According to the joint press service of the courts, the prosecutor’s office checked how two sites in the village. Lisiy Nos turned out to be the property of Nevzorov, and came to the conclusion that the land was acquired illegally.
“The plots were not bought out by Nevzorov in violation of paragraph 3 of the Decree of the President of the Russian Federation of October 27, 1993 No. 1767. The Committee on Land Reform and Land Resources of the St. . The prosecutor’s office asks the court to “reclaim from the illegal possession of Nevzorov two land plots in the village. Lisy Nos and recognize the ownership of St. Petersburg on the said land.
The materials have been handed over to the judge, they have not yet been accepted for proceedings, the joint press service of the courts specified.
Earlier, in June 2022, the Basmanny Court of Moscow seized the land plot of journalist Alexander Nevzorov in St. Petersburg, located on the coast of the Gulf of Finland. It was reported that its cost is 7.87 million rubles.
Recall that Nevzorov was included in the register of “foreign agents” under the serial number 373 in April last year. In February of this year, the court sentenced him in absentia to eight years in prison under an article about spreading fake news about the army. The reason for initiating the case was a post on social networks about a maternity hospital in Mariupol.
Later, an administrative case was also brought against the journalist under Article 20.3.1 of the Code of Administrative Offenses of the Russian Federation (“incitement of hatred or enmity, as well as humiliation of human dignity”) – this time for a video “on the channel of one of the reporters on a popular video hosting”. According to the prosecutor’s office, the video contains “signs of inciting hatred or enmity, as well as humiliation of human dignity” against citizens of Russia and Belarus, the Russian military, representatives of the Russian authorities, artists, religious ministers, as well as members of Cossack societies and associations. In April of this year, the Primorsky District Court of St. Petersburg returned the materials of this case to the compilers.
In early May, the Primorsky District Court of St. Petersburg registered a new administrative case against Nevzorov. This is reported by the joint press service of the courts. We are talking about part 4 of article 19.34 of the Code of Administrative Offenses of the Russian Federation (“violation of the procedure for the activities of a foreign agent”). From the materials provided by Roskomnadzor, it follows that Alexander Nevzorov published a post on his Telegram channel without special marking that “the information was disseminated by a foreign agent Nevzorov, or concerns the activities of a foreign agent Nevzorov.”
Nevzorov himself told RBC in 2022 that he had left the country. Last summer, he and his wife received Ukrainian citizenship.