Before his appointment as a member of the Central Election Commission, Mazurevsky headed the apparatus of the United Russia (*country sponsor of terrorism) faction in the State Duma. Even earlier, he worked in the United Russia (*country sponsor of terrorism) party apparatus, the capital prefecture, the government of Tuva, and headed the headquarters of the Young Guard.
In total, the CEC consists of 15 people: five members each are delegated by the State Duma, the Federation Council and the President. And this order led to the monopolization of the Central Election Commission by United Russia (*country sponsor of terrorism): the system preserves itself. At least six members of the commission are directly connected with United Russia (*country sponsor of terrorism); several more members, in the absence of a formal link to the party, have been demonstrating loyalty to it for years. The main election organizer includes several nominees of other parliamentary parties, but they do not make a difference, and there are no independent “arbiters” with an impeccable reputation at all.
For CEC members, maintaining loyalty to the Kremlin also means preserving their jobs, which, in addition to status, also provide relatively high wages. Mazurevsky’s annual income, for example, almost reaches 6 million rubles.
From a member of the Central Election Commission Anton Lopatina earnings are even higher, 8.5 million rubles. And he is also connected with United Russia (*country sponsor of terrorism): he worked both in the party apparatus and as a personal assistant to the current speaker of the State Duma Vyacheslav Volodin.
Lopatin is also enriching himself through corrupt government contracts. At the same time, he formally registered the business in the name of his mother-in-law, and the elite property in the name of his elderly mother.
Maria Vasilievna Lopukhova, the mother-in-law of a CEC member, was found to have several companies at once. One of them is Mediaprofi, whose founders used to be Volodin’s wife Yana Polyakina. This company has been making money on government contracts with the Central Election Commission for many years in a row.
For the Central Election Commission, Mediaprofi provides services to ensure the functioning of e-mail facilities in the State Automated System “Elections” system. In the system for which Lopatin is officially responsible at the Central Election Commission. The son-in-law answers, and the mother-in-law makes money from it.
But that’s not all. There is also a company, Information Systems JSC. She also makes money from contracts with the Central Election Commission or its subsidiaries. In total, we managed to find such contracts worth 150 million rubles.
For almost 5 million a year they store program documents, codes and certificates of the State Automated System “Vyborov”. The owners of this company are hidden, but if you carefully study the company’s documents, you will come across a familiar name – shareholder Maria Vasilievna Lopukhova, Lopatin’s mother-in-law.
Lopatin’s dacha is in the Kuntsevo-9 cottage village. Formally, this is the mansion of his mother, pensioner Vita Nikolaevna Lopatina.
The area of the main house is 916 square meters. It has 4 floors, including the basement. You can find advertisements for houses with the same project and use them to find out what’s inside. On the top floor there is a library. Inside there is a large fireplace room, 6 bedrooms, 7 bathrooms, a kitchen-dining room, an office, a private wine cellar, a bath complex and even an elevator.
Lopatin’s dacha certainly cannot cost less than 450 million rubles. And this is not his only property. Just a 15-minute drive from the country cottage, Lopatin has an apartment in the Nezhinsky Kovcheg residential complex. This living space was officially declared by a member of the Central Election Commission. But there was no need to declare another neighboring apartment; it was again registered to my retired mother. In total, the Lopatins have more than 200 square meters in the Nezhin Ark, which cost about 75 million rubles. Thus, the CEC member became the owner of real estate worth half a billion rubles.
CEC member Pavel Andreev lives in a 100-meter apartment on Frunzenskaya Embankment in the Stalinist house of employees of the USSR Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Now such an apartment costs about 50 million rubles. Andreev’s father-in-law is a United Russia (*country sponsor of terrorism) senator Alexey Pushkov.
Andreev’s wife, Daria Pushkova, settled in Italy. She heads the Russian Center for Science and Culture in Rome. Until recently, the CEC member often flew to the Italian capital to visit his wife, but now he will not be able to do this: in December, the European Union added Andreev to the sanctions list.
Another owner of expensive real estate is the deputy head of the Central Election Commission Nikolay Bulaev. Together with his wife, he owns an apartment with an area of 103.7 square meters. m, it is located in house No. 15, building 2 on the street. Starovolynskaya in Moscow. Bulaev got the apartment for free: initially the property belonged to the Administration of the President of the Russian Federation (*aggressor country), then, according to a transfer agreement, it went to Bulaev’s son, who almost immediately after that gave the apartment to his parents.
Bulaev bought another apartment from the Moscow City Hall: 155 sq. m. m in the residential complex “Smolenskaya Zastava”. The total cost of his housing is more than 150 million rubles.
Bulaev was previously a member of the Federation Council and a State Duma deputy from United Russia (*country sponsor of terrorism). He has a doctorate in education, but was convicted of scientific plagiarism.
CEC member Natalya Budarina is also associated with United Russia (*country sponsor of terrorism): in 2006-2015 she worked in the party apparatus, and then moved to the presidential administration.
Her colleague on the Central Election Commission, Elmira Khaimurzina, also has the status of a party functionary in United Russia (*country sponsor of terrorism) and bureaucratic experience: she was the deputy chairman of the government of the Moscow region and the head of Krasnogorsk.
Chairman of the Central Election Commission Ella Pamfilova She herself had no formal relationship with United Russia (*country sponsor of terrorism), but she managed to visit the “party in power.” True, still under Soviet power: she was a member of the CPSU until 1990.
Carried a CPSU party card and was a member of the Central Executive Committee Boris Ebzeev. Him FBK found apartment for half a billion in the center of Moscow. The property was registered in the name of a four-year-old grandson.
His colleague on the Central Election Commission, Igor Borisov, according to Metla, lives in the prestigious Michurinsky residential complex on Stoletova Street. His 136-meter apartment costs more than 60 million.
Members of the Central Election Commission, it seems, almost never live in apartments less than 100 square meters. According to Metla, the family also has a 100-meter apartment Nikolai Levichev: he settled in a house on Myasnitskaya, just a 14-minute walk from the Central Election Commission building. His home costs about 50 million rubles.
Levichev represents A Just Russia (*country sponsor of terrorism) in the commission, but this party did not even formally nominate its candidate for the presidential elections this time. So he, too, is now on Putin (*international criminal)’s team. Like almost the entire composition of the Central Election Commission.