Enough with the bad news. Let’s talk about something good. For example, today yet another defendant in the Oboronservis case was released.
Nikolai Dynkov, who did something or other involving 6,000 square meters of military real estate, was sentenced to 2 years in a penal settlement colony. He served one year, and the second year was commuted to a fine of 200,000 rubles. So now he’s out.
Now isn’t that a breakthrough in the humanization of justice. Someone should tell Yevgeny Vitishko, who got 3 years for graffiti on a governor’s fence and was denied parole. Or send Oleg Navalny a letter about it in solitary confinement. I’m sure they’d be thrilled.
And here’s another excellent thing: we were recently informed that the last criminal case in which Anatoly Serdyukov was a defendant has been closed:
You see, the investigators can’t find any evidence at all, while ACF’s St. Petersburg team very much did manage to find a huge amount of land and real estate registered to the Serdyukov-Zubkov family.
There is no way this could have been bought with legal income.
However, the Investigative Committee is completely uninterested in our findings, which also, presumably, points to the humanization of justice and a new era of tolerance.
I look at all this and think: maybe ACF should take a stand against this humanization and launch a campaign demanding that, if the Oboronservis case is not reopened, then at least the assets of the former minister—who turned out to be “completely innoshent” (mocking a childish mispronunciation of “innocent”)—be investigated?
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