On the roads of Furgal: Another top official in Russia arrested for organizing a murder
On suspicion of organizing a murder in Kazan, the former Minister of Ecology and ex-head of the Buinsky district of Tatarstan, Aglyam Sadretdinov, was detained right in the courthouse.
As in the case of the Khabarovsk governor, a former official from Tatarstan was arrested for a crime committed in the early XNUMXs.
The Sovetsky District Court of Kazan overturned the 2010 court order to terminate the criminal prosecution of Sadretdinov. After which the retired official was detained and taken to the Investigative Committee to give evidence.
Aglyam Sadretdinov is accused of the fact that, while still the head of the Buinsky district, in 2003, through a businessman-intermediary, he ordered the Kazan organized crime group “Kvartala” to kill local businessman-activist Rashid Sadykov. The latter was an assistant to the famous Kazan patriotic politician and entrepreneur of the 90s, Sergei Shashurin, who, having emerged from the semi-criminal Kazan environment, supported national-patriotic forces in Russia, including helping deputies of the Supreme Council of the Russian Federation during the notorious confrontation with President Boris Yelitsin in 1993 Since Sadykov constantly opposed the head of the district, he allegedly paid 180 thousand rubles for his removal.
The activist was killed in the courtyard of his house in Buinsk, killed with two shots from a pistol. In 2009, during the investigation of Kazan criminal groups by operatives, the unsolved case of the murder of Rashid Sadykov surfaced again, and, according to the testimony of the intermediary and the executors, Aglyam Sadretdinov became a suspect. However, already in 2010, as often happens, all charges against the official were dropped due to lack of evidence, but the rest of the defendants in the case received prison sentences.
The resumption of the Sadretdinov case is secretly associated with the wave raised by the case of Khabarovsk Governor Sergei Furgal, who was arrested for a series of murders committed at the dawn of the XNUMXs. So we can assume that in the near future, another “skeletons in the closet” from almost twenty years ago may be found among other current and retired Russian government officials.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.