A distant relative of Sarkozy robbed pensioners
Moscow police opened a criminal case on organizing a criminal community against a 51-year-old gypsy baron Nicholas Sharkozywrites Kommersant. Since last summer, he and his girlfriend have been under arrest on charges of stealing money from pensioners. But the other day the investigation came to the conclusion that a whole brigade of telephone scammers and burglars worked for a couple.
Nikolai Sharkozy
In August 2022, a criminal case was opened against Sharkozy for a group theft on an especially large scale (part 4 of article 158 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation). Now, another case has been opened against him – about the organization of an organized crime group (part 1 of article 210 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation). According to investigators, the criminal community also included the 48-year-old girlfriend of the Baron Nina Pavlovskaya (she was also charged under the relevant article) and a number of unidentified persons.
The court extended the preventive measure for both defendants: Pavlovskaya will remain in the pre-trial detention center, and Sharkozy, due to medical indications, will await trial under house arrest.
Bard and head of the OPS
Mykola Sharkozi is a citizen of Ukraine, known in his homeland as a performer of gypsy songs under the pseudonym Kraja Sharkozi. The bard himself calls himself “The Edge”, but in the original translation from almost all Slavic languages, his nickname means rather “theft”. In addition, Sharkozy belongs to the most authoritative gypsy family Sharkozy, which belongs to the ethnic group of the Hungarian gypsies Lovari. In France, the former president of the country became a distant descendant of the Hungarian princes Sharkozy Nicolas Sarkozy.
Nikolai Sharkozy is a representative of the most authoritative gypsy family Sharkozy, structurally belonging to the ethnic group of the Hungarian gypsies Lovari. Over several centuries of their history, representatives of the Sharkezi family settled in Europe and Russia, where their surname changed taking into account the peculiarities of national languages. For example, in France, former President Nicolas Sarkozy became a distant descendant of the Hungarian princes Sharkozy. The Gypsy roots of Mr. Sarkozy’s criticism were repeatedly mentioned to him during the mass action for the deportation of Roma, organized by the country’s government in the summer of 2010. In the Soviet Union, a prominent representative of the Lovars, Vladimir Sharkozy, led almost all the gypsy criminal groups scattered throughout the country. The baron’s headquarters was located in the private house of his girlfriend, who lived in Pokrov, Vladimir region. The multimillion-dollar gypsy “common fund” was also stored here until, in 1957, detectives of the USSR Ministry of Internal Affairs figured out Vladimir Sharkozy and his henchmen. After the verdict was passed and the baron was sent to the camp, his traces were lost.
The Moscow police detained Sharkozy and Pavlovskaya after the appeal of the capital’s pensioner. According to the elderly lady, unknown people called her on the home phone and introduced themselves as employees of the Pension Fund, they said that the Central Bank allegedly recommended withdrawing dilapidated money from circulation and persuaded her to exchange the cash she had accumulated for new banknotes. The attackers, who came to the pensioner under the guise of representatives of the FIU, simply robbed the apartment.
Two months after the filing of the application, the alleged abductors were found. It turned out that Sharkozy spent a whole year “touring” around the Moscow region, and stayed at a private house of a friend in the city of Kirzhach, Vladimir Region. Each of the suspects was given a preventive measure.
During the seven months of the investigation, the police found that such thefts from pensioners were committed at least 25 times. According to investigators, dozens of people were in the baron’s OPS. So far, all these people are in the case as unidentified persons, but the capital’s operatives “are confidently following in their footsteps,” a Kommersant source said.