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Peryshkin Nikolay Petrovich FSB. Russia's most secret service: The country has a professional anti-mafia team

army General June 20, 1996 July 25, 1998 5 Putin Vladimir Vladimirovich without rank (reserve colonel) July 25, 1998 August 9, 1999 6 Patrushev, Nikolai Platonovich army General August 9, 1999 May 5, 2008 7 army General May 12, 2008 (in the position)

First Deputy Directors

Full name Military rank
(at the time of resignation)
date
appointments
date
liberation
Main position
Zorin Viktor Mikhailovich Colonel General July 24, 1995 May 1997 Head of the Anti-Terrorism Center of the FSB of Russia (since September 1995)
Klimashin Nikolay Vasilievich Colonel General? March 2003 July 2004 And. O. General Director of FAPSI (2003).
Kulishov Vladimir Grigorievich army General March 2013 (in the position) Head of the Border Service (since 2013)
Patrushev Nikolay Platonovich Colonel General April 1999 August 1999
Pronichev Vladimir Egorovich army General March 2003 March 2013 Head of the Border Guard Service (March 2003-March 2013)
Safonov Anatoly Efimovich Colonel General April 5, 1994 August 1, 1997
Smirnov Sergey Mikhailovich army General June 2003 (in the position)
Sobolev Valentin Alekseevich Colonel General 1997 April 1999
Stepashin Sergey Vadimovich lieutenant general December 21, 1993 March 3, 1994
Cherkesov Viktor Vasilievich lieutenant general August 1998 May 2000

Deputy Directors

Full name Military rank
(at the time of resignation)
date
appointments
date
liberation
Main position
Anisimov Vladimir Gavrilovich Colonel General 2002 May 2005 Head of the Inspectorate Department (2002-2004)
Bespalov Alexander Alexandrovich Colonel General 1995 March 15, 1999 Head of the Department of Organizational and Personnel Work (1995-1998), Head of the Department of Organizational and Personnel Work (1998-1999)
Bortnikov Alexander Vasilievich lieutenant general March 2004 July 2004
Bulavin Vladimir Ivanovich Colonel General March 2006 May 2008
Buravlev Sergey Mikhailovich Colonel General June 2005 December 2013
Bykov Andrey Petrovich Colonel General January 1994 August 26, 1996
Gorbunov Yuri Sergeevich Colonel General of Justice December 2005 2015 Secretary of State
Grigoriev Alexander Andreevich Colonel General August 1998 January 2001 Head of the Department of Economic Security (August-October 1998), Head of the FSB Directorate for St. Petersburg and the Leningrad Region (1998-2001)
Ezhkov Anatoly Pavlovich Colonel General 2001 July 19, 2004
Zhdankov Alexander Ivanovich Lieutenant General? 2001 July 2004
Zaostrovtsev Yuri Evgenievich Colonel General 1999 or 2000 March 2004 Head of the Department of Economic Security
Zorin Viktor Mikhailovich Colonel General May 1997 May 1998
Ivanov Viktor Petrovich Lieutenant General? April 1999 January 5, 2000 Head of the Department of Economic Security
Ivanov Sergey Borisovich lieutenant general August 1998 November 1999
Klimashin Nikolay Vasilievich lieutenant general 2000 March 2003
Kovalev Nikolay Dmitrievich Colonel General December 1994 July 1996
Komogorov Viktor Ivanovich Colonel General 1999 July 2004 Head of the Department of Analysis, Forecast and Strategic Planning
Kulishov Vladimir Georgievich Colonel General August 2008 March 2013 Chief of Staff of the National Anti-Terrorism Committee
Kupryazhkin Alexander Nikolaevich Colonel General July 2011 (in the position)
Lovyrev Evgeniy Nikolaevich Colonel General OK. April 2001 July 2004
Mezhakov Igor Alekseevich Lieutenant General? 1995 December 1995 Head of the Personnel Department
Nurgaliev Rashid Gumarovich Colonel General July 2000 July 2002 Head of the Inspectorate Department
Osobenkov Oleg Mikhailovich Colonel General 1996 1998 Head of the Department of Analysis, Forecast and Strategic Planning (since 1997)
Patrushev Nikolay Platonovich Colonel General? October 1998 April 1999 Head of the Department of Economic Security
Pereverzev Pyotr Tikhonovich Colonel General 2000 July 2004 Head of the Operations Support Department
Pechenkin Valery Pavlovich Colonel General September 1997 July 2000 Head of the Department of Counterintelligence Operations (1997-1998), Head of the Department of Counterintelligence (1998-2000)
Ponomarenko Boris Fedoseevich lieutenant general 1996 September 1997
Pronichev Vladimir Egorovich Colonel General 1998 August 1999 Head of the Department for Combating Terrorism
Savostyanov Evgeniy Vadimovich major general January 6, 1994 December 2, 1994 Head of the Federal Disaster Control Department for Moscow and the Moscow Region
Safonov Anatoly Efimovich Colonel General January 6, 1994 April 5, 1994
Sirotkin Igor Gennalievich lieutenant general December 2015 (in the position) Chief of Staff of the National Anti-Terrorism Committee
Sobolev Valentin Alekseevich Colonel General 1994 1997
Solovyov Evgeny Borisovich Colonel General April 1999 April 2001 Head of the Department of Organizational and Personnel Work
Strelkov Alexander Alexandrovich Colonel General January 1994 January 2000 Head of the Operations Support Department (since 1997)
Syromolotov Oleg Vladimirovich Colonel General July 2000 July 2004 Head of the Counterintelligence Department
Sysoev Evgeniy Sergeevich Colonel General March 2013 December 2015 Chief of Staff of the National Anti-Terrorism Committee
Timofeev Valery Alexandrovich Colonel General? January 1994 1995
Trofimov Anatoly Vasilievich Colonel General January 17, 1995 February 1997 Head of the Federal Criminal Investigation Department and the Federal Security Service Directorate for Moscow and the Moscow Region
Ugryumov German Alekseevich admiral November 1999 May 31, 2001 Head of the Department for the Protection of the Constitutional Order and Combating Terrorism
Ushakov Vyacheslav Nikolaevich Colonel General July 2003 February 21, 2011 Secretary of State (2003-2005)
Tsarenko Alexander Vasilievich Colonel General April 1997 May 2000 Head of the FSB Directorate for Moscow and the Moscow Region
Shalkov Dmitry Vladislavovich Lieutenant General of Justice March 2015 (in the position) Secretary of State
Shultz Vladimir Leopoldovich Colonel General July 2000 July 2003 Secretary of State

Heads of services (since 2004)

Full name Military rank date
appointments
date
liberation
Service
Conversation Sergey Orestovich Colonel General 2009 (in the position)
Bortnikov Alexander Vasilievich army General 2004 2008
Bragin Alexander Alexandrovich Colonel General 2004 2006
Zhdankov Alexander Ivanovich Colonel General 2004 2007 Control service
Ignashchenkov Yuri Yurievich Colonel General 2007 2013 Control service
Klimashin Nikolay Vasilievich army General 2004 2010 Scientific and technical service
Komogorov Viktor Ivanovich Colonel General 2004 2009 5th Service (Operational Information and International Relations Service)
Kryuchkov Vladimir Vasilievich Colonel General 2012 (in the position) Control service
Lovyrev Evgeniy Nikolaevich Colonel General 2004 (in the position) 6th Service (Organizational and Personnel Work Service)
Menshchikov Vladislav Vladimirovich lieutenant general 2015 (in the position) 1 Service (counterintelligence service)
Sedov Alexey Semenovich army General 2006 (in the position) 2nd Service (Service for the Protection of the Constitutional Order and Combating Terrorism)
Syromolotov Oleg Vladimirovich army General 2004 2015 1st Service (Counterintelligence Service)
Fetisov Andrey Alexandrovich Colonel General 2010 or 2011 (in the position) Scientific and technical service
Shekin Mikhail Vasilievich Colonel General 2006 or 2007 (in the position)
Shishin Sergey Vladimirovich Colonel General 2004 2006 7th Service (Activity Support Service)
Yakovlev Yuri Vladimirovich army General 2008 07.2016 4th Service (Economic Security Service)

Sources

  • Encyclopedia of Russian Secret Services / Author-comp. A.I. Kolpakidi. - M.: Astrel Publishing House LLC: AST Publishing House LLC: Transitkniga LLC. 2003. - 800 p.

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An excerpt characterizing the leadership of the FSB of Russia

Andrei did not tell his father that he would probably live for a long time. He understood that there was no need to say this.
“I will do everything, father,” he said.
- Well, now goodbye! “He let his son kiss his hand and hugged him. “Remember one thing, Prince Andrei: if they kill you, it will hurt my old man...” He suddenly fell silent and suddenly continued in a loud voice: “and if I find out that you did not behave like the son of Nikolai Bolkonsky, I will be ... ashamed!” – he squealed.
“You don’t have to tell me this, father,” the son said, smiling.
The old man fell silent.
“I also wanted to ask you,” continued Prince Andrey, “if they kill me and if I have a son, do not let him go from you, as I told you yesterday, so that he can grow up with you... please.”
- Shouldn’t I give it to my wife? - said the old man and laughed.
They stood silently opposite each other. The old man's quick eyes were directly fixed on his son's eyes. Something trembled in the lower part of the old prince’s face.
- Goodbye... go! - he suddenly said. - Go! - he shouted in an angry and loud voice, opening the office door.
- What is it, what? - asked the princess and princess, seeing Prince Andrei and for a moment the figure of an old man in a white robe, without a wig and wearing old man’s glasses, leaning out for a moment, shouting in an angry voice.
Prince Andrei sighed and did not answer.
“Well,” he said, turning to his wife.
And this “well” sounded like a cold mockery, as if he was saying: “Now do your tricks.”
– Andre, deja! [Andrey, already!] - said the little princess, turning pale and looking at her husband with fear.
He hugged her. She screamed and fell unconscious on his shoulder.
He carefully moved away the shoulder on which she was lying, looked into her face and carefully sat her down on a chair.
“Adieu, Marieie, [Goodbye, Masha,”] he said quietly to his sister, kissed her hand in hand and quickly walked out of the room.
The princess was lying in a chair, M lle Burien was rubbing her temples. Princess Marya, supporting her daughter-in-law, with tear-stained beautiful eyes, still looked at the door through which Prince Andrei came out, and baptized him. From the office one could hear, like gunshots, the often repeated angry sounds of an old man blowing his nose. As soon as Prince Andrei left, the office door quickly opened and the stern figure of an old man in a white robe looked out.
- Left? Well, good! - he said, looking angrily at the emotionless little princess, shook his head reproachfully and slammed the door.

In October 1805, Russian troops occupied the villages and towns of the Archduchy of Austria, and more new regiments came from Russia and, burdening the residents with billeting, were stationed at the Braunau fortress. The main apartment of Commander-in-Chief Kutuzov was in Braunau.
On October 11, 1805, one of the infantry regiments that had just arrived at Braunau, awaiting inspection by the commander-in-chief, stood half a mile from the city. Despite the non-Russian terrain and situation (orchards, stone fences, tiled roofs, mountains visible in the distance), despite the non-Russian people looking at the soldiers with curiosity, the regiment had exactly the same appearance as any Russian regiment had when preparing for a review somewhere in the middle of Russia.
In the evening, on the last march, an order was received that the commander-in-chief would inspect the regiment on the march. Although the words of the order seemed unclear to the regimental commander, and the question arose how to understand the words of the order: in marching uniform or not? In the council of battalion commanders, it was decided to present the regiment in full dress uniform on the grounds that it is always better to bow than not to bow. And the soldiers, after a thirty-mile march, did not sleep a wink, they repaired and cleaned themselves all night; adjutants and company commanders counted and expelled; and by morning the regiment, instead of the sprawling, disorderly crowd that it had been the day before during the last march, represented an orderly mass of 2,000 people, each of whom knew his place, his job, and of whom, on each of them, every button and strap was in its place and sparkled with cleanliness . Not only was the outside in good order, but if the commander-in-chief had wanted to look under the uniforms, he would have seen an equally clean shirt on each one and in each knapsack he would have found the legal number of things, “sweat and soap,” as the soldiers say. There was only one circumstance about which no one could be calm. It was shoes. More than half the people's boots were broken. But this deficiency was not due to the fault of the regimental commander, since, despite repeated demands, the goods were not released to him from the Austrian department, and the regiment traveled a thousand miles.
The regimental commander was an elderly, sanguine general with graying eyebrows and sideburns, thick-set and wider from chest to back than from one shoulder to the other. He was wearing a new, brand new uniform with wrinkled folds and thick golden epaulettes, which seemed to lift his fat shoulders upward rather than downwards. The regimental commander had the appearance of a man happily performing one of the most solemn affairs of life. He walked in front of the front and, as he walked, trembled at every step, slightly arching his back. It was clear that the regimental commander was admiring his regiment, happy with it, that all his mental strength was occupied only with the regiment; but, despite the fact that his trembling gait seemed to say that, in addition to military interests, the interests of social life and the female sex occupied a significant place in his soul.
“Well, Father Mikhailo Mitrich,” he turned to one battalion commander (the battalion commander leaned forward smiling; it was clear that they were happy), “it was a lot of trouble this night.” However, it seems that nothing is wrong, the regiment is not bad... Eh?
The battalion commander understood the funny irony and laughed.
- And in Tsaritsyn Meadow they wouldn’t have driven you away from the field.
- What? - said the commander.
At this time, along the road from the city, along which the makhalnye were placed, two horsemen appeared. These were the adjutant and the Cossack riding behind.
The adjutant was sent from the main headquarters to confirm to the regimental commander what was said unclearly in yesterday's order, namely, that the commander-in-chief wanted to see the regiment exactly in the position in which it was marching - in overcoats, in covers and without any preparations.
A member of the Gofkriegsrat from Vienna arrived to Kutuzov the day before, with proposals and demands to join the army of Archduke Ferdinand and Mack as soon as possible, and Kutuzov, not considering this connection beneficial, among other evidence in favor of his opinion, intended to show the Austrian general that sad situation , in which troops came from Russia. For this purpose, he wanted to go out to meet the regiment, so the worse the situation of the regiment, the more pleasant it would be for the commander-in-chief. Although the adjutant did not know these details, he conveyed to the regimental commander the commander-in-chief’s indispensable requirement that the people wear overcoats and covers, and that otherwise the commander-in-chief would be dissatisfied. Having heard these words, the regimental commander lowered his head, silently raised his shoulders and spread his hands with a sanguine gesture.
- We've done things! - he said. “I told you, Mikhailo Mitrich, that on a campaign, we wear greatcoats,” he turned reproachfully to the battalion commander. - Oh, my God! - he added and decisively stepped forward. - Gentlemen, company commanders! – he shouted in a voice familiar to the command. - Sergeants major!... Will they be here soon? - he turned to the arriving adjutant with an expression of respectful courtesy, apparently referring to the person about whom he was speaking.
- In an hour, I think.
- Will we have time to change clothes?
- I don’t know, General...
The regimental commander himself approached the ranks and ordered that they change into their overcoats again. The company commanders scattered to their companies, the sergeants began to fuss (the overcoats were not entirely in good working order) and at the same moment the previously regular, silent quadrangles swayed, stretched out, and hummed with conversation. Soldiers ran and ran up from all sides, threw them from behind with their shoulders, dragged backpacks over their heads, took off their greatcoats and, raising their arms high, pulled them into their sleeves.
Half an hour later everything returned to its previous order, only the quadrangles turned gray from black. The regimental commander, again with a trembling gait, stepped forward of the regiment and looked at it from afar.
- What else is this? What's this! – he shouted, stopping. - Commander of the 3rd company!..
- Commander of the 3rd company to the general! commander to the general, 3rd company to the commander!... - voices were heard along the ranks, and the adjutant ran to look for the hesitant officer.
When the sounds of diligent voices, misinterpreting, shouting “general to the 3rd company”, reached their destination, the required officer appeared from behind the company and, although the man was already elderly and did not have the habit of running, awkwardly clinging to his toes, trotted towards the general. The captain's face expressed the anxiety of a schoolboy who is told to tell a lesson he has not learned. There were spots on his red (obviously from intemperance) nose, and his mouth could not find a position. The regimental commander examined the captain from head to toe as he approached breathlessly, slowing his pace as he approached.
– You’ll soon dress people up in sundresses! What's this? - shouted the regimental commander, extending his lower jaw and pointing in the ranks of the 3rd company to a soldier in an overcoat the color of factory cloth, different from other overcoats. – Where were you? The commander-in-chief is expected, and you are moving away from your place? Huh?... I'll teach you how to dress people in Cossacks for a parade!... Huh?...
The company commander, without taking his eyes off his superior, pressed his two fingers more and more to the visor, as if in this one pressing he now saw his salvation.
- Well, why are you silent? Who's dressed up as a Hungarian? – the regimental commander joked sternly.
- Your Excellency…
- Well, what about “your excellency”? Your Excellency! Your Excellency! And what about Your Excellency, no one knows.
“Your Excellency, this is Dolokhov, demoted...” the captain said quietly.
– Was he demoted to field marshal or something, or to soldier? And a soldier must be dressed like everyone else, in uniform.
“Your Excellency, you yourself allowed him to go.”
- Allowed? Allowed? “You’re always like this, young people,” said the regimental commander, cooling down somewhat. - Allowed? I’ll tell you something, and you and...” The regimental commander paused. - I’ll tell you something, and you and... - What? - he said, getting irritated again. - Please dress people decently...
And the regimental commander, looking back at the adjutant, walked towards the regiment with his trembling gait. It was clear that he himself liked his irritation, and that, having walked around the regiment, he wanted to find another pretext for his anger. Having cut off one officer for not cleaning his badge, another for being out of line, he approached the 3rd company.
- How are you standing? Where's the leg? Where's the leg? - the regimental commander shouted with an expression of suffering in his voice, still about five people short of Dolokhov, dressed in a bluish overcoat.
Dolokhov slowly straightened his bent leg and looked straight into the general’s face with his bright and insolent gaze.
- Why the blue overcoat? Down with... Sergeant Major! Changing his clothes... rubbish... - He didn’t have time to finish.

As Kommersant learned, the head of the “M” department of the FSB of Russia, Sergei Alpatov, has been promoted. The general and his subordinates initiated the most high-profile anti-corruption investigations, as a result of which, in particular, police billionaire Dmitry Zakharchenko, deputy director of the Federal Penitentiary Service Oleg Korshunov, as well as high-ranking officials of the Investigative Committee and the Federal Customs Service were arrested. After Mr. Alpatov became deputy head of the economic security service (SEB) of the FSB, even larger-scale revelations may follow.

Several Kommersant sources reported on the transfer of Lieutenant General Sergei Alpatov to the post of first deputy head of the economic security service of the FSB of the Russian Federation. Now Mr. Alpatov, awaiting the official presidential decree on the appointment, which most likely will not be made public for reasons of secrecy, is completing his duties at his previous post and is gradually getting acquainted with new official responsibilities.

Sergei Alpatov comes from the FSB Internal Security Service. He headed the “M” Department, which deals with combating corruption in law enforcement agencies, about three years ago. During this time, the most famous revelations of emshchikov were criminal cases against the former head of the Federal Penitentiary Service, Alexander Reimer, convicted of a scam involving inflating the prices of electronic bracelets, who was recently arrested for fraud and bribery along with subordinates of the deputy head of the prison department, Oleg Koshunov. Investigators revealed large-scale thefts during the creation of an intellectual system for supporting the activities of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, facts of corruption in the Federal Customs Service, and also exposed billionaire colonel Dmitry Zakharchenko from the GUEBiPK. And one of the latest developments of the “M” department led not only to the arrests for bribes of officials of the Investigative Committee of the Russian Federation - Major General Denis Nikandrov, as well as Colonels Mikhail Maksimenko, Alexander Lamonov and Alexei Kramarenko, but may also result in the reform of the Investigative Committee of Russia, which they want to merge with police investigation.

It should be noted that all this time there was a certain rivalry between employees of the “M” department and the “K” department (countering abuses among officials and in the credit and financial sphere), which is headed by another native of the FSB Internal Security Service, Ivan Tkachev. Previously, departments “M”, “K” and a number of others were part of the SEB, but later, according to some sources, fighters against corruption in law enforcement agencies and security forces found themselves directly subordinate to the director of the FSB.

Let us recall that it was General Tkachev who was responsible for the operational development of the employees of the GUEBiPK Ministry of Internal Affairs, which ended with his ex-leader Denis Sugrobov, along with a number of subordinates, being convicted of organizing a criminal community and participating in it. According to Kommersant’s sources, thanks to other operational measures, including in relation to the former head of the Russian Ministry of Economic Development Alexey Ulyukaev, who received a sentence for corruption, General Tkachev can also count on a promotion. Moreover, the FSB SEB is now headed by the former head of the Internal Security Service, Sergei Korolev.

The position of deputy chief of the SEB presupposes the assignment of the rank of colonel general - Yuri Yakovlev, who led the service for a long time, even rose to the rank of army general - and is a launching pad for further career advancement. Both of the last directors of the FSB - Nikolai Patrushev and Alexander Bortnikov - at one time came to the post precisely from the SEB.


General secretaries came and went, one country fell apart and another rose, presidents changed, but Lubyanka is alive, survived everything and came to power, photo June 24, 2016

Each of these resignations is interesting in its own way, but the resignation of the super-influential head of department “K” of the Economic Security Service (SEB) of the FSB (counterintelligence in the credit and financial sector), General Viktor Voronin, stands apart. It is alleged that Colonel Ivan Tkachev, the head of the 6th Service of the FSB Internal Security Directorate, is expected to take his place, who was directly involved in the high-profile arrests of officials in uniform and without in the last five years.

Bank curator

Until recently, no one believed the intensified rumors about Voronin’s resignation. Voronin, as they say, is lucky: he sat in his chair after the escape in 2008 to the United States of a former employee of the “banking” department of the FSB “K” department, Alexei Artamonov, who told FBI agents and The Guardian journalists how his colleagues, under the cover of “crusts,” transport from bank to bank multi-million dollar cash. In his homeland, Artamonov has been put on the federal wanted list for particularly large-scale fraud and criminal case No. 41326 has been opened against him. According to investigators, he allegedly cheated clients of one of the capital’s banks out of several million dollars.

General Viktor Voronin is no longer the curator of banks

Then General Voronin was rinsed with might and main in the media after Sergei Magnitsky was included in the list, and it was like water off a duck’s back for him. As is known, the starting point for the prosecution of Magnitsky, a lawyer for the Hermitage Capital fund, was the report of the operative of Directorate “K” of the SEB of the FSB of Russia, Alexander Kuvaldin, addressed to Voronin, who left his resolution on the report and sent it to the Moscow Central Internal Affairs Directorate to initiate a criminal case against Magnitsky (in November 2009 Magnitsky died in a pre-trial detention center under unclear circumstances. NT ).

Then, in 2013, a loud scandal broke out with Voronin’s deputy, Colonel Dmitry Frolov: expensive real estate was registered for the relatives of the security officer in the Italian town of Strese, which is very popular among millionaires - but even here Voronin was carried away: he was protected by numerous connections accumulated over the years of service in the KGB of the USSR.

Voronin, as they say, is lucky: he sat in his chair after the escape in 2008 to the United States of a former employee of the “banking” department of the FSB “K” department, Alexei Artamonov, who told FBI agents and The Guardian journalists how his colleagues, under the cover of “crusts,” transport from bank to bank multi-million dollar cash

He started as a leading Komsomol worker in Leningrad, then graduated from the Higher Courses of the KGB in Minsk, worked as the first deputy head of the Federal Tax Police Service for St. Petersburg and the head of the Main Directorate of the State Drug Control Service for the North-Western Federal District. He was a man close to Putin, General Viktor Cherkesov, who lost the bureaucratic battle between the KGB clans in 2007-2009 and left the political scene. He was closely associated with the head of the St. Petersburg Drug Control Department, Alexander Karmatsky, who was put on the federal wanted list for smuggling in 2009 (investigation case No. 333).

Since 2004, Voronin was often seen as part of official delegations of the Federal Tax Service (FTS), together with its then head Anatoly Serdyukov and Colonel Igor Medoev, seconded from the FSB. +



In 2006, Voronin was appointed head of the “K” department of the SEB FSB, and for ten whole years, almost the entire banking sector of the country was under his direct supervision.

Reference NT : Directorate “K” (in the jargon of security officers “kashniks”) is part of the Economic Security Service (SEB) of the FSB. In addition to the “K” department, the structure of the FSB SEB includes the “T” department (counterintelligence in transport) and the “P” department (counterintelligence in industrial enterprises). Other tasks of the FSB SEB are the fight against counterfeiters, drug trafficking, and the illegal sale of explosives and toxic substances. The department's employees have a very large network of agents among bankers, fraudsters and drug addicts. In addition to FSB service IDs, they use police “corks” and cover passports in other people’s names.

Castling

Active movement in the central apparatus of the FSB began last year: in March, the State Secretary of the FSB, 65-year-old Colonel General of Justice Yuri Gorbunov, was dismissed. Gorbunov supervised the FSB investigation for almost eleven years and was nicknamed the Old Man for his gray beard. The Old Man was replaced by 48-year-old Colonel General of Justice Dmitry Shalkov, who moved to the FSB from the Main Military Investigation Department of the Investigative Committee.

In December 2015, another deputy director of the FSB, 57-year-old Colonel General Yevgeny Sysoev, was sent into honorable exile to the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO). He was replaced by 56-year-old Igor Sirotkin, who was in the personnel reserve, who previously served as deputy head of the St. Petersburg FSB Directorate - he oversaw the local customs.

In 2009, Baltic customs detained 23 containers with Chinese contraband worth $1 million. The recipient of the cargo was a shell company registered in St. Petersburg, and the goods were sent to Moscow to the Cherkizovsky market. However, the seized containers mysteriously disappeared in an unknown direction - and a loud scandal broke out. Soon, an FSB commission arrived from Moscow and, based on the results of the inspection, Sirotkin and another group of senior officers received severe reprimands or were removed from their posts.

Other recent reshuffles include the transfer to the “paradise group” of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, to the post of deputy minister, former head of counterintelligence of the FSB, 63-year-old General Oleg Syromolotov, who was responsible for the security of the Sochi 2014 Olympics. He was replaced by a native of Russian Technologies, 57-year-old Lieutenant General Vladislav Menshchikov, who headed the Almaz-Antey concern for ten years and then headed the Main Directorate of Special Programs of the President (serves secret bunkers for the top officials of the state. - NT ).

The case about iPhones

But let us now return to the former head of the FSB department “K”, Viktor Voronin. Some media outlets associate his resignation with a criminal story that happened in November 2015, again at St. Petersburg customs: employees of the FSB department “K” detained in Pulkovo a cargo with 50 thousand smuggled iPhones, tablets and 15 thousand Lenovo A560 smartphones, which are not yet sold in Russia .

After some time, when transferring a bribe in the amount of 2 million rubles. Vyacheslav Naumov, a former representative of the Federal Customs Service of the Russian Federation in Finland, was detained. Next came searches at the carrier company ULS Global, whose owners are the famous St. Petersburg businessman Igor Khavronov and Turkish citizen Jebrail Karaarslan, who has repeatedly boasted of his close friendship with Turkish President Recep Erdogan.

“When we come to the service, we change into military uniform and constantly work out in the gym. After the start of events in Crimea and Donbass, we were transferred to a special position"

According to investigators, Pavel Smolyarchuk, an operative for particularly important cases of combating customs crimes of the Main Directorate for Combating Smuggling of the Federal Customs Service of the Russian Federation, took on the task of resolving the situation with the seized electronics. Moreover, the sister of operative Smolyarchuk, Svetlana, is the wife of the head of the 7th department of Directorate “K” of the SEB FSB, Vadim Uvarov, whose employees are in charge of St. Petersburg customs and seized the cargo.

It is possible that the criminal case would have been collecting dust on the investigators’ desks for a long time, but on April 22, 2016, in St. Petersburg, two unknown assailants brutally beat the former head of the ULS Global security service, Ivan Lapshin, who was a key witness in the criminal case. The victim did not wait to be quietly finished off in the hospital room, and turned to the St. Petersburg media: “They hit me mainly on the head, they also hit me hard in the stomach and legs. They didn’t ask me for money, they didn’t steal my phone and they weren’t going to steal my car, they wanted to kill me.”

There is an important detail here: the operational support of the criminal case of electronics smuggling is carried out not by local special officers from Liteiny, but by the 6th Internal Security Service of the FSB, whose office is located in Lubyanka.

"Sechinsky special forces"

The 6th Service of the FSB Internal Security Directorate was formed in 2004, after the reorganization of the FSB: employees nicknamed it “Sechin’s special forces.” According to some reports, the initiator of the creation of the “six” was the current head of Rosneft, Igor Sechin, who at that time held the position of deputy head of the presidential administration and oversaw the security forces (now the main supervisor of the security forces is Putin’s colleague in the GDR, Evgeniy Shkolov. - NT ).

According to the special officer, with whom the correspondent spoke on condition of strict anonymity NT , the “six” have strict rules: “When we come to work, we change into military uniform and constantly work out in the gym. After the events began in Crimea and Donbass, we were transferred to a special position.”

The main task of the unit is operational support of high-profile criminal cases and witness protection. Among other things, this unit has its own “stompers” and a special forces group.

They were taken by the FSB "six"(from left to right) : Governor of the Sakhalin Region Alexander Khoroshavin, Head of the Komi Republic Vyacheslav Gaizer, Mayor of Vladivostok Igor Pushkarev

It was the “six” employees who in 2014 detained the head of the Main Directorate of Economic Security and Anti-Corruption (GUEBiPK) of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, Police Lieutenant General Denis Sugrobov, and his deputy, Police Major General Boris Kolesnikov (according to investigators, he committed suicide during interrogation by the Investigative Committee .— NT ), who dared to take into operational development the deputy head of the 9th Directorate of the FSB Internal Security Service, Colonel Igor Demin.

In March 2015, they also detained the governor of the Sakhalin region, Alexander Khoroshavin, who was charged with accepting a bribe in the amount of $5.6 million. In the same year, soldiers of the 6th service handcuffed the head of the Komi Republic, Vyacheslav Gaizer, and officials of his administration, who are accused of creating a criminal group and fraud. Finally, on the night of June 1, it was the “six” who arrested the mayor of Vladivostok, millionaire (he owned the Park Group concern) Igor Pushkarev, who was immediately taken to Moscow - he is accused of abuse of power and commercial bribery.

Many people from the “six” can be found in Rosneft and its subsidiaries

Immediately after the arrest, information appeared on the Internet that Pushkarev was allegedly part of the team of the ex-director of the Federal Service for Drug Control, Colonel General Viktor Ivanov, who was dismissed in April.

What is curious: at one time, soldiers from the 6th service guarded the notorious banker Evgeny Dvoskin (aka Slusker, Shuster,
Kozin, Altman), who is wanted by the FBI. Moreover, Mr. Dvoskin with the KGB guards accidentally ended up in an outdoor photographic lens from the MUR, which recorded visitors to the “Old Phaeton” restaurant on Povarskaya Street, where, as is known, the office of the patriarch of the Russian underworld Aslan Usoyan (Grandfather Hasan, killed in 2013) was located. NT ).

Many people from the “six” can be found in Rosneft and its subsidiaries. For example, in 2013, the deputy head of the special forces of the FSB Internal Security Service, Nail Mukhitov, was seconded to head the Rosneft security service. True, Major General Mukhitov did not last long in his post and, after numerous complaints from suppliers, resigned.

In turn, the “six” is part of the 9th Directorate of the FSB Internal Security Directorate, which is headed by another native of the St. Petersburg FSB Directorate, General Sergei Korolev. The immediate tasks of the “nine” include catching “werewolves” in their own ranks.

Bottom line

Today, the FSB leadership has the following alignments: FSB Director General Alexander Bortnikov, First Deputy General Sergei Smirnov and simply Deputy Lieutenant General Igor Sirotkin - all from St. Petersburg.

Among the deputies (there are five in total), only Colonel General of Justice Dmitry Shalkov has Moscow roots, and even he was appointed on the recommendation of the Chairman of the Investigative Committee Alexander Bastrykin, who is part of Putin’s closest “St. Petersburg” circle.

Crimean banker Evgeniy Dvoskin, now wanted by the FBI, at one time walked under the protection of the “six”

Apparently, key positions in the economic bloc of the FSB will now be occupied by people from the “Sechin special forces”: as we have already written, the head of the 6th Internal Security Service of the FSB, Ivan Tkachev, who is called the right-wing by the hand of the Deputy Head of the FSB Internal Security Directorate Oleg Feoktistov (both served in the Sortavala border detachment. - NT ). In Lubyanka, Major General Feoktistov enjoys great influence and is called Oleg Bolshoi behind his back.

According to some reports, the head of the 9th Department of Internal Security of the FSB, General Sergei Korolev, will soon be promoted: he is tipped to lead the Economic Security Service of the FSB - as they say, the “tastiest” division of the Lubyanka. His former boss, General Yuri Yakovlev, had allegedly already submitted his resignation letter.

The general public can only wait to see how the opposing KGB clans will respond and who will be next to retire and be imprisoned.

Different testimony in a criminal case and in arbitration does not bother anyone yet, only because law enforcement officers do not combine all processes and decisions on them into one scheme. But lawlessness cannot last indefinitely, and in the event of a fair trial, the documents indicated on the paper with Ushakov’s name will greatly hinder the raiders.

General Prosecutor's Office of the Russian Federation

The criminal case initiated against Ekimov was investigated for six years. Investigator of the Investigative Department of the Department of Internal Affairs of Russia for the Istra District, Petr Zvonkov, closes the case at the stage of signing the indictment. The position of the investigation is that Ekimov’s guilt has been fully proven.

It is impossible to find this criminal case now. All requests for information about where the materials are located are answered by PASMI journalists with a refusal to provide data.


Obviously, the Prosecutor General's Office knows where the case is. An inspection carried out there showed that it was illegally closed. The prosecutor's office insists on resuming the investigation, which is reported to Deputy Prosecutor General Viktor Grin.

“The study of the case in the Prosecutor General’s Office of the Russian Federation showed that the preliminary investigation into the second episode of V.S. Ekimov was accused. the act was terminated by the investigator unreasonably, the resolution in this part, in violation of part 4 of article 7 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of the Russian Federation, is not motivated and not substantiated on the collected materials of the criminal case,” the document says. – “Taking into account the above, as well as the fact that the investigation of the criminal case based on the appeals of Churin V.V. has taken on a protracted nature, the investigative body has repeatedly made illegal procedural decisions, which were canceled in the order of supervision and departmental control, in order to intensify the investigation, I propose to instruct the prosecutor of the Moscow region to cancel the illegal decision to terminate the investigation dated 04/02/2015, to take measures aimed at establishing all the circumstances of the crime crimes, making a lawful decision.”

The actions specified in the letter have not yet been completed. I would like to print the name of that employee of the prosecutor’s office who, after thousands of appeals from social activists, journalists and deputies, nevertheless saw signs of a violation of the law and reported this to higher management. But the source's name is hidden for his safety. Such a paradox.

PASMI sends a request to the Prosecutor General of the Russian Federation Yuri Chaika and the Deputy Prosecutor General of the Russian Federation Viktor Grin with a request to provide data on the deadlines for completing the actions specified in this document.

Early in the morning of August 31, a colleague called me and said: “Hurray! Victory!" — advised me to go to the official website of the FSB. When I opened the right page, I was quite surprised: after three months of stubborn silence, the FSB leadership finally published information about your income and property , which they were obliged to do at the request of the president, like all civil servants. But just recently the FSB Public Relations Center (CPR) said: “You can’t wait!” - because, they say, the property and income of FSB employees constitute a state secret. However, this is a very small victory on the way to what is accepted in all civilized states, where intelligence services are under parliamentary and public control. In Russia, the FSB is still an overly closed structure with a lot of corrupt employees, and the leadership perceives any criticism of itself as high treason.

Novaya continues to study how the FSB corporation is structured (see. No. 93 from 08/25/2010 ).

Checking information


Let's start with the declaration of FSB Director Alexander Bortnikov, who graduated from the Leningrad Institute of Railway Engineers, from 2003 to 2004 served as head of the FSB department for St. Petersburg and the Leningrad Region, then, under the former FSB Director Patrushev, headed the FSB Economic Security Service (SEB). .

For a long time, the Bortnikovs lived quite modestly: a caravan was registered for the head of the family, and a VAZ 21093 car was registered for their wife Tatyana Borisovna (on the night of July 14, 2005, unknown attackers stole the license plate from the car). The couple owned an apartment in St. Petersburg on Zagreb Boulevard.

After moving to the capital, the family significantly improved their living conditions. According to published data, they acquired another apartment (115 sq. m), a plot of land (1198 sq. m), a country house (150 sq. m) and two individual parking spaces. It is true that what kind of cars are parked in these parking lots is not specified.

The only son of the Bortnikovs* graduated from the St. Petersburg University of Economics and Finance in 1996. Until 2004, he worked at Industrial Construction Bank OJSC, then as an adviser to the manager of the Guta-Bank branch, and in 2005 he moved to the position of deputy manager of Vneshtorgbank Retail Services CJSC. Since 2006 - Deputy Manager of the VTB branch in St. Petersburg. In 2007, he was appointed Deputy Chairman of the Board of VTB North-West.

First Deputy Director of the FSB Sergei Smirnov, while working as the head of the FSB Directorate for St. Petersburg and the region, lived with his wife Natalya Pavlovna in house number 27 on Novgorodskaya Street and officially owned a Zhiguli car produced in 1983. Now the Smirnovs have moved to a “Chekist” house on Udaltsova Street. In addition to two apartments, they have a plot of land (2500 sq. m) and a parking space (832.5 sq. m). It is not known what their son Evgeniy does.

Director of the FSB border service, Hero of Russia (received for “Nord-Ost”) and concurrently chairman of the Dynamo society Vladimir Pronichev, according to published data, owns a land plot (5028 sq. m.), a residential building (811.3 sq. m.) and an apartment (204 sq. m.).

The wife, Lyudmila Aleksandrovna, works at the Investment Company Global-Invest LLC. Just two years ago, I was driving a Toyota RAV with thieves license plates - O *** MP 77. Now my husband gave Lyudmila Aleksandrovna his Lexus GC 470, and he himself moved to an LX 570 worth three and a half million rubles. In addition, another plot of land (3000 sq. m), a residential building (604.3 sq. m), a garage (123.4 sq. m) and an outbuilding (172.4 sq. m.) were registered in the name of the spouse. The eldest daughter is a lawyer, drives an Infiniti FX 3. The youngest daughter graduated from MGIMO, worked at Gazprom, owns a Honda Accord car, also with criminal plates - A *** MP 77.

Deputy Director of the FSB Vyacheslav Ushakov met his other half in the 8th grade, sitting at the same desk. Now Valentina Petrovna is a housewife. The youngest daughter graduated from the Lyceum in Petrozavodsk, and then from the Academy of National Economy under the Government of the Russian Federation, she is a co-founder of Eigers LLC (the company has its own cinema and also rents out retail space in Sheremetyevo). She owns a Mercedes.

The Ushakovs’ eldest daughter married businessman Ruslan, studied at the FSB Academy, and is now a successful businesswoman. Her name can be seen among the founders of the Arizo trading house, Yunika MS LLC (production and sale of finishing materials), Platon Service CJSC, Eigers LLC and the Youth Leisure Center (office on the territory of the Central Air Terminal). In addition, the daughter and her father, a security officer, established a non-profit partnership of individual developers "Beijing" (real estate management) at the address: "Gorki-2" UMTO FSB of the Russian Federation, site No. 51. In addition to the Ushakovs, the founders of "Beijing" included tax officer Boris Korol and two Muscovites - Umarpasha Khanaliev and Hammyat Suleymanov. She gets around in a Volvo.

On the FSB website, Ushakov indicated that he owns a residential building (210 sq. m) and rents a plot of land (2461 sq. m). But for some reason there is a dash in the “spouse” column.

Another deputy director of the FSB is State Secretary Yuri Gorbunov, Honored Lawyer of the Russian Federation, Associate Professor, member of the Russian Association of International Law, author of more than 70 scientific works. The President was twice commended for his services in improving the legal framework for countering terrorism.

Previously, the Gorbunovs lived in an old house on Troitskaya Street. The wife, Tatyana Evgenievna, first worked at Atompromresursy OJSC, and then moved to a management position at the Federal Tax Service for the Moscow Region. According to published data, Mr. Gorbunov does not own any property. However, for the second half, a plot of land (1040 sq. m), a new apartment (117.3 sq. m.) and a dacha (193 sq. m.) were registered.

Sergei Buravlev has been in the security forces since August 1971. Appointed to the position of Deputy Director of the FSB in June 2005. Together with his wife and daughter, they own two apartments (55 and 80 sq. m.), a plot of land (1025 sq. m. and rent another 495 sq. m.) and drive a Kia Sefia car, manufactured in 1998. It is unknown where the son and daughter work.

Deputy Director of the FSB Vladimir Kulishov was born on July 20, 1957 in the Rostov region. In 1979 he graduated from the Kiev Institute of Civil Aviation Engineers, then the Higher School of the KGB of the USSR, since 2000 he worked in the central office of the FSB, commanded security officers in the Saratov region (he headed the regional society "Dynamo") and in Chechnya. According to official data, Kulishov and his wife own a plot of land (1,487 sq. m), a residential building (374.4 sq. m), an apartment (87.2 sq. m) and a Volga car manufactured in 1999.

According to our source from the presidential administration, several more heads of departments of the central apparatus, as well as heads of the FSB departments of republics, regions and large cities, will soon report on their income and property.

FSB structure


Existing on the money of Russian taxpayers, the FSB has tightly fenced itself off from the country. They have everything of their own: operational services, investigation, aviation, navy, construction department, design institutes, fire service, educational institutions, medicine, rest homes, sanitary and epidemiological service and the press.

In 1993, by decree of Boris Yeltsin, the FSB Investigation Department was dissolved, and Lefortovo prison was transferred to the Ministry of Internal Affairs. But two years later, under pressure from the security officers, Yeltsin “gave in,” and the SU was revived again. Immediately, criminal cases began to be filed against environmentalists, scientists, and especially recalcitrant businessmen accused of espionage. Moreover, the prosecutors supervising the KGB investigation almost never found any violations.

Loud scandals also began in the system itself. The most recent one happened in Nizhny Novgorod. According to the materials of the criminal case, the head of the investigative department of the FSB Directorate for the Nizhny Novgorod Region, Oleg Efremov, and his predecessor, Vladimir Obukhov, traded heroin (39 kg), seized from drug dealers in 2002, for six years. Both security officers were detained in 2008, but a year ago Efremov was killed in solitary confinement. The circumstances of Efremov’s death leave a lot of questions. For example, on what basis was he transferred to a special colony without being convicted? Do you know how he was killed? I quote: “... Having previously opened the cell, detective Kruchinin, prisoners Arkhipov and Toropov (former sparring partner of the Klitschko brothers) wrapped Efremov with tape, hung him on a rope from the ceiling so that his feet barely touched the floor, and inflicted at least 70 blows with fists, feet and rubber with a baton..."

There are rumors that just before his death, Efremov was allegedly going to tell investigators who else from the leadership of the FSB had a share. According to other sources, the opera and the lessons beat him out of the location of caches with “grandmas” and drugs.

The widow has her own version: “Oleg was forced to testify against the former head of the FSB Directorate for the Nizhny Novgorod Region, Vladimir Bulavin (now the head of the apparatus of the National Anti-Terrorism Committee), but he refused. That’s why he suffered.”

The FSB control service conducts financial audits within the department, monitors moral character and catches security officers-werewolves. The service is headed by an old acquaintance of Putin's - 62-year-old Yuri Ignashchenkov, who at one time worked as the head of the security service of the Sheraton Nevsky Palace hotel, and then as the head of the St. Petersburg FSB Directorate (his wife, Lyudmila Vasilievna, is a housewife. The daughter graduated from the Faculty of Biology and Soil Sciences of St. Petersburg State University, at the university of the German city Tübingen worked on her dissertation: “Neural mechanisms underlying secret changes in attention”)

The Control Service includes five departments: financial and economic, inspectorate, control and audit, information support for operational intelligence activities and the department of internal security (USB).

We haven’t heard much about the first four, but we have heard about the CSS. At one time, even the head of the special unit, General Alexander Kupryazhkin, “distinguished himself” by actually divulging the secret of the investigation into the murder of Anna Politkovskaya. If you remember, in 2007, on the eve of the arrests of the main suspects, Kupryazkin unexpectedly appeared on air and named the name of one of the defendants - an employee of the capital's FSB Directorate, Lieutenant Colonel Ryaguzov.

General Kupryazhkin was born in 1957 in the Voronezh region. My wife, Olga Nikolaevna, is engaged in business. My son worked at OJSC MMZ Vympel, and there is also a daughter.

Several of Kupryazkin’s subordinates appeared in a criminal case, according to which entire trainloads of Chinese contraband were delivered from the Far East to the address of the FSB warehouse (military unit 54729) (criminal case No. 290724). Special officers and generals of the central apparatus associated with this case were either fired or reinstated, and in the end they ended up as vice-presidents and heads of security services in large banks and state corporations. But the criminal case quietly fizzled out.

Another important body is the Organizational and Personnel Work Service (SOHR). The head is Colonel General Evgeny Lovyrev (part-time director of the Dynamo women's volleyball club). His wife Anna Viktorovna and son work at Zarubezhneft OJSC. The SOKR includes three departments: special registrations, organizational planning management and personnel management.

We have heard a lot about the sporting successes of the girls from Dynamo. But many are tormented by doubts about the state of affairs with FSB personnel. For example, do all employees follow the precepts of former FSB director Patrushev (now Secretary of the Security Council)? I quote the last interview: “Security officers have always had such qualities as patriotism, a sense of civic responsibility for the fate of the Motherland, and loyalty to the military oath. For them, honor, courage, courage and readiness for self-sacrifice are not simple words, but concepts filled with deep inner content, the moral basis of life.”

SEB and management "M"


One of the key structures is the Economic Security Service (SES). The service includes seven departments: for counterintelligence support for industrial enterprises (directorate “P”), for counterintelligence support for transport (directorate “T”), for counterintelligence support for the credit and financial system (directorate “K”), for counterintelligence support for the Ministry of Internal Affairs, the Ministry of Emergency Situations, Ministry of Justice (directorate “M”), organizational and analytical, combating smuggling and drug trafficking (directorate “N”) and administrative service.

Let us dwell on the “M” department, which “grasses” the Ministry of Internal Affairs, the Ministry of Emergency Situations and the Ministry of Justice. The guys are so secretive that even the address of their office in the center of Moscow is a state secret. Although ordinary sergeants from the Central Administrative District Internal Affairs Directorate showed it to me.

After the execution of innocent people by the head of the Tsaritsyno police department, Evsyukov, almost two dozen generals of the Ministry of Internal Affairs lost their posts. There was also a personnel purge in the “M” department: the immediate police supervisor, the head of the Nikolaev department, lost his post. But the head of the “M” department, Vladimir Kryuchkov, on the contrary, went for a promotion and became deputy head of the organizational and inspection department. Patrushev’s protégé, Alexey Dorofeev, who previously held the position of head of the FSB Directorate in Karelia, was appointed in his place. The structure has also been changed. Previously, the “M” department was subordinate to Smirnov, now it is directly to the director of the FSB, Bortnikov.

After the historical publication of data on the income and property of security officers, I dare to ask the director of the FSB a couple of questions:

— Dear Alexander Vasilievich! As one knowledgeable person said, many police chiefs were caught by your subordinates from the “M” department for unseemly acts, and now they not only “knock on the door”, but also allegedly give part of the profits to their curators. This is true?

A MUR operative told me about another problem:

— In order to track all the movements of Ded Hasan (the oldest thief in law Aslan Usoyan, we put a “watch” on him at airports and train stations (the “Rozysk-Magistral” system). Previously, we knew where he went and where he came from. And recently Grandfather Hasan visited Azerbaijan and Uzbekistan on “working visits”. But the FSB border service did not notify us about this. I wonder why?

— By the way, how is the search going for Vladimir Volkov (nicknamed Volchar, Volodya the Shlepnog), who has escaped from Penitentiary Colony No. 2 in Tatarstan and has been on the federal wanted list since 1992? According to your and the police files, he passes as “Ded Hassan’s regular killer.” The intelligence reports indicate addresses in Eastern Europe where he may be hiding. Among other things, there are references to the fact that as soon as Volchara appears in Russia, contract killings are sure to occur. I wonder where the surveillance reports on Volkov go and who supplies him with fake passports of Serbia, the Czech Republic and Poland and gives him a “green corridor” when crossing the border? And how does he actually get through border control?

"Fortified"


At the beginning of the 2000s, under the slogan of fighting crime, corruption and chaos, the FSB sent its career officers to various ministries, departments and even commercial structures to strengthen personnel. What came of this is well known: drug addiction has become a national disaster, it is better not to mention the increase in crime, and in terms of corruption, Russia has dropped to 147th place and ranks on the same line with Kenya, Syria and Bangladesh.

Of course, you can’t list all the “fortified people,” but you can list the most noticeable ones.

Presidential plenipotentiary representative in the Central Federal District Georgy Poltavchenko (served in the KGB of Leningrad), plenipotentiary representative in the Volga region Grigory Rapota (since 1966 in the ranks of the KGB).

The former head of the FSB inspectorate department is now the head of the Ministry of Internal Affairs Nurgaliev, the head of the internal security department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs is a native of the KGB Draguntsov, the head of the administrative department is a security officer Maidanov.

The head of the State Drug Control Service is the former head of the FSB Internal Security Service - Ivanov, the head of the Moscow department of this department is the security officer Davydov, the head of the St. Petersburg department is the security officer Shesterikov, the head of the Orenburg department is the security officer Ivanov. And this list goes on and on.

By the way, I would really like to ask Comrade Davydov how the story ended with the discovery of the bodies of detectives Dmitry Mazanov and Vakhtang Gvakharia (son-in-law of Yeltsin’s former security guard, now State Duma deputy Korzhakov) in the office of the Federal Drug Control Service in the Closed Administrative District of Moscow. died from a heroin overdose ? Have you found out where the deceased purchased drugs and who protected this outlet? And what kind of high official tried to prevent the autopsy of the bodies to establish the cause of death?

Well, readers already know the head of customs - a former KGB officer and friend of Putin Belyaninov.

In addition, a whole army of comrades working under the guise has settled in local authorities, large enterprises, state corporations, the oil and gas complex (for example, another friend of the prime minister, Mr. Tokarev), the management of state television channels, newspapers, universities and even theaters. And all this, not counting the numerous agents and anonymous people.

* The editors, for security reasons, naturally omit the names of children and personal transport numbers.

Help "New"
Usoyan Aslan Rashidovich (Grandfather Hassan) was born on February 27 (28), 1937 in Tbilisi. By nationality - Yezidi Kurd. A thief in law. From 1980 to 1992, he served a prison sentence in the Urals for selling counterfeit gold coins (he was arrested in Kazakhstan). He has extensive connections among corrupt officials in Moscow, St. Petersburg, the Stavropol and Krasnodar territories, as well as in the Ministry of Internal Affairs and the FSB. In almost every region of Russia, from Ded Hassan there are “watchers” who control commercial banks, illegal money flows, drug trafficking, gambling, residential robberies, robberies and thefts of foreign cars.

In 1998, at a gathering of thieves in Moscow, Usoyan was “crowned” for collaborating with the authorities and departing from the “thieves’” traditions. The initiator was the famous thief in law Rudolf Oganov (nickname Rudik - he was soon killed in the capital).

September 16 in Moscow another attempt was made on Usoyan (third in a row).