FSB generals: names, positions. Management of the Federal Security Service of the Russian Federation. Why are prosecutors-protectors persecuted by the FSB, or what the FSB generals Oleg Feoktistov and the Prosecutor General's Office Yuri Sindeev Nikolai Alekseevich Saraev did not share

Biography of the FSB director

Alexander Bortnikov was born in the Urals in 1951. At the age of 15, while still in school, he became a Komsomol member. After receiving secondary education, he entered the Institute of Railway Transport Engineers in Leningrad. In Gatchina he worked in his specialty.

Then he moved to Moscow, where he began studying at the Dzerzhinsky KGB Higher School. Already at this time he chose a career as a security officer. At the same time, he became a member of the CPSU, to which he remained faithful until its dissolution in the early 90s.

In state security agencies

Bortnikov Alexander Vasilyevich in 1975 entered the service of state security agencies. He started as an operational officer, then got into the leadership structures of the KGB department in the Leningrad region.

He remained working in the same system after the collapse of the Soviet Union - in the management of the FSB of Russia. By 2003, he took the position of deputy head of the department for the city of St. Petersburg and the Leningrad region. Still in charge of counterintelligence operations.

In 2003, Alexander Vasilyevich Bortnikov was appointed to the post of head of the regional department of the FSB. He worked in this position for only six months. After this, by decree of Russian President Vladimir Putin, he was transferred to the central office.

The following year, Bortnikov became deputy director of the Russian FSB. The Department of Economic Security was directly subordinate to him. He officially headed this structure a few months later. The state apparatus at that time was waging a consistent fight against oligarchs and big businessmen who were beyond the control of the tax authorities, so perhaps the most responsible function fell on Bortnikov’s shoulders.

To combat economic criminals and identify persistent tax evaders in the state treasury, an interdepartmental working group to combat the laundering of criminal proceeds was created in October. Alexander Bortnikov becomes the head of this group.

In the management of a shipping company

In 2008, Bortnikov joined the board of directors of the open joint stock company Sovcomflot. This is a Russian shipping company that is engaged in maritime transport. The annual turnover is about one and a half billion rubles per year. The company employs about 8 thousand people.

The company began its history back in the USSR. In modern Russia it was equipped with new ships. The stake in Sovcomflot is fully owned by the state.

Despite the unstable position in the shipping market, Sovcomflot is included in the list of the largest tanker companies in the world. For example, it ranks first in transportation in northern latitudes.

Alexander Bortnikov makes management decisions on the company’s board of directors. Today it is one of the ten largest in the world in organizing tanker transportation.

Head of the FSB of Russia

On May 12, 2008, a new director of the Russian FSB was appointed. Alexander Bortnikov holds this position. In his post, he replaced Nikolai Patrushev, who headed the federal state security agencies for 9 years. The period of his work included the second Chechen campaign, countering terrorist organizations that had become active in Russia.

For Patrushev, resignation from the post of head of the Federal Security Service was not a significant demotion. He headed the Security Council. He still holds this post today.

The biography of Alexander Bortnikov since 2008 is entirely related to his work in the leadership of the FSB. He also headed the National Anti-Terrorism Committee and became a permanent member of the Federal Security Council.

Anti-Terrorism Committee

The need for an anti-terrorist committee, headed by Bortnikov, arose in 2006. Its first leader was Nikolai Patrushev.

The committee’s tasks include preparing specific proposals to counter terrorism, which are approved by the head of state. Development of methods to combat terrorist organizations, coordination of the activities of all government bodies in this direction.

At the same time, the leadership of the National Anti-Terrorism Committee is directly involved in international cooperation.

The chairman of the committee is the current head of the FSB. His deputy is the Minister of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation.

Among the main tasks of the committee today is the fight against terrorism in the North Caucasus, as well as the development of a law “On countering terrorism.”

Bortnikov's deputies

Army General Alexander Bortnikov, a title he received in 2006, relies on his deputies in his work as head of the FSB. The head of the federal state security agencies has six of them.

Army General Vladimir Grigorievich Kuleshov holds the post of first deputy. His area of ​​responsibility includes the management of the border service, which is part of the FSB structure.

Army General Sergei Mikhailovich Smirnov is the most experienced among Bortnikov's deputies. He has been working in the state security system since 1974.

Lieutenant General Evgeny Nikolaevich Zinichev was appointed to this post quite recently - in October 2016. Before that, for a year he headed the regional department of the FSB of Russia in the Kaliningrad region, for several months he served as acting governor of the Yantarny Territory after the transfer of the previous head of the region to the post of plenipotentiary representative of the President of Russia in the Northwestern Federal District.

Colonel General Alexander Nikolaevich Kupryazhkin worked as deputy director of the FSB under Nikolai Patrushev.

Colonel General Igor Gennadyevich Sirotkin heads the apparatus of the National Terrorist Committee.

All of Alexander Bortnikov’s deputies began working in state security agencies back in Soviet times. An exception to the rule is Colonel General of Justice Dmitry Vladimirovich Shalkov. He did not serve in the USSR State Security Committee. He has been working in the FSB system since 1993. He holds the position of Secretary of State.

International sanctions

In 2014, in connection with the annexation of Crimea to Russia and the events in the south-east of Ukraine, sanctions were imposed against Russia by the international community. They concerned both large companies and specific managers.

In July and August, the European Union and the Canadian government imposed sanctions against FSB director Alexander Bortnikov. At the same time, the United States did not include the head of state security agencies among the 35 officials and deputies closest to Vladimir Putin. Therefore, American sanctions did not apply to him.

Thanks to this, Bortnikov was able to take part in the summit on countering extremism, which took place in the United States at the beginning of 2015. The FSB director led the Russian interdepartmental delegation.

Criticism in the media

Bortnikov’s work has been criticized more than once in the opposition and liberal media. In particular, in 2015, Novaya Gazeta published a number of publications alleging that Bortnikov and his associates in the FSB were involved in illegal transactions with land plots in the Moscow region. Specifically in the Odintsovo district.

If you believe the sources that were at the disposal of the editorial office, the Bortnikovs and their associates sold land plots of almost five hectares. They were located under a building that once housed a departmental kindergarten. The plots were located in a prestigious area - on Rublevo-Uspenskoye Highway. As a result, each of the participants in the deal, as reporters claimed, received a profit of two and a half million dollars.

According to the publication, it was this deal that was largely the reason why the Russian FSB insisted on closing public access to information contained in Rosreestr. In particular, to data about property owners.

Family of the FSB director

The family of Alexander Vasilyevich Bortnikov consists of a wife and son. Denis was born in 1974, now he is 32 years old. He received higher education in the city on the Neva in the field of economics and finance.

He worked in banking structures, since 2011 he has headed the North-West regional center of VTB.

There is minimal evidence, prosecutors, like in a fairy tale, confess to everything themselves, honestly and voluntarily tell when, how much and from whom they took bribes, after which... they are released from custody, about which they organize drinking parties, which are cheerfully covered in the media.

The criminal case itself is being processed by Major General Denis Nikandrov, senior investigator for particularly important cases of the Investigative Committee, but the operational support of the investigation has mysteriously been taken over by the most secret and powerful Ninth Directorate of the FSB of Russia - the Directorate of Internal Security, represented by the first deputy head of General Oleg Feoktistova. True, for some reason not a single FSB officer has been caught yet; they are all somehow more prosecutors. Then what does the FSB's Internal Security Service have to do with it? A few words about “how everything works.”

Oleg Feoktistov

Oleg Feoktistov, who held the position of head of the 6th Internal Security Service of the FSB until 2008, gained fame by directly pursuing the prosecution of General Alexander Bulbov of the Federal Drug Control Service of the Russian Federation. As you know, after suffering for many months, Bulbov admitted to petty crimes and was released from punishment on account of the time he had already spent in a pre-trial detention center. In gratitude for the perfectly executed special operation, the head of the FSB Internal Security Service, Alexander Kupryazhkin, made Oleg Feoktistov his first deputy.

A career and general's shoulder straps are, of course, good, but you won't earn much money with it. But what makes the internal security situation of the FSB unique is that the chain of corruption has always been closed to them.

It is known that in our country law enforcement agencies are paid by businessmen and “persons of interest”, in direct contact with whom, as a rule, is the lower link of the law enforcement “food chain” - operatives and investigators of the Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs. The ideal option is when the operational services develop material on dishonest businessmen (and we have practically no others), contact them and offer to pay for their closure. The Department of Internal Security (DSB) of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia, which in its work obeys and listens to senior colleagues from the FSB, must search for and catch such dishonest employees of the Ministry of Internal Affairs (and we also have practically no others). For the most part, the employees of the DSS of the Ministry of Internal Affairs are wealthy people and do not meddle in their own affairs without special instructions.

The security officers, in turn, have a special Directorate “M”, which is engaged in counterintelligence activities to identify bribe-takers and criminals in the ranks of employees of all law enforcement agencies, including the Ministry of Internal Affairs, the Investigative Committee, the Ministry of Justice and others.

In turn, the employees of the “M” department are supervised by the FSB Internal Security Service, who has no one to supervise. It’s interesting that the security officers themselves call the same system in the prosecutor’s office “protection protection.”

In 2008, common interests brought General Oleg Feoktistov closer to the newly appointed First Deputy Head of the Department of Economic Security (DES) of the Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs, General Andrei Khorev, and they were brought together by Sergei Abutidze, who worked in the structure of the Russian Technologies State Corporation. General Khorev had a huge flow of incoming corruption money. He and his people were paid by everyone: bankers and cashers, customs officers and smugglers, budget scammers and builders, and he desperately needed a reliable roof. Oleg Feoktistov began not only to patronize Andrei Khorev in exchange for a monthly remuneration for himself and his trusted people, but also found many points of contact with the young general of the Ministry of Internal Affairs.

Several sources immediately confirmed with confidence that Andrei Khorev transfers 500 thousand US dollars monthly to Oleg Feoktistov to pay for the current services of the 9th Directorate of the FSB of Russia for general patronage. Income from individual joint ventures is, of course, distributed separately.

One can say about Feoktistov - a man without principles, slippery, today he will swear his love to you, and tomorrow he will sincerely betray you. General Feoktistov gives most of the “special” assignments to the employees of the 6th Internal Security Service of the FSB, where he himself worked before his promotion, primarily to the head of the service, Tkachev, and the operational officer Grigoryan. In particular, the most important object of development for the CSS was the Directorate “M” of the FSB and those of its employees who are directly involved in supervising the central apparatus of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia. Oleg Feoktistov developed a special relationship with the first deputy head of the department, Vladimir Maksimenko, and the head of the 1st service, Alexander Filin, who came from military counterintelligence. Feoktistov has prepared a large amount of incriminating evidence against Maksimenko and Filin, which is collected on an ongoing basis by the head of the 6th Internal Security Service of the FSB, Tkachev. Having received the latest information, Feoktistov calls Maksimenko, shows him the collected materials and reprimands in a fatherly manner: how carelessly you work, you screwed up again! As a result of such periodic conversations, Maksimenko is completely enslaved by Feoktistov and fulfills all his requests.

In turn, Oleg Feoktistov takes advantage of the fact that Alexander Kupryazkin has long ceased to see himself as the head of the 9th Directorate and dreamed of becoming deputy director of the FSB of Russia. When this happened, Feoktistov did everything to achieve appointment to the position of head of the department, but the director of the FSB of Russia, Alexander Bortnikov, rejected his candidacy, offering this position to the assistant to the Minister of Defense of Russia Sergei Korolev, who previously worked in the FSB agencies in St. Petersburg.

They say that upon learning of this, Oleg Feoktistov became furious, but did not give up and decided to act the old fashioned way, instructing the head of the 6th Internal Security Service, Tkachev, to urgently find incriminating evidence on Korolev. It was not possible to find corruption, and Feoktistov decided to stop searching. Since August 2011, Sergei Korolev began to perform his duties.

Considering that his partner Andrei Khorev has lost most of his influence on the economic bloc of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, Oleg Feoktistov’s current dream is to take the position of head of the FSB Directorate for Moscow and the Moscow Region.

Vladimir Maksimenko

From 2007 to 2009, Vladimir Maksimenko headed the internal security department of the Investigative Committee at the Prosecutor's Office, where he gained a reputation as a person who solves the problems of those involved in specific cases. However, when in January 2009, one of Maksimenko’s employees, Dmitry Marinin, was shot dead in St. Petersburg, it turned out that before joining the Investigative Committee, the murdered man had a rich criminal past, and while working in the investigative department, he dealt with the issues of his boss, achieving the desired results in the cases under investigation. As a result, the head of the committee, Alexander Bastrykin, fired Vladimir Maksimenko with a scandal, and in the FSB, as if nothing had happened, he was offered his previous position in the “M” Directorate of the FSB.

Returning to Dzerzhinsky Square, Maksimenko gathered a team of officers close to him under the auspices of the 1st service of Directorate “M”, which included the head of the service Alexander Filin, operational officers Kozyrev, Vasilevsky, Ekonomitsev, Melnik, as well as the recently retired Korobeinikov and seconded to the DEB, and now to the GUEBiPK Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia Yakovlev.

The head of the “M” department, Alexey Dorofeev, does not trust Vladimir Maksimenko and suspects that his deputy is engaged in commercial work, but only the FSB Internal Security Service can confirm or deny this, and Oleg Feoktistov is reliably covering for his sponsored colleague.

The main role of employees of the “M” department is to approve or reject candidates for appointment to positions in the central apparatus of the Investigative Committee, the Ministry of Internal Affairs and other law enforcement agencies. Even if the Ministry of Internal Affairs has its own opinion on any candidate, the last word always belongs to the Emshchiks. At the same time, all decisions regarding the central apparatus of the Ministry of Internal Affairs are made by the head of the 1st management service, Alexander Filin.

For example, when appointing employees to senior positions in the Department of Economic Security and Anti-Corruption (GUEBiPK) of the Ministry of Internal Affairs during certification, the cost of approving a candidate in the “M” department ranged from 50 to 200 thousand US dollars. This is exactly how DEB employees Andrey Solodovnikov, Vladimir Sevastyanov, Dmitry Zakharchenko, Alexey Ryabtsev, Alexey Kamnev and some others were appointed to senior positions in the structure of the GUEBiPK of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia. Many of these candidates were supported by Andrei Khorev.

For example, the owner of UMMC, Iskander Makhmudov, very much asked Khorev to take control of the newly created department “M” (Mechanical Engineering and Metallurgy) within the GUEBiPK structure, to which General Khorev proposed the candidacy of Andrei Solodovnikov, promising his full loyalty and assistance in the work. However, it was not possible to appoint Solodovnikov as head of the department the first time, providing him with only the position of deputy. But, at the same time, Directorate “M” refused to approve all other real candidates for the position of head of the department.

During the transformation of the Investigative Committee under the Ministry of Internal Affairs into the departmental Investigation Department, Filin personally communicated with the heads of departments and interested parties. As a result, from the initial list of 70 rejected candidates, almost all were able to “pay off” for a reward. However, Filin also carried out orders for the guaranteed dismissal of investigators, among which were the dismissal of senior investigators for particularly important cases Andrei Kisin and Oleg Urzhumtsev, in relation to whom Filin and Vasilevsky falsified reports and intelligence reports about the investigators receiving bribes from certain parties in the cases under investigation. The clients were the defendants in the cases that were being processed by these investigators.

Another important layer of the work of Directorate “M” is the personnel of the Investigative Committee of Russia, and especially the regional ones. Thus, the head of the Investigative Directorate of the Russian Federation for the Rostov Region, Yu.V. Popov. in addition to resolving issues related to the interests of representatives of the criminal community, V.P. Maksimenko reports monthly. 50 thousand US dollars for general patronage and connivance on the part of the Russian FSB.

Head of the Investigative Directorate of the Russian Federation for the Volgograd Region Muzraev R.K. in addition to monthly cash payments, he is a link between the “M” Department and the heads of territorial divisions of the RF IC in the Astrakhan region, Krasnodar region and the Republic of Kalmykia. For communication with Muzraev R.K. In Directorate “M” the deputy head of the 1st service is Vasilevsky, who was previously one of the heads of the economic security service of the FSB Directorate for the Volgograd Region. In general, Maksimenko and Filin try to entrust the most important cases to Vasilevsky, who skillfully knows how to create incriminating material out of nothing. For this purpose, falsified reports and intelligence reports are created about off-duty contacts of a candidate or employee of the Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs with certain persons involved in criminal cases and the receipt of corruption rewards. To confirm reports, periodically checked employees are photographed with random persons, and the photographs are passed off as documenting off-duty contacts, making up the names and positions of those depicted in the photograph. Since this information is secret, no one can verify it, and the FSB Internal Security Service will always cover up the “junior comrades” from Directorate “M”.

As a result of such simple manipulations, the same Vasilevsky, for example, earned indecently good money. He has four expensive cars, including two Range Rovers, his own yacht and a boat in the Volgograd region. The officer lives in an apartment in the Ukraina Hotel on the 7th floor, and constantly dines not far from home at the Pinnochio restaurant next to the Bagration Bridge, where, by the way, he often meets with colleagues and where they were repeatedly seen together with Andrei Khorev .

When in July 2011, the head of the “M” department, Alexey Dorofeev, decided to move to a new duty station in the Federal Security Service, Vladimir Maksimenko got the idea to take his place, counting on the support of Oleg Feoktistov, but the position has not yet become available for him.

Commercial interests of the 9th Directorate of the FSB

Over the past few years, in several high-profile criminal cases, the 9th Department - the Internal Security Service of the FSB of Russia - has undertaken to accompany investigations conducted by the Investigative Committee at the Prosecutor's Office, and now the Investigative Committee of Russia. Moreover, sometimes such investigations bring employees of the 9th Directorate of the FSB fabulous amounts of money. Almost always Andrei Khorev is involved in the investigation of such cases.

For example, General Khorev, who was closely acquainted with employees of the North-Western Customs Administration, systematically selected for his fellow security officers information about criminal cases involving the smuggling of large quantities of consumer goods from the PRC. Feoktistov, in turn, agreed with the deputy head of the Investigative Committee, Vasily Piskarev, to transfer the next criminal case for investigation to the central office of the Investigative Committee. There, the case was sent to an investigator loyal to the security officers, who transferred the seized inventory items for safekeeping to commercial structures indicated by employees of the 9th Directorate of the FSB, with their subsequent sale. At the same time, no court decisions were made to recognize the property as ownerless.

An indicative example of such theft of material evidence is the case of the so-called “Cherkizovsky market”. It was in the hands of investigator Sergei Deptitsky of the Main Investigative Directorate of the Investigative Committee of the Russian Federation, who instructed employees of the 9th Directorate of the FSB to carry out searches of the market. Almost all the goods seized during the searches had to be bought back by merchants for money. Moreover, the collection of money was organized by Andrei Khorev. The most striking thing is that during the searches, $3 million in cash was seized from Chinese citizens as evidence of illegal banking activities in the market, but the money disappeared. On this fact, the Investigative Committee itself conducted a pre-investigation check, but the case was hushed up, although investigator Deptytsky had to retire.

Of course, all participants in the scheme participated in sharing the profits from the sale.

Another favorite method of work for employees of the 9th Directorate was to receive orders to carry out investigative actions in connection with some criminal case being investigated in the Main Investigation Department of the Investigative Committee, which were not at all related to the subject of the investigation.

Oleg Feoktistov’s subordinates introduced interesting know-how to free the necessary persons from criminal liability. Thus, the accused, who is at large, falsifies, together with operatives of the 9th Directorate, the fact of extortion of a bribe by the investigator leading the case. After which the FSB officers raise the question of removing the bribe-taking investigator from the case, the accused is provided with state protection with the protection of special forces of the FSB of Russia (for example, the accused Pototsky, Kormilitsin, Rybkin), and the case itself falls apart under the pretext that it is fabricated.

In general, in the activities of the 9th Directorate of the FSB of Russia, it has become the norm to contact the central office of the Investigative Committee of Russia with a request to take over, on flimsy grounds, any criminal case being investigated anywhere on the territory of Russia, in order to subsequently achieve the necessary results on it. And in cases that are already pending, sometimes for 3-4 years, systematically extort bribes through employees of the Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs for their failure to investigate.

A typical example in this sense is the criminal case against Alexander Gitelson, who absconded from the investigation only after 4 years of investigation. But throughout the entire period of the investigation, at the direction of the named employees of the FSB of Russia, investigators Chernyshev S.M. and Sanarov D.A. on far-fetched grounds, they issued investigative orders to employees of the 9th Directorate of the FSB of the Russian Federation to carry out investigative actions and operational search activities in relation to commercial structures not related to the subject of the investigation in the case. Thus, in the form of bribes to investigators and operational employees, operational information was realized about the involvement of commercial structures (including credit institutions) in tax evasion and the withdrawal of funds in foreign currency abroad (VEF Bank Latvia).

This “activity,” the analogue of which V.V. Putin once called “economic ecstasy,” involves many investigators from the central apparatus of the Investigative Committee of Russia, including the head of the Main Investigation Department of the Investigative Committee Alexander Shchukin, investigators Valery Alyshev, Ruslan Ibiev (appointed head Main Investigative Directorate of the Investigative Committee for the Urals Federal District), Denis Nikandrov, Alexey Kramarenko (transferred to head of the Investigative Investigation Department for the city of Sochi, planned to be appointed to the position of head of the Investigative Investigation Department for the Central Administrative District of Moscow), Alexey Novikov, Artem Nikitchenko (originally from the same locality as Tkachev I.I.), Daniil Sanarov, Sergei Chernyshev and some others. It is these investigators who periodically handle “custom-made” criminal cases with operational support from the 9th Directorate of the FSB.

But, we must give them their due, Oleg Feoktistov with his people, in every possible way takes care, protects and promotes the employees of the Investigative Committee collaborating with him, using for these purposes the administrative resource of the deputy head of the Investigative Committee, Colonel General of Justice Yu.V. Nyrkov, previously Head of the personnel service of the FSB of Russia.

The Case of the Prosecutors

The whole conflict flared up due to the reluctance of the head of the organizational department of the General Prosecutor's Office, Yuri Sindeev, to negotiate with Oleg Feoktistov.

Taking into account the degree of influence of Oleg Feoktistov on almost all law enforcement agencies of the country, the independent and independent position of Yuri Sindeev, who had enormous influence in the General Prosecutor's Office and did not want, despite repeated hints, to coordinate his actions with the Internal Security Service of the FSB of Russia, could not end without a trace for the high-ranking prosecutor and the 9th Directorate went to war against the prosecutors.

In order not to be exposed ahead of time, General Feoktistov agreed in September 2010 with Andrei Khorev that, on the basis of falsified intelligence reports, he would obtain permission to wiretap the phones of Sindeev’s entourage in order to obtain compromising material sufficient to initiate some kind of criminal case. The result exceeded all expectations and by December Oleg Feoktistov had a clear and harmonious picture of protecting underground casinos near Moscow, which was later turned into almost the “case of the century.” Moreover, the first case regarding illegal gambling activities was initiated back in September 2010, but for Feoktistov it was important to reveal the pattern of relationships between prosecutors and obtain evidence that could lead to Yuri Sindeev.

To initiate a new criminal case, Feoktistov cunningly took advantage of the contradictions between Prosecutor General Yuri Chaika and Chairman of the Investigative Committee Alexander Bastrykin, naturally keeping silent about his conflict with Sindeev.

After searches and arrests, no evidence of Sindeev’s involvement was found. All that we managed to find were photographs from joint holidays of Moscow region prosecutors, not in an expensive Italian restaurant like Pinnochio, but in the budget Premium restaurant, owned by casino manager Ivan Nazarov, and joint trips by helicopter to Valaam (note, This is not Andrei Khorev's vacation on a 50-meter yacht in Sardinia with thousand-dollar champagne). The picture was retouched, exaggerated and beautifully presented to the media, dropping the image of the prosecutor's office to a trash level, and simultaneously inflating the amount of income from the rather pitiful underground casinos by several orders of magnitude. After this, further investigation was a matter of technique.

Oleg Feoktistov achieved his goal; Yuri Sindeev will not return to his position after his vacation and will be dismissed from the prosecutor’s office. But I would like to wish the fighter against corruption in the ranks of the Russian FSB: start with yourself.

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 Alexei 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.

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 for Organizational and Personnel Work (1995-1998), Head of the Department for 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 Counterintelligence Operations Directorate (1997-1998), Head of the Counterintelligence Department (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 Department of Federal Disaster Control 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
Soloviev Evgeniy 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 outer part 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, “stuff 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 downward. 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.

Search by " Goncharov FSB". Results: Goncharov - 213, FSB - 4378.

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1. Redistribution of the FSO business empire. The rest were less fortunate: Deputy Chairman of the Board of FGC UES Valery Goncharov while trying to fly abroad, he was detained by CSS officers FSB on suspicion of embezzling funds during the supply of equipment, Marat Oganesyan went to jail on suspicion of embezzling funds during the construction of the Zenit Arena, FSO General Gennady Lopyrev (North Caucasus Directorate) was taken into custody on charges of receiving a large bribe, Andrey Kaminov and Stanislav Kuehner were detained on suspicion of organizing a criminal...
Date: 06/14/2017 2. Ukrainian auction of election monsters. Studied at the KGB Higher School, now FSB. Accordingly, he knows the methods of conspiracy, conducting covert surveillance, and evading persecution. Veselov Evgeniy Aleksandrovich, - employee of the FSB Directorate for St. Petersburg. 50 years old, average height. Medium build. Dark. Full lips. Balding. Wear glasses. Drives a car. On the forum for-ua.com - Velesov. Goncharov Sergey Leonidovich, employee of the FSB Directorate for St. Petersburg. 50 years. Medium height.
Date: November 25, 2004 3. Report of the Kesaev commission to investigate the Beslan terrorist attack. Indirect evidence of the lack of control over the situation is the director’s statement FSB Russia N. Patrushev at a meeting of the Federation Council of the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation on September 20, 2004 about the lack of proactive...
... Levitskaya Alina Afakoevna; Head of the Center "Protection" of the Ministry of Health and Social Development of the Russian Federation Goncharov Sergey Fedorovich; Deputy Director of the Department of Information Programs "Vesti" TRK "Rossiya" Vasiliev Petr...
Date: 12/05/2005 4. Table of prices for elite rooms, “in demand among the population.” Official car state sign FSB can be obtained for $25,000. Other prestigious license plates are cheaper - Why do we have so many of these same flashing lights? Any pimple comes with a flashing light, and this situation needs to be corrected. Yuri Luzhkov, Moscow Mayor Anton Goncharov Prices, of course, are steep. But the criminal number is worth it. After all, magical letter combinations on a tin plate mean belonging to a special “caste”: FSB, Ministry of Internal Affairs, FSO, and even to the Administration of the President of the Russian Federation. Country neighbors, co-workers...
Date: 09/30/2004 5. Serdyukov got into the sanatorium-landing case. Since there are another 900 companies listed at its place of registration, and there is only one employee on staff, he is also the general director of the company Igor Goncharov.
[...] Everything changed after the SVR generals and FSB. A couple of months later, a land surveyor appeared on the island and announced that at the very top it had been decided to open a boarding house for employees here FSB. In the spring of 2008, how...
Date: 02/07/2013 6. General scammer. ... zone 2.8 hectares (Ostankino) - 4.2 million rubles; nursery "Cedars" 5.5 hectares - 5.5 million rubles; Fishermen village 21 hectares - 21 million rubles. What kind of money was all this property purchased for and where did the head of the Main Directorate for Security of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, Mr. Draguntsov, and the management of the “M” department look? FSB ...
... and the founders of the bank were Roman Soiko (chairman of the board), Valitov’s mother - Rumiya Minshakirovna, and as, as one might assume, figureheads from Bokov - the majordomo Stepanov, already familiar to us, and his two foreman friends - Goncharov and Sidorkin...
Date: 05/23/2012 7. How the General of the Ministry of Internal Affairs “milked” the Caucasus. “No, no,” the general’s wife quickly corrected herself. FSB, - I just don’t remember the page.
According to eyewitnesses, on the eve of the vote in the Tryum restaurant, deputies on behalf of the “dad” were collected and processed by the head of the Stavropol Central Internal Affairs Directorate Nikolai Goncharov.
Date: 03/20/2012 8. Agents of influence. ... providing industrial facilities FSB). Plenipotentiary representatives and their apparatus: plenipotentiary representative in the Central Federal District - Lieutenant General Georgy Poltavchenko ( FSB); 1st Deputy Plenipotentiary Representative of the Central Federal District - Major General Alexander Gromov ( FSB); Deputy Plenipotentiary Representative in the Central Federal District Vladimir Volkov ( FSB) Deputy Plenipotentiary Representative of the Urals Federal District - Lieutenant General Leonid Kuznetsov (former head of the FSB Directorate for the Krasnoyarsk Territory); assistant to the plenipotentiary representative of the Siberian Federal District - Major General Valery Khalanov (former head of the FSB Directorate for Buryatia); Deputy Plenipotentiary Representative of the Northwestern Federal District - Lieutenant General Vadim Goncharov (FSB); - Deputy Plenipotentiary Representative of the Southern Federal District - Oleg...
Date: 08/30/2004 9. Who covers up the killers from the Ministry of Internal Affairs. Andrey Yuryev [...] To employees of the Ministry of Internal Affairs and FSB Russia managed to find the criminals almost immediately; moreover, the latter, believing in their impunity, did not try to cover their tracks. In a vacant lot in Solntsevo, huge bloody stains remained in the snow for a long time. Two employees of the Balashikha city police department, officers Goncharov and Vorotnikov, as well as the burly security guard of the private security company Melikhov, killed Vladimir Sukhomlin in 30-degree frost.
Date: 04/22/2004 10. Abramovich - information FSB Original of this material © APN, 07/08/1999 Abramovich - reference FSB Russian intelligence services claim that Abramovich proposed to Dyachenko to physically eliminate Skuratov Abramovich Roman Arkadyevich Head of the Moscow representative office of Sibneft Member of the Council...
In addition to him, the founders of the company were Goncharov Oleg Yurievich (resides in Moscow at the address: Yeniseiskaya str., 16/21, apt. 55) and the offshore company "EDNA Limited" (Trident Corporate Services Providence House, East Hill Street, p.o. Box N 3944 .. 11. In the case of the chairman of the Moscow Advertising Committee, evidence appeared about extortion and receipt of bribes ... including from the Ministry of Internal Affairs, FSB, FSKN and even the Union of Beekeepers of Russia, as well as the Mayor of Moscow Yuri Luzhkov and the rector of Moscow State University Viktor Sadovnichy. It is worth noting that on September 1, in the “Facing the City” program on the TV Center channel, Mayor Luzhkov, speaking in support of the chairman of the committee of advertising, information and decoration of the capital, called the accusation against him unfounded. And a week ago, 16 State Duma deputies spoke in defense of Mr. Makarov, including Alexander Khinshtein, Nikolai Potter, Yuri Karabasov...
Date: 09.17.2009 12. Team of security forces. According to the collected materials of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, FSB and the Prosecutor General's Office opened several dozen criminal cases. True, the matter usually did not reach the point of punishing the perpetrators.
Independent deputies will be represented by Nikolai Potter, sitting in the Duma for his third term.
Date: 04/21/2004 13. The brother of one of the main defendants in the Kaitov case harbored terrorists. President of the Association of Veterans of the Alpha Unit Sergei Goncharov in a conversation with TD, he called the North Caucasus a “passing yard” for terrorists.
These are the employees FSB KCR stormed the apartment of one of the defendants in the case, Temirlan Bostanov.
Date: 12/27/2006 14. Square meters of power. Original of this material © "Express Newspaper", 06/04/2004 Square meters of power Vladimir Pozharsky, Dmitry Lifantsev, Anton Goncharov(photo) Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin - President of Russia: Tverskoy Boulevard, building 14, building 1, apartments 6, 7, 8 ...
Do you know that the director lives in this house? FSB?
Date: 06/07/2004 15. The KGB is in power. Since July 1995 director FSB. In June 1996 he was dismissed.
GONCHAROV VADIM VADIMOVICH Lieutenant General, Deputy Plenipotentiary Representative of the President of the Russian Federation in the Siberian Federal District Born on November 20, 1955 in Moscow.
Date: 12/27/2002 16. Sergei Sokolov’s wife was charged with treason at home. According to Gritsak, Daria Mastikasheva, who has a residence permit in Russia, recruited Ukrainians to cross to Moscow, carry out terrorist attacks there, and then specifically surrender FSB, substituting Square.
What was selected in advance from a group of two proven shooters: Boxer - Pavel Parshov (the direct executor) and Sobol - Igor Potter's, who was supposed to eliminate the killer.
Date: 01/18/2018 17. Officials from the highway. This story is painfully familiar to residents of the district and lies in the fact that in the struggle of competitors for a place under the Sergiev Posad sun, two former heads of the district - Goncharov and Upyrev were found guilty of the illegal privatization of a meat processing plant, the entire...
It would seem that one cannot be blamed for supporting a candidate who, until recently, was a senior officer FSB. However, not everything is so simple here either.
Date: 08/22/2012 18. “Friendship” with Putin, Shoigu and Gryzlov. The fund's board of trustees includes, along with Ignatova herself, State Duma Speaker Boris Gryzlov, head of the Russian Ministry of Emergency Situations Sergei Shoigu, Secretary of the Russian Security Council and ex-director FSB Nikolay Patrushev, first deputy director FSB Vladimir Pronichev, Minister of Internal Affairs Rashid Nurgaliev, and a number of other officials.
Date: 03/21/2011 19. Cynicism in Stavropol style. “January 15, 2008, in the bar “TRYUM” (!) Head of the Central Internal Affairs Directorate of the SK Goncharov N.V. gathered deputies of the Stavropol City Duma and, under the threat of criminal prosecution, demanded that an entrepreneur controlled by him be elected to the position of Chairman of the City Duma...
P.S. Currently, we also have a statement from Utkin’s wife to the manager FSB Russia to N.P. Patrushev.
Date: 04/14/2008 20. Register of “oligarchs in civilian clothes”. Former central office employee FSB. BRITVIN Nikolai Nikolaevich, Deputy Plenipotentiary Representative of the President of the Russian Federation in the Southern Federal District (Viktor Kazantsev). In the KGB of the USSR since 1981, since 1987 he headed operational units in the territorial security agencies and the central apparatus of the KGB; then deputy head of management FSB in the Stavropol Territory. GONCHAROV Vadim Vadimovich, Deputy Plenipotentiary Representative of the President of the Russian Federation in the Siberian Federal District (Leonid Drachevsky).
Date: 09.26.2002