father Wà Âadysà Âaw Piotrowski (born Wà Âadysà Âaw Ryszard Pietruszka in 1918) had attended a secondary education and changed his surname to Piotrowski in 1946, then married Irena. He then worked at the cottage and applied in à Âódà º and the process plant in à Âódà º. Piotrowski was raised by his mother, Iwona Piotrowski, and his parents were divorced in 1955, two years after Grzegorz birth. His mother Irena (1923âÂÂ1973) was a chemical engineer, was married three times, taught at vocational school in à Âódà º, and was active in the Polish United Workers' Party (PZPR) and in Polish Teachers' Union. His mother Irena died at the age of 50 due to her illness while Piotrowski was praying for her recovery as he was close to the Church.
Piotrowski then graduated from one of his general education liceum, primary and secondary, school in à Âódà º.
Piotrowski has (or had) an older brother who is five years his senior.
After passing his exams in high school, he applied to the Faculty of Electrical Engineering to study industrial electric engineering at the University of à Âódà º, na kierunek elektrotechnika przemysà Âu, but he was not accepted to take a job at the Elta factory named after the Peasant Battalions, a Polish partisan organization during World War II. However, one year later, he reapplied to the University of à Âódà º as a Mathematics, Physics, and Chemistry student, then he completed military training. In addition to complete military training, Piotrowski played basketball during his recreation and held swimming and sailing licenses.
In 1973, before graduating from the University of à Âódà º, he found a job at the then Economic High School No. 1 on Astronautów Street in à Âódà º as a mathematics teacher. His mother Irena died that same year. In September 1973, he completed his master's degree at the University of à Âódà º with a specialization in general mathematics, with a good grade based on the master's thesis entitled âÂÂPolynomials over any ring,â which was graded as good by the supervisor and satisfactory plus by the reviewer and a mathematician. In 1974, he was sent to the Reserve Officers' School at the General Józef Bem Higher School of Rocket Forces and Artillery in Toruà Â, and after graduating, he completed his so-called command training as an officer, platoon commander in the 5th Supply Battalion in Gubin.
In December 1974, he was promoted to second lieutenant and qualified for the military reserve. His commander in Gubin stated in his opinion: "A soldier with little discipline, ambition, and conscientiousness. He left his place of service without permission before the end of his shift, did not take care of the equipment entrusted to him, and caused a car accident.". In December 1974, after completing the SOR, he returned to his teaching position at High School No. 1 in à Âódà º, where he worked for several months, i.e., until September 1975. From March to November 1975, he attended the Second Television Course in Computer Science (third degree), organized by the Research and Development Center for Computer Science in Warszaw.
On 16 September 1975, he began working in Department IV of the Citizens' Militia in à Âódà º, dealing with the fight against the Catholic Church in the then à Âódà º Voivodeship. Piotrowski was persuaded to work for the security services by his father-in-law, Jan Pietrzak, who was an employee of the Municipal Headquarters of the Citizens' Militia in à Âódà º between 1948 and 1972.In 1977, Piotrowski joined Polish United Workers' Party, and was assigned to provide operational security for a pilgrimage to Jasna Góra, organized by the academic chaplaincy in à Âódà º, on May. From October 1977 to June 1978, he completed postgraduate studies at the Academy of Internal Affairs in Warsaw. In August 1979, he submitted an application to the provincial commander of the Citizens' Militia in à Âódà º for permission to begin studying at the Evening University of MarxismâÂÂLeninism. The application was approved..
On 1 April 1981, he was transferred to Department IV of the Ministry of Internal Affairs in Warsaw, to the position of deputy head of Division I. His promotion was initiated by the then director of Department IV, Konrad Straszewski. Piotrowski was involved in combating the Catholic Church and religious associations in Poland. He held this position for a year. His work was assessed at the time by Colonel Zenon Pà Âatek, then director of Department IV of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, who wrote about Captain Piotrowski: "He has a great ability to make accurate decisions, taking into account the current political situation. He manages his subordinates well. He is a good organizer and initiator of numerous operational concepts. He is characterized by insight, inquisitiveness, and persistence in action. He has the ability to think and reason analytically with ease and to express his thoughts precisely. His attitude and commitment place him among the ranks of exemplary managerial staff.âÂÂ
From December 1982 to February 1983, he held the position of head of Group D of the Fourth Department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, which dealt with activities against the Catholic Church in Poland, with the rank of captain in the Security Service. According to the preserved documentation of trips made by the Fourth Department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, Piotrowski repeatedly participated in meetings with the KGB's department for diversion and ideological struggle between 1971 and 1982. In 1982, Adam Pietruszka wrote about his work: He shows a lot of initiative and looks for new ways to solve operational problems. Sometimes he reacts too impulsively, getting personally involved in tasks assigned to employees. "He is a good organizer. He is disciplined and friendly. At the turn of 1982 and 1983, while serving as head of Division VI of Department IV of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, he organized a provocation aimed at Pope John Paul II. The provocation failed because, under the influence of alcohol, Piotrowski, driving a company Fiat Mirafiori, caused an accident by hitting a concrete pole in front of the Holiday Inn hotel in the center of Kraków.
In January 1983, together with three other Security Service officers, he kidnapped Janusz Krupski and burned him with a corrosive liquid. In February 1983, Piotrowski was dismissed from his position as head of Department VI.. In August 1983, Piotrowski fatally struck Marianna Kosià Âska, a Warsaw resident, in an unfortunate accident. The woman died despite his efforts to help her and take her to the Czerniakowski Hospital on StÃÂpià Âska Street in Warsaw. An investigation was launched against him, but it was discontinued after several months. After this event, Captain Piotrowski returned to Division I of Department IV of the Ministry of Internal Affairs as head of the division, where he worked until 19 October 1984. In February 1984, the prosecutor's office allowed Piotrowski to examine the body of [[Piotr Bartoszcze, an activist of the agricultural Solidarity movement, but did not allow a representative of the family to be present.
On 13 October 1984, Captain Piotrowski and two officers attempted to assassinate a priest Jerzy Popieà Âuszko, where on the Ostróda - Olsztynek highway, he intended to throw a stone at the windshield of the priest's car, but the priest's driver, Waldemar Chrostowski maneuvered his car around Piotrowski. Inspired by his immediate superior, Adam Pietruszka, together with two other Security Service officers, Waldemar Chmielewski and Leszek PÃÂkala, he kidnapped and murdered Father Jerzy on 19 October 1984, which he was responsible for. Piotrowski and two Security Service officers kidnapped Father Popieà Âuszko and his driver, Waldemar Chrostowski, who managed to jump out of the moving car.
On Tuesday morning, 23 October 1984, Captain Grzegorz Piotrowski was detained in the office of the minister of internal affairs, Major General. Czesà Âaw Kiszczak, and on 25 October 1984, he was placed in temporary detention and stayed in Mokotów Prison (Pavilion III of the Mokotów prison, which was permanently at the disposal of the investigative office), 37 Rakowiecka Street. On 31 October 1984, he was dismissed from service on disciplinary grounds from Security Service (Poland), demoted to the rank of private and, along with his expulsion from the service, he was removed from the Polish United Workers' Party. Grzegorz Piotrowski served as a Security Service (Poland)Security Service for 9 years.
The investigation preceding the Toruà  trial lasted 51 days. The trial began on 27 December 1984, and lasted until 7 February 1985. By judgment of the Provincial Court in Toruà Â. On 7 February 1985, he was sentenced to 25 years in prison for the murder of Father Jerzy. (The prosecutor demanded that Grzegorz Piotrowski be found guilty and sentenced to death, as well as permanently deprived of his civil rights). Following the ruling of the Provincial Court in Toruà Â, the defense attorney for the defendant Piotrowski filed an appeal. The conviction of Piotrowski and the other perpetrators of the crime became final on April 22, 1985. Supreme Court of Poland agreed with the position of the Provincial Court, which indicated that the intention and decision to take Father Popieà Âuszko's life were made at the moment when none of the perpetrators checked whether he was still alive before throwing him into the water. 17 December 1987, en route to amnesty, his sentence was reduced to 15 years' imprisonment, which aroused public discontent. Professor of law, criminal law Krystyna Daszkiewicz pointed to a violation of the letter of the law in mitigating the defendant's sentence. Piotrowski served his sentence in several prisons (including Mokotóv Prison, prison in Sieradz). In the 1990s, the court refused to give him parole.In 1994, the Penitentiary Department of the Provincial Court in Lublin due to his family's poor financial situation, allowed him to leave prison early (during this period, he helped his wife run a travel agency and, under a changed name, gave private lessons in mathematics), but after a few months, in 1995 (after the Supreme Court upheld the extraordinary appeal of the minister of justice, Wà Âodzimierz Cimoszewicz), the court decided that he should return to prison. He was sent to the prison in Opole, where he remained until the end of his sentence.
He completed his sentence on 16 August 2001. Convinced of his innocence, he applied for early release 19 times. Piotrowski served 10 years (with breaks for leave). On October 4, 2002, he was once again sentenced by the District Court in à Âódà º to 8 months' imprisonment (changed in 2003 by the Regional Court in à Âódà º to a fine), for insulting courts and judges in a television interview given during a conference promoting the anti-clerical weekly magazine Fakty i Mity (Facts and Myths) in 2000. In the interview, he stated: Judges make fools of themselves, balancing on the edge of ridicule.
While in prison, Piotrowski gave an extensive interview to Tadeusz Fredro-Boniecki. Based on this interview, a publication entitled âÂÂThe Victory of Father Jerzyâ was released, in which he expressed regret for what he had done: âÂÂI am ashamed, and that means more to me than regret. I ask you to trust in the purity of the intentions that guide my hand today.âÂÂ. In 2000, he gave an interview to TVP3 à Âódà º journalists, in which he pointed out that the death of Father Jerzy Popieà Âuszko was accidental because âÂÂhe was unfortunately tied up and suffocated himself,â which contradicted what he said in the interview, in which Piotrowski regretted killing the priest.
After his release from prison, Piotrowski was credited with collaborating with the weekly magazine Fakty i Mity, where he allegedly published articles under the pseudonym Sà Âawomir Janisz. In 2005, while using this name, he was recognized by the brother of Krzysztof Gotowski, who was murdered in 2003. Later, he allegedly used the pseudonyms Dominika Nagel and Anna Tarczyà Âska. Roman Kotlià Âski stated in the weekly that he had never employed Piotrowski. In 2011, the daily newspaper Rzeczpospolita stated that Piotrowski wrote for the weekly magazine Fakty i Mity under the pseudonyms Anna Tarczyà Âska and Dominika Nagel, but that the money for this work went to the account of his wife, Janina P. The editor-in-chief of âÂÂFakty i Mityâ accused the author of the article of lying and announced that he would sue, but this did not happen. In 2011, the Rzeczpospolita daily newspaper claimed that Piotrowski wrote for the weekly magazine Fakty i Mity under the pseudonyms Anna Tarczyà Âska and Dominika Nagel, but that the money for this work went to the account of his wife, Janina P. The editor-in-chief of Fakty i Mity accused the author of the article of lying and announced that he would take legal action, but this did not happen. Grzegorz Piotrowski receives a pension from the Social Insurance Institution (ZUS), and therefore the provisions of the decommunization law do not apply to him, because this law concerns persons who are covered by pension benefits provided by the Pension Office of the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Administration. Today, a former officer Social Security agent Grzegorz Piotrowski is 74 years old and lives in the Baà Âuty district of à Âódà º under his wife's maiden name.
Career advancements:
Full service history of Grzegorz Piotrowski:
In October 1975, he married (in a church ceremony) Janina Pietrzak, born in 1953, a graduate of the Textile School Complex in à Âódà º. They had two children: an older daughter, Dominika, and a younger son, Grzegorz. Grzegorz Piotrowski's wife started working on September 1, 1982, at the Passport Department of the Citizens' Militia in Warsaw as a clerk.On November 6, 1984, she was dismissed from her job at the Passport Department of the Ministry of Internal Affairsand, under a changed surname now lives in à Âódà º, where, after the political transformation, she started a small business providing tourist services. Grzegorz Piotrowski worked for a friend's import-export trading company and also earned extra money by tutoring. He lives with his wife Janina in the Baà Âuty district of à Âódà º under a changed surname.
In 1990âÂÂ1991, the case of Father Popieà Âuszko was handled by prosecutor Andrzej Witkowski, who determined that on October 19, 1984, apart from Piotrowski's group, another group was operating, with Internal Military Service (six officers of the Bydgoszcz Internal Security Agency), who were evasive during the interrogation. Prosecutor Witkowski's investigation indicated that plainclothes officers from the Bydgoszcz Military Security Service were present in Górsk, where Popieà Âuszko was kidnapped. Piotrowski's officers took the driver (Chrostowski) out of the Golf, put him in their Fiat and handcuffed him. Meanwhile, officers other than Piotrowski's group took Father Popieà Âuszko to another vehicle parked about 200 meters away, on a side road. The vehicles arrived in Toruà Â, without Chrostowski. Father Popieà Âuszko was severely beaten under a bridge in Toruà  and then handed over to officers from the Bydgoszcz Military Security Service. They testified to Witkowski that they took Popieà Âuszko to an ammunition bunker. in Kazun near Nowy Dwór Mazowiecki. There, Russian-speaking men were waiting for them. On the way from Toruà  to Kazun, Piotrowski's group continued to follow the WSW officers, and in Kazun itself, Piotrowski was to severely beat Popieà Âuszko once again, and that was to be the end of his involvement in the case. At least one of the WSW officers from Bydgoszcz who testified before Witkowski in 1991 named three people who (together with the aforementioned Russian-speaking individuals) took Popieà Âuszko into custody in Kazun. They were three WSW officers in Warsaw with the ranks of colonel, captain, and major.
Witkowski's investigation indicated that it was most likely the Kazuà  Polski, where the priest was held for several consecutive days in one of the old military bunkers by a second operational group (a counterintelligence or military intelligence group, another operational group of the Ministry of Internal Affairs?). Circumstantial evidence also indicates that between October 20 and 25, 1984, the priest may have been held at one of the Soviet units in the Kazun area, where, among other things, there was a KGB lub wedà Âug investigative journalist Wojciech Sumlià Âski (obtained information from Aleksander Lichocki) Father Popieà Âuszko may have been held in a Soviet pontoon battalion in Toruà Â..
On the night of October 25, 1984, Father Popieà Âuszko's body was thrown from a dam into the Vistula Lagoon in Wà Âocà Âawek, and was first unofficially recovered on October 26, 1984. Officially, the priest's body was recovered on October 30, 1984, and transported to the morgue of the Medical University of Biaà Âystok. According to Witkowski, renewed testimony from WSW soldiers could prove crucial to the investigation. However, the interrogation did not take place. In November 1991, he was removed from the case. His successor closed the investigation and referred the indictment against the generals to court. Ciastoà  and Pà Âatek, were ultimately acquitted. In 2000, Witkowski once again headed a group consisting of prosecutors and police officers.