Killer jailed after brutally betraying young son
Miklos Bolza |
In his final moments, Alexi wanted to be like his father: with a red-coloured neck.
But in a perverse and egregious breach of trust, his drug-abusing, paranoid father Nathan Vikatos calmly took his son’s life, motivated by unfounded fears.
Vikatos led Alexi into the bathroom of a female relative’s Sydney apartment in May 2023, one-and-a-half hours after learning his partner made a domestic violence complaint to police about him.
After neither emerged for some time, the woman unlocked the bathroom door with a butter knife and found the pair lying in a pool of blood.

The boy, who was three years and nine months old, could not be revived.
In a phone call from jail after his arrest, the killer told partner Carmen Melek he “did himself” first and then asked his son what colour he saw.
“Red,” the boy told his father.
“You want to be red too?” the father asked, before Alexi replied yes.
“Then I did it,” Vikatos told Ms Melek, before attempting to blame her for trying to “put me in” jail.
The 48-year-old told prison staff he killed his son in an attempted murder-suicide because he wanted them to become two ghosts.
NSW Supreme Court Justice Paul McGuire said a child of such tender years as Alexi was entitled to feel safe and protected when in the presence of their father.
“By killing his own infant child, the offender has perversely and egregiously breached the trust, protection and love that Alexi deserved,” he said in a decision published on Friday.
After Vikatos’s arrest, he told hospital staff he knew he would be arrested but had no one to take care of his son and did not want him “bouncing around in foster care”.

But he need not have felt alone, his sister told the court in a moving victim impact statement.
“She said he had support all around him in his extended family and that help was there, love was there and taking Alexi’s life was never the only option,” the judge said.
Alexi’s biological mother Jessica Marett died of natural causes two years before the murder.
His father resumed a relationship with Ms Melek six months later and soon started reusing methylamphetamine.
The couple had previously split in 2014 over his violent behaviour and drug use.
Days before the murder, he accused Ms Melek of infidelity, smashing her phone and assaulting her in the bathroom of his home.
He also expressed delusions that police were watching him.
Unable to contact his mother, he abandoned his Blue Mountains home, taking Ms Melek and Alexi to his aunt’s apartment.
While he was out looking for a place to live, Ms Melek packed her bags and left, calling police to make the domestic violence complaint.

Justice McGuire found Vikatos was experiencing bizarre beliefs spurred by paranoia that his son was better off dead than being cared for by someone else.
He had only made very limited expressions of contrition and remorse, including a guilty plea in November.
Recent claims to a forensic psychiatrist that he heard voices telling him to “kill everything he loved” at the time of the murder were inconsistent with statements made to police and hospital staff soon after, the judge noted.
Justice McGuire jailed Vikatos for 28 years and six months after a 25 per cent discount for the guilty plea.
He set the non-parole period at 18 years and six months – reducing it after finding the 48-year-old’s time in custody would be more onerous because of his mental illness.
He was also likely to spend time in protective custody because of the nature of his offence.
He will be eligible for parole in December 2041.
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AAP