The Terror of Moravia: Martin Lecián In the winter of 1927, a dying man with a gun held an entire nation captive. Martin Lecián-safecracker, deserter, and multiple murderer-escaped from a military hospital in his pyjamas and leg irons, then evaded the largest manhunt in Czechoslovak history for ten brutal months. Newspapers transformed him into a romantic outlaw, the "Czech Jánosík." Street musicians sang ballads mocking the police who couldn't catch him. But behind the legend was a far darker reality: a tubercular criminal who murdered a night watchman, shot multiple police officers, and used a wet cloth to filter ash while cracking obsolete safes.Drawing on trial transcripts, forensic evidence, and contemporary newspaper accounts, historian [Author Name] reconstructs Lecián's trajectory from neglected child to executed criminal, revealing how institutional failures at every turn-family collapse, brutal reformatories, military prisons-created the Terror of Moravia. This deeply researched narrative explores the birth of modern criminology, the dangerous relationship between media and crime, and why outlaw legends persist despite brutal reality. Lecián's unmarked grave was meant to ensure he'd be forgotten. A century later, his legend endures-and the questions his case raises about crime, punishment, and justice remain disturbingly relevant.