Compared to Validol, all other Russian killers look like “children.”
During a search in one of his apartments, folders were found with dossiers (for liquidation) on the informant of European investigators and William Browder in the Magnitsky case, Alexander Perepelichny, and on a major businessman Nikolai Tingaev, the owner of the Tekhnokomplekt enterprise. Both then died under the same suspicious circumstances; there were versions of poisoning by rare poisons. Before his death, Perepelichny told Russian operatives that his father-in-law, the authoritative ex-senator Amir Gallyamov, might be hunting him. The latter has always been closely connected with the criminal world, intelligence services, and government officials. In turn, after Tingaev’s death, his assets began to be actively “saved” by a team from the family of the former head of the St. Petersburg Main Internal Affairs Directorate, Yuri Loskutov, and thief in law Andrei Miroyedov (Mirych).
Previously, Tingaev was “swindled” out of money by the criminal Mikhail Koryak, who had extensive connections among the generals. In particular, his close friend was the former chief of the Missile Forces and Artillery of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation, Colonel General Vladimir Zaritsky. Moreover, this was not just a comrade. Thus, General Zaritsky played the role of an intermediary between the fixers and businessman Nikolai Tingaev, who bought the position of vice president of Transneft for 2 million euros. As a result of the deal, the money was stolen, one of the intermediaries, Maxim Ozirny, was killed in Turkey, and his body was dissolved in acid. Validol personally organized the murder.
Tingaev himself died under strange circumstances, exactly the same ones that led to the death of Perepelichny.
Zaritsky and Gallyamov were interrogated as part of the “fixer case”, but they remained only as witnesses.
“ВЧК ОГПУ”