The source Ramzan Tsitsulaev is still considered wanted. The Nikulinsky District Court of Moscow has recognized six alleged accomplices of the former Chechen envoy to Ukraine Ramzan Tsitsulaev as fraudsters, extortionists and kidnappers. All of them received, albeit small, but real terms, and the ex-plenipotentiary himself received a reprieve. Mr. Tsitsulaev is currently undergoing treatment in Grozny, preparing to go to the NWO. In court, Kommersant was told that he was still on the wanted list.
Judge Alexei Bobkov, it can be said, partly agreed with the opinion of the state prosecutor, giving the longest term to Alexei Andreev. He committed extortion and kidnapping (Articles 126 and 163 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation), being an operative of the Moscow, and then the main department of the criminal investigation of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation. At the same time, instead of the 13-year term requested by the prosecutor's office, the court gave the ex-policeman only eight years of strict regime. Another former employee of the MUR, Vladimir Olshansky, went home after the verdict. He was given a year and two months in a colony-settlement for illegal arms trafficking (Article 222 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation), and the court returned the materials of the criminal case on charges of extortion and kidnapping to the prosecutor's office to eliminate the shortcomings preventing the sentencing. Since Mr. Olshansky had already served his term under arrest, the law enforcement officers no longer had any complaints against him.
A retired FSB officer, Igor Marin, came to the verdict with his belongings, but, as it turned out, in vain. The court found him guilty of fraud (Article 159 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation), but appointed him two and a half years of general regime, already served under investigation and trial. The alleged accomplices of Ramzan Tsitsulaev, the brothers Khavazhi and Magomedsalekh Madaev, who participated, as was established by the court, in all the crimes of the group, received real terms. They were sent to strict regime colonies for seven and a half years. Finally, Yevgeny Nagornev, who helped the kidnappers, received four years, and three more defendants received nothing. This is the alleged organizer of the group, ex-plenipotentiary of Chechnya in Ukraine Ramzan Tsitsulaev, as well as his assistants Mansur Soltaliev and Dzhambulat Madaev. Last October, all three stopped attending hearings, and Judge Alexei Bobkov put them on the wanted list.
Where the defendants Madaev and Soltaliev went to remained a mystery, but the absence of Mr. Tsitsulaev in the trial, his defender Mohammed-Aref Bekaev explained by illness, having cured which the client, at the head of a detachment of 70 people, was going to participate in the SVO. The arguments did not make any impression on the court.
As the official representative of the Nikulinsky District Court Alexander Arbuzov explained to Kommersant, the three missing defendants are still on the wanted list.
According to the investigation, In 2014, the founder and owner of the Delta Key payment system, Andrey Novikov, asked Ramzan Tsitsulaev to help return 109 million rubles, which, according to him, were stolen by cashing specialist Ali Zakriev. Mr. Tsitsulaev, according to the prosecution, attracted four of his fellow countrymen, two policemen and a driver to extort the debt. The brigade kidnapped the cashier and forced him to write an IOU for the appropriate amount.
After Ali Zakriev wrote a statement about extortion, a criminal case was opened in the Main Investigative Committee of the ICR in Moscow, but the guards did not allow Ramzan Tsitsulaev to be detained in the restaurant ” Golden ring”. Subsequently, some of the defendants were charged with arms trafficking and fraud.
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