Russian businessmen keep dying under mysterious circumstances since Putin invaded Ukraine: report
newNow you can listen to Fox News articles!
Powerful Russians are being killed in an increasingly bizarre series of killings after criticizing Russian President Vladimir Putin.
A number of businessmen have been killed over the past few months as Russians grow increasingly disaffected over the invasion of Ukraine. Ivan Pechorin, managing director of the aviation industry at the Corporation for the Development of the East and Arctic, died on September 12. Allegedly falling from a speedboat Off the coast of Vladivostok.
Chairman of the Russian oil company Lukoil, Ravel Magunov Reportedly died after collapsing From the sixth floor window of a Moscow hospital on September 1. He and his company urged Putin to call off the attack, calling it a “tragedy”. Lukoil claimed that Magnoff “died after a severe illness”.
Alexander Sabbotin, a former top manager of Lukoil, was found dead in the basement of a Moscow apartment in May after he allegedly went to a doctor to treat hangover symptoms but was instead diagnosed with heart failure. had to face it.
According to Euronews, at least eight other Russian oligarchs have died under strange circumstances in the past few months. International investigators have suggested looking at the deaths as suicides or revenge killings. Opposition to the invasion of Ukraine Or links to corruption at Russian gas company Gazprom.
President Vladimir Putin ordered a full-scale invasion of Ukraine by Russia just eight months after Time magazine described President Biden as ready to take on the Russian leader.
(Sputnik, Kremlin poll photo via AP)
Leonid Shulman, head of transport services at Gazprom Invest, was found dead during the attack in February. Authorities said they found a suicide note on the executive, who allegedly slashed his wrists in the bathroom of his St. Petersburg cottage.
The morning after the attack began, authorities found Alexander Tylyakov, a senior executive of Gazprom’s corporate security, hanging in the garage of his home. An unnamed law enforcement source told Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta that Gazprom’s own security unit Arrived before the police.

Russian President Vladimir Putin stands with First Executive Vice President of oil producer Lukoil Ravel Magnov after he was awarded the Order of Alexander Nevsky during an award ceremony at the Kremlin on November 21, 2019 in Moscow, Russia.
(Sputnik/Mikhail Klimentyev/Kremlin via Reuters ATTENTION EDITORS – This photo was provided by a third party.)
Rebecca Koffler, a former Defense Intelligence Agency official and author of “Putin’s Playbook: Russia’s Secret Plan to Defeat America,” told Fox News Digital at the time of Pechorin’s death that “the truth cannot be known because of the Russian investigation.” Cannot be trusted.”
Brittany Griner, Paul Whelan’s families meet with Biden to discuss return to US
“If it was a hit, it would be made like a tragic accident,” Koffler explained.

Alexey Miller, CEO of Russian state-owned natural gas company Gazprom, attends the annual meeting of shareholders at the Gazprom headquarters on Friday, June 27, 2014, in Moscow, Russia.
(AP Photo/Alexander Zemlyanchenko)
He also noted that the Russian media “couldn’t get their story straight today about what happened to Magnov” when he died, suggesting that Russian news agencies are largely under control or at least Under the influence of the Russian government.
Click here to get the Fox News app.
“The truth is that these tactics are deliberately designed to hide, so no investigator can detect foul play. They are generally considered ‘tragic accidents.’ [which is] is also part of the ideology,” he said.
Fox News’ Paul Best and Jon Brown contributed to this report.