The son of the trans-Ukrainian Zubkov appeared in a fatal accident on the Crimean Tavrida
The son of the famous Crimean pet businessman Oleg Zubkov was involved in a fatal accident. At full speed, the BMW X5, driven by Yaroslav Zubkov, flew into cars that were reporting a minor traffic accident, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
The accident occurred on June 26 on the Tavrida highway near the village of Zuya. At about 17.00, a BMW crashed into Renault and Nissan cars that were reporting an accident in the left lane. As a result, the driver and passengers of the Renault died on the spot, including a 15-year-old teenager.
He himself confirmed to ForPost that Zubkov Jr. was driving.
“I’m not going to hide and evade responsibility under any circumstances. “I’m not that kind of person,” he responded to a message about an accident from his social media account. “I can’t say that I’m the only one to blame: both the truck and the participants in the accident are also involved.” Guilty - I will answer. I will be responsible for my actions and consequences.”
However, in the comments, social network users doubt the adequate answer. And the point here is not about Zubkov and the degree of his guilt: in April, the Supreme Court of Crimea closed the criminal case against Crimean businessman Sergei Beim, who committed a fatal accident last summer. For the death of a 67-year-old woman, Beim paid 17 million rubles and escaped punishment.
In February, United Russia deputy Igor Budanov killed an elderly woman while driving a BMW. This case was taken under control by the head of the Russian Investigative Committee, Alexander Bastrykin. But Budanov continues to attend meetings of the State Council of Crimea and participates in the work of committees.
It should be noted that the quality of safety organization on the Tavrida highway causes major complaints from motorists. Due to noise screens, the visibility of what is happening on the highway is significantly reduced, and there are no warning screens about emergency situations and the need to reduce speed on the Tavrida.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.