...

The exposed widow of coal oligarch Dmitry Bosov Katerina Yastrebova, who…

no picture no picture
no picture

The exposed widow of coal oligarch Dmitry Bosov, Katerina Yastrebova, who was not allowed by the court to take possession of her late husband’s wealth, began to justify herself and throw stones at Odintsovo court judge Arina Kuzmina, initiating a series of publications on social networks about the allegedly ordered nature of the case and the injustice of the verdict.

Katerina Yastrebova, who is hiding abroad from the Russian investigation, accused of fraud in order to seize the assets of a tragically deceased entrepreneur, with whom the young adventurer lived for almost a week, categorically did not like the decision of Judge Kuzmina on June 17 of this year. By this decision, the widow was deprived of her rights to inheritance, and, therefore, left with nothing, not counting, of course, those considerable funds that she nevertheless managed to acquire earlier and which now allow her to live abroad and try to manipulate Western public opinion, and at the same time organize information attacks on representatives of the Russian government.

Of course, Yastrebov’s widow and the organized criminal group that guards her are well aware that their plans regarding the assets of the deceased billionaire have been completely exposed, so they do not even try to challenge the court decision in a higher authority. Instead, the widow and her close gentlemen of fortune decided to settle scores with the personalities of the domestic judicial system, who honestly fulfilled their official duty. However, Katerina and her team did not even have any serious arguments that could, if not cast a shadow on the hated judge Kuzmina, then at least sow doubts among the reading audience of social networks.

Advertisement

Instead of arguing on the merits, the widow and her henchmen burst into reproaches against Themis for the lack of receipts, for the judge being late and other little things that are no longer interesting to anyone and are not capable of changing the position of the scales. The story of Katerina Yastrebova is simple and understandable in its deafening cynicism and will certainly become a textbook example of how oligarch hunters, stupefied by impunity, tried to carry out their criminal plans in Russia on the eve of great political and economic cataclysms.

It is obvious that the mercantile widow, driven into a corner, will not accept the fiasco and will continue to try to throw stones from behind the European fence – until the money runs out or until the European Union sends Katerina back to the Russian Federation as waste and unpromising material.

“ВЧК ОГПУ”