Brattsev Sergey Anatolyevich Federal Security Service. The head of the “M” department became one of the heads of the FSB economic security service. Grigoriev Alexander Andreevich

Different testimony in a criminal case and in arbitration does not bother anyone yet, only because law enforcement officers do not combine all processes and decisions on them into one scheme. But lawlessness cannot last indefinitely, and in the event of a fair trial, the documents indicated on the paper with Ushakov’s name will greatly hinder the raiders.

General Prosecutor's Office of the Russian Federation

The criminal case initiated against Ekimov was investigated for six years. Investigator of the Investigative Department of the Department of Internal Affairs of Russia for the Istra District, Petr Zvonkov, closes the case at the stage of signing the indictment. The position of the investigation is that Ekimov’s guilt has been fully proven.

It is impossible to find this criminal case now. All requests for information about where the materials are located are answered by PASMI journalists with a refusal to provide data.


Obviously, in General Prosecutor's Office they know where it is. An inspection carried out there showed that it was illegally closed. The prosecutor's office insists on resuming the investigation, which is reported to the deputy Prosecutor General Victor Green.

“Studying the case in the Prosecutor General’s Office Russian Federation showed that the preliminary investigation into the second episode of Ekimov V.S. the act was terminated by the investigator unreasonably, the resolution in this part, in violation of part 4 of article 7 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of the Russian Federation, is not motivated and not substantiated on the collected materials of the criminal case,” the document says. – “Taking into account the above, as well as the fact that the investigation of the criminal case based on the appeals of Churin V.V. has taken on a protracted nature, the investigative body has repeatedly made illegal procedural decisions, which were canceled in the order of supervision and departmental control, in order to intensify the investigation, I propose to instruct the prosecutor of the Moscow region to cancel the illegal decision to terminate the investigation dated 04/02/2015, to take measures aimed at establishing all the circumstances of the crime crimes, making a lawful decision.”

The actions specified in the letter have not yet been completed. I would like to print the name of that employee of the prosecutor’s office who, after thousands of appeals from social activists, journalists and deputies, nevertheless saw signs of a violation of the law and reported this to higher management. But the source's name is hidden for his safety. Such a paradox.

PASMI sends a request to the Prosecutor General of the Russian Federation Yuri Chaika and the Deputy Prosecutor General of the Russian Federation Viktor Grin with a request to provide data on the deadlines for completing the actions specified in this document.

Director

First Deputy

First Deputy Director - Head of the Border Service of the FSB of Russia

Deputy Director - Chief of Staff of the National Anti-Terrorism Committee (NAC) Deputy Director - State Secretary Deputy Director

1. Counterintelligence Service (TCS)

Counterintelligence Operations Department

Office of Coordination and Analysis of Counterintelligence Activities

Office of Special Events (source)

Directorate of Counterintelligence on Sites

Center information security

Department of Military Counterintelligence

2. Service for the Protection of the Constitutional Order and the Fight against Terrorism (SZKSiBT)

Office for Combating Terrorism and Political Extremism (UBTPE)

Anti-terrorism center / Center special purpose(TSSN)

Office for Combating international terrorism(UBMT)

Organizational and operational management

Operational-Investigation Department (ORU)

3. Border Guard

4. Economic Security Service (SES)

Directorate for Counterintelligence Support of Industrial Enterprises (Directorate “P”)

Directorate for Counterintelligence Support of Transport (Directorate “T”)

Directorate for Counterintelligence Support of the Credit and Financial System (Directorate “K”)

Directorate for Counterintelligence Support of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, Ministry of Emergency Situations, Ministry of Justice (Department “M”)

Organizational and analytical management

Directorate for Combating Smuggling and Illegal Drug Trafficking (Directorate “N”)

Administrative service

5. Service for Operational Information and International Relations (formerly Service for Analysis, Forecast and Strategic Planning)

Department of Operational Information (DOI)

Analytical management

Strategic Planning Department

Department open information

Department of International Cooperation

6. Service of organizational and personnel work (SOKR)

Office of Special Registrations

Organizational and planning management

Personnel Department

7. Control service

Inspection Department

Department of Information Support of Operational-Investigative Activities

Control and Audit Department

Department of Internal Security

8. Scientific and technical service

Department of orders and supplies of weapons, military and special equipment

Department of Operational and Technical Measures (OTM)

research institute information technologies

9. Operations support service

Financial and economic management

Logistics Department (UMTO)

Capital Construction Department

Central subdivisions

Investigation Department

Case Management

FSB reception (as a department)

Contractual management

Central Security Communications Center

Center for Electronic Intelligence on Communications - TsRRSS

Special service (encryption)

Center for Licensing, Certification and Protection of State Secrets (LSZ Center)

FSUE STC Atlas

Special Equipment Center

Institute of Forensic Sciences Operational Search Department (OPU)

Department of Assistance Programs

Public Relations Center

Office of Registration and Archive Funds (URAF)

Central Archive

Radio Counterintelligence Directorate (Directorate “R”). Aviation Directorate Special Communications Directorate Military Construction Directorate Commandant Service Duty Service

Tenth Department (military mobilization)

Philip Bobkov

Army General. Graduated from the Leningrad school of military counterintelligence Smersh. In state security agencies since 1946. Since 1969, he headed the 5th Directorate of the KGB of the USSR, which was engaged in the protection of the constitutional order and fought against ideological sabotage and dissidents. Since 1983, he was deputy chairman, and since 1985, first deputy chairman of the KGB of the USSR. He left service in 1991.

In 1992, a graduate of the Smersh school headed the analytical department of the Most group of oligarch Vladimir Gusinsky. Bobkov worked at Most until the second half of 2001. By that time, Gusinsky himself had already lost control of the NTV channel and lived abroad for more than a year.

Alexey Kondaurov

Major General. In 1971 he graduated from the Faculty of Economic Cybernetics of the Moscow Engineering and Economic Institute named after. Ordzhonikidze. Since 1973 in state security agencies. IN last years The service was headed by the FSB Public Relations Center.

In 1994, Kondaurov headed information management Mikhail Khodorkovsky's Menatep group, from 1998 to 2003 he headed the analytical department of the Yukos oil company. In addition to analytics, Kandaurov was involved in working with representatives of the country’s key political forces. After Khodorkovsky's arrest, he spoke out in defense of the disgraced oligarch. In 2003, he was elected to the State Duma. In 2014, he signed a statement demanding an end to support for the self-proclaimed republics in southeastern Ukraine.

Oleg Osobenkov

Colonel General. Graduated from the Faculty of International economic relations MGIMO. In state security agencies since 1969. He headed the department of analysis, forecast and strategic planning, and since 1996 he has served as State Secretary of the FSB of Russia.

In 1999, Oleg Osobenkov was appointed deputy general director, head of personnel department at Aeroflot. He was a member of the airline's board. It is believed that Osobenkov’s task was to rid the company of the influence of Boris Berezovsky. Osobenkov was removed from the board of Aeroflot in 2005.

Yuri Kobaladze

Major General. Graduated from the Faculty of International Journalism at MGIMO. Since 1972 he worked in the first main directorate of the KGB of the USSR ( foreign intelligence). As a journalist, he traveled to the UK, Malta, the USA, and France. In 1991, he headed the press bureau of the SVR, and for six months he was deputy general director of ITAR-TASS.

In September 1999, Kobaladze became managing director of the investment company Renaissance Capital. From 2007 to 2012, he was Managing Director for Corporate Affairs and Advisor to the Chairman of the Board of X5 Retail Group. Since 2012 - consultant at UBS investment bank.

Alexander Zdanovich

Lieutenant General. Graduated from the KGB Higher School. In state security agencies since 1972. Served in military counterintelligence, at the FSB public relations center. In February 1996, he became acting head of the FSB TsOS. In November 1999, he was appointed head of the FSB assistance programs department.

From 2002 to 2012 - Deputy Chairman of the All-Russian State Television and Radio Broadcasting Company for security issues. From 2012 to 2014 - Advisor to the General Director of VGTRK.

Yuri Yakovlev

Army General. In 1975 he graduated from the Moscow Engineering Physics Institute with a degree in Experimental Nuclear Physics. In state security agencies since 1976. In 2008, he headed the economic security service of the FSB.

In July 2016, Russian President Vladimir Putin dismissed him. Two months later, Yakovlev was appointed deputy general director of Rosatom for state policy in the field of security in the use of atomic energy for defense purposes.

Oleg Feoktistov

General of the FSB. Graduated from the FSB Academy. Since 2004, he headed the 6th service of the FSB Internal Security Directorate, responsible for operational support of criminal cases, and deputy head of the FSB Internal Security Directorate.

In September 2016, he was appointed head of the security service of Rosneft and joined the company’s board. On March 10, Rosneft President Igor Sechin confirmed that Feoktistov had left the company. “This is correct information, he returned to service,” Sechin noted.

army General June 20, 1996 July 25, 1998 5 Putin Vladimir Vladimirovich without rank (reserve colonel) July 25, 1998 August 9, 1999 6 Patrushev, Nikolai Platonovich army General August 9, 1999 May 5, 2008 7 army General May 12, 2008 (in the position)

First Deputy Directors

Full name Military rank
(at the time of resignation)
date
appointments
date
liberation
Main position
Zorin Viktor Mikhailovich Colonel General July 24, 1995 May 1997 Head of the Anti-Terrorism Center of the FSB of Russia (since September 1995)
Klimashin Nikolay Vasilievich Colonel General? March 2003 July 2004 And. O. General Director of FAPSI (2003).
Kulishov Vladimir Grigorievich army General March 2013 (in the position) Head of the Border Service (since 2013)
Patrushev Nikolay Platonovich Colonel General April 1999 August 1999
Pronichev Vladimir Egorovich army General March 2003 March 2013 Head of the Border Guard Service (March 2003-March 2013)
Safonov Anatoly Efimovich Colonel General April 5, 1994 August 1, 1997
Smirnov Sergey Mikhailovich army General June 2003 (in the position)
Sobolev Valentin Alekseevich Colonel General 1997 April 1999
Stepashin Sergey Vadimovich lieutenant general December 21, 1993 March 3, 1994
Cherkesov Viktor Vasilievich lieutenant general August 1998 May 2000

Deputy Directors

Full name Military rank
(at the time of resignation)
date
appointments
date
liberation
Main position
Anisimov Vladimir Gavrilovich Colonel General 2002 May 2005 Head of the Inspectorate Department (2002-2004)
Bespalov Alexander Alexandrovich Colonel General 1995 March 15, 1999 Head of the Department of Organizational and Personnel Work (1995-1998), Head of the Department of Organizational and Personnel Work (1998-1999)
Bortnikov Alexander Vasilievich lieutenant general March 2004 July 2004
Bulavin Vladimir Ivanovich Colonel General March 2006 May 2008
Buravlev Sergey Mikhailovich Colonel General June 2005 December 2013
Bykov Andrey Petrovich Colonel General January 1994 August 26, 1996
Gorbunov Yuri Sergeevich Colonel General of Justice December 2005 2015 Secretary of State
Grigoriev Alexander Andreevich Colonel General August 1998 January 2001 Head of the Department of Economic Security (August-October 1998), Head of the FSB Directorate for St. Petersburg and Leningrad region (1998-2001)
Ezhkov Anatoly Pavlovich Colonel General 2001 July 19, 2004
Zhdankov Alexander Ivanovich Lieutenant General? 2001 July 2004
Zaostrovtsev Yuri Evgenievich Colonel General 1999 or 2000 March 2004 Head of the Department of Economic Security
Zorin Viktor Mikhailovich Colonel General May 1997 May 1998
Ivanov Viktor Petrovich Lieutenant General? April 1999 January 5, 2000 Head of the Department of Economic Security
Ivanov Sergey Borisovich lieutenant general August 1998 November 1999
Klimashin Nikolay Vasilievich lieutenant general 2000 March 2003
Kovalev Nikolay Dmitrievich Colonel General December 1994 July 1996
Komogorov Viktor Ivanovich Colonel General 1999 July 2004 Head of the Department of Analysis, Forecast and Strategic Planning
Kulishov Vladimir Georgievich Colonel General August 2008 March 2013 Chief of Staff of the National Anti-Terrorism Committee
Kupryazhkin Alexander Nikolaevich Colonel General July 2011 (in the position)
Lovyrev Evgeniy Nikolaevich Colonel General OK. April 2001 July 2004
Mezhakov Igor Alekseevich Lieutenant General? 1995 December 1995 Head of the Personnel Department
Nurgaliev Rashid Gumarovich Colonel General July 2000 July 2002 Head of the Inspectorate Department
Osobenkov Oleg Mikhailovich Colonel General 1996 1998 Head of the Department of Analysis, Forecast and Strategic Planning (since 1997)
Patrushev Nikolay Platonovich Colonel General? October 1998 April 1999 Head of the Department of Economic Security
Pereverzev Pyotr Tikhonovich Colonel General 2000 July 2004 Head of the Operations Support Department
Pechenkin Valery Pavlovich Colonel General September 1997 July 2000 Head of the Department of Counterintelligence Operations (1997-1998), Head of the Department of Counterintelligence (1998-2000)
Ponomarenko Boris Fedoseevich lieutenant general 1996 September 1997
Pronichev Vladimir Egorovich Colonel General 1998 August 1999 Head of the Department for Combating Terrorism
Savostyanov Evgeniy Vadimovich major general January 6, 1994 December 2, 1994 Head of the Department of Federal Disaster Control for Moscow and the Moscow Region
Safonov Anatoly Efimovich Colonel General January 6, 1994 April 5, 1994
Sirotkin Igor Gennalievich lieutenant general December 2015 (in the position) Chief of Staff of the National Anti-Terrorism Committee
Sobolev Valentin Alekseevich Colonel General 1994 1997
Solovyov Evgeny Borisovich Colonel General April 1999 April 2001 Head of the Department of Organizational and Personnel Work
Strelkov Alexander Alexandrovich Colonel General January 1994 January 2000 Head of the Operations Support Department (since 1997)
Syromolotov Oleg Vladimirovich Colonel General July 2000 July 2004 Head of the Counterintelligence Department
Sysoev Evgeniy Sergeevich Colonel General March 2013 December 2015 Chief of Staff of the National Anti-Terrorism Committee
Timofeev Valery Alexandrovich Colonel General? January 1994 1995
Trofimov Anatoly Vasilievich Colonel General January 17, 1995 February 1997 Head of the Federal Criminal Investigation Department and the Federal Security Service Directorate for Moscow and the Moscow Region
Ugryumov German Alekseevich admiral November 1999 May 31, 2001 Head of the Department for the Protection of the Constitutional Order and Combating Terrorism
Ushakov Vyacheslav Nikolaevich Colonel General July 2003 February 21, 2011 Secretary of State (2003-2005)
Tsarenko Alexander Vasilievich Colonel General April 1997 May 2000 Head of the FSB Directorate for Moscow and the Moscow Region
Shalkov Dmitry Vladislavovich Lieutenant General of Justice March 2015 (in the position) Secretary of State
Shultz Vladimir Leopoldovich Colonel General July 2000 July 2003 Secretary of State

Heads of services (since 2004)

Full name Military rank date
appointments
date
liberation
Service
Conversation Sergey Orestovich Colonel General 2009 (in the position)
Bortnikov Alexander Vasilievich army General 2004 2008
Bragin Alexander Alexandrovich Colonel General 2004 2006
Zhdankov Alexander Ivanovich Colonel General 2004 2007 Control service
Ignashchenkov Yuri Yurievich Colonel General 2007 2013 Control service
Klimashin Nikolay Vasilievich army General 2004 2010 Scientific and technical service
Komogorov Viktor Ivanovich Colonel General 2004 2009 5th Service (Operational Information and International Relations Service)
Kryuchkov Vladimir Vasilievich Colonel General 2012 (in the position) Control service
Lovyrev Evgeniy Nikolaevich Colonel General 2004 (in the position) 6th Service (Organizational and Personnel Work Service)
Menshchikov Vladislav Vladimirovich lieutenant general 2015 (in the position) 1 Service (counterintelligence service)
Sedov Alexey Semenovich army General 2006 (in the position) 2nd Service (Service for the Protection of the Constitutional Order and Combating Terrorism)
Syromolotov Oleg Vladimirovich army General 2004 2015 1st Service (Counterintelligence Service)
Fetisov Andrey Alexandrovich Colonel General 2010 or 2011 (in the position) Scientific and technical service
Shekin Mikhail Vasilievich Colonel General 2006 or 2007 (in the position)
Shishin Sergey Vladimirovich Colonel General 2004 2006 7th Service (Activity Support Service)
Yakovlev Yuri Vladimirovich army General 2008 07.2016 4th Service (Economic Security Service)

Sources

  • Encyclopedia of Russian Secret Services / Author-comp. A.I. Kolpakidi. - M.: Astrel Publishing House LLC: AST Publishing House LLC: Transitkniga LLC. 2003. - 800 p.

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An excerpt characterizing the leadership of the FSB of Russia

Andrei did not tell his father that he would probably live for a long time. He understood that there was no need to say this.
“I will do everything, father,” he said.
- Well, now goodbye! “He let his son kiss his hand and hugged him. “Remember one thing, Prince Andrei: if they kill you, it will hurt my old man...” He suddenly fell silent and suddenly continued in a loud voice: “and if I find out that you did not behave like the son of Nikolai Bolkonsky, I will be ... ashamed!” – he squealed.
“You don’t have to tell me this, father,” the son said, smiling.
The old man fell silent.
“I also wanted to ask you,” continued Prince Andrei, “if they kill me and if I have a son, do not let him go from you, as I told you yesterday, so that he can grow up with you... please.”
- Shouldn’t I give it to my wife? - said the old man and laughed.
They stood silently opposite each other. The old man's quick eyes were directly fixed on his son's eyes. Something trembled in the lower part of the old prince’s face.
- Goodbye... go! - he suddenly said. - Go! - he shouted in an angry and loud voice, opening the office door.
- What is it, what? - asked the princess and princess, seeing Prince Andrei and for a moment the figure of an old man in a white robe, without a wig and wearing old man’s glasses, leaning out for a moment, shouting in an angry voice.
Prince Andrei sighed and did not answer.
“Well,” he said, turning to his wife.
And this “well” sounded like a cold mockery, as if he was saying: “Now do your tricks.”
– Andre, deja! [Andrey, already!] - said the little princess, turning pale and looking at her husband with fear.
He hugged her. She screamed and fell unconscious on his shoulder.
He carefully moved away the shoulder on which she was lying, looked into her face and carefully sat her down on a chair.
“Adieu, Marieie, [Goodbye, Masha,”] he said quietly to his sister, kissed her hand in hand and quickly walked out of the room.
The princess was lying in a chair, M lle Burien was rubbing her temples. Princess Marya, supporting her daughter-in-law, with tear-stained beautiful eyes, still looked at the door through which Prince Andrei came out, and baptized him. From the office one could hear, like gunshots, the often repeated angry sounds of an old man blowing his nose. As soon as Prince Andrei left, the office door quickly opened and the stern figure of an old man in a white robe looked out.
- Left? Well, good! - he said, looking angrily at the emotionless little princess, shook his head reproachfully and slammed the door.

In October 1805, Russian troops occupied the villages and towns of the Archduchy of Austria, and more new regiments came from Russia and, burdening the residents with billeting, were stationed at the Braunau fortress. The main apartment of Commander-in-Chief Kutuzov was in Braunau.
On October 11, 1805, one of the infantry regiments that had just arrived at Braunau, awaiting inspection by the commander-in-chief, stood half a mile from the city. Despite the non-Russian terrain and situation ( orchards, stone fences, tiled roofs, mountains visible in the distance), to the non-Russian people, looking at the soldiers with curiosity, the regiment had exactly the same appearance as any Russian regiment had, preparing for a review somewhere in the middle of Russia.
In the evening, on the last march, an order was received that the commander-in-chief would inspect the regiment on the march. Although the words of the order seemed unclear to the regimental commander, and the question arose how to understand the words of the order: in marching uniform or not? In the council of battalion commanders, it was decided to present the regiment in full dress uniform on the grounds that it is always better to bow than not to bow. And the soldiers, after a thirty-mile march, did not sleep a wink, they repaired and cleaned themselves all night; adjutants and company commanders counted and expelled; and by morning the regiment, instead of the sprawling, disorderly crowd that it had been the day before during the last march, represented an orderly mass of 2,000 people, each of whom knew his place, his job, and of whom, on each of them, every button and strap was in its place and sparkled with cleanliness . Not only was the outer part in good order, but if the commander-in-chief had wanted to look under the uniforms, he would have seen an equally clean shirt on each one and in each knapsack he would have found the legal number of things, “stuff and soap,” as the soldiers say. There was only one circumstance about which no one could be calm. It was shoes. More than half the people's boots were broken. But this deficiency was not due to the fault of the regimental commander, since, despite repeated demands, the goods were not released to him from the Austrian department, and the regiment traveled a thousand miles.
The regimental commander was an elderly, sanguine general with graying eyebrows and sideburns, thick-set and wider from chest to back than from one shoulder to the other. He was wearing a new, brand new uniform with wrinkled folds and thick golden epaulettes, which seemed to lift his fat shoulders upward rather than downward. The regimental commander had the appearance of a man happily performing one of the most solemn affairs of life. He walked in front of the front and, as he walked, trembled at every step, slightly arching his back. It was clear that the regimental commander was admiring his regiment, happy with it, that all his mental strength was occupied only with the regiment; but, despite the fact that his trembling gait seemed to say that, in addition to military interests, the interests of social life and the female sex occupied a significant place in his soul.
“Well, Father Mikhailo Mitrich,” he turned to one battalion commander (the battalion commander leaned forward smiling; it was clear that they were happy), “it was a lot of trouble this night.” However, it seems that nothing is wrong, the regiment is not bad... Eh?
The battalion commander understood the funny irony and laughed.
- And in Tsaritsyn Meadow they wouldn’t have driven you away from the field.
- What? - said the commander.
At this time, along the road from the city, along which the makhalnye were placed, two horsemen appeared. These were the adjutant and the Cossack riding behind.
The adjutant was sent from the main headquarters to confirm to the regimental commander what was said unclearly in yesterday's order, namely, that the commander-in-chief wanted to see the regiment exactly in the position in which it was marching - in overcoats, in covers and without any preparations.
A member of the Gofkriegsrat from Vienna arrived to Kutuzov the day before, with proposals and demands to join the army of Archduke Ferdinand and Mack as soon as possible, and Kutuzov, not considering this connection beneficial, among other evidence in favor of his opinion, intended to show the Austrian general that sad situation , in which troops came from Russia. For this purpose, he wanted to go out to meet the regiment, so the worse the situation of the regiment, the more pleasant it would be for the commander-in-chief. Although the adjutant did not know these details, he conveyed to the regimental commander the commander-in-chief’s indispensable requirement that the people wear overcoats and covers, and that otherwise the commander-in-chief would be dissatisfied. Having heard these words, the regimental commander lowered his head, silently raised his shoulders and spread his hands with a sanguine gesture.
- We've done things! - he said. “I told you, Mikhailo Mitrich, that on a campaign, we wear greatcoats,” he turned reproachfully to the battalion commander. - Oh, my God! - he added and decisively stepped forward. - Gentlemen, company commanders! – he shouted in a voice familiar to the command. - Sergeants major!... Will they be here soon? - he turned to the arriving adjutant with an expression of respectful courtesy, apparently referring to the person about whom he was speaking.
- In an hour, I think.
- Will we have time to change clothes?
- I don’t know, General...
The regimental commander himself approached the ranks and ordered that they change into their overcoats again. The company commanders scattered to their companies, the sergeants began to fuss (the overcoats were not entirely in good working order) and at the same moment the previously regular, silent quadrangles swayed, stretched out, and hummed with conversation. Soldiers ran and ran up from all sides, threw them from behind with their shoulders, dragged backpacks over their heads, took off their greatcoats and, raising their arms high, pulled them into their sleeves.
Half an hour later everything returned to its previous order, only the quadrangles turned gray from black. The regimental commander, again with a trembling gait, stepped forward of the regiment and looked at it from afar.
- What else is this? What's this! – he shouted, stopping. - Commander of the 3rd company!..
- Commander of the 3rd company to the general! commander to the general, 3rd company to the commander!... - voices were heard along the ranks, and the adjutant ran to look for the hesitant officer.
When the sounds of diligent voices, misinterpreting, shouting “general to the 3rd company”, reached their destination, the required officer appeared from behind the company and, although the man was already elderly and did not have the habit of running, awkwardly clinging to his toes, trotted towards the general. The captain's face expressed the anxiety of a schoolboy who is told to tell a lesson he has not learned. There were spots on his red (obviously from intemperance) nose, and his mouth could not find a position. The regimental commander examined the captain from head to toe as he approached breathlessly, slowing his pace as he approached.
– You’ll soon dress people up in sundresses! What's this? - shouted the regimental commander, extending his lower jaw and pointing in the ranks of the 3rd company to a soldier in an overcoat the color of factory cloth, different from other overcoats. – Where were you? The commander-in-chief is expected, and you are moving away from your place? Huh?... I'll teach you how to dress people in Cossacks for a parade!... Huh?...
The company commander, without taking his eyes off his superior, pressed his two fingers more and more to the visor, as if in this one pressing he now saw his salvation.
- Well, why are you silent? Who's dressed up as a Hungarian? – the regimental commander joked sternly.
- Your Excellency…
- Well, what about “your excellency”? Your Excellency! Your Excellency! And what about Your Excellency, no one knows.
“Your Excellency, this is Dolokhov, demoted...” the captain said quietly.
– Was he demoted to field marshal or something, or to soldier? And a soldier must be dressed like everyone else, in uniform.
“Your Excellency, you yourself allowed him to go.”
- Allowed? Allowed? “You’re always like this, young people,” said the regimental commander, cooling down somewhat. - Allowed? I’ll tell you something, and you and...” The regimental commander paused. - I’ll tell you something, and you and... - What? - he said, getting irritated again. - Please dress people decently...
And the regimental commander, looking back at the adjutant, walked towards the regiment with his trembling gait. It was clear that he himself liked his irritation, and that, having walked around the regiment, he wanted to find another pretext for his anger. Having cut off one officer for not cleaning his badge, another for being out of line, he approached the 3rd company.
- How are you standing? Where's the leg? Where's the leg? - the regimental commander shouted with an expression of suffering in his voice, still about five people short of Dolokhov, dressed in a bluish overcoat.
Dolokhov slowly straightened bent leg and directly, with his bright and insolent gaze, looked into the general’s face.
- Why the blue overcoat? Down with... Sergeant Major! Changing his clothes... rubbish... - He didn’t have time to finish.

For ten years we have been convinced that the FSB is the only structure that can save the country from chaos and lawlessness. That the FSB brought together people united by the idea of ​​selfless service to the Fatherland. Under this pretext, security officers occupied key positions in the state apparatus, the Ministry of Internal Affairs, Drug Control, and entered the boards of directors of the largest banks and corporations.

The results of the decade do not inspire optimism: the southern borders of Russia are seething, terrorist attacks occur regularly, drug addiction has become a national disaster, the security officer Nurgaliev, assigned to the Ministry of Internal Affairs, completely ruined the work of the ministry, and during the years of “chekism” the country was completely corroded by corruption.

The time has come to take a closer look at this forge of personnel. In the end, the Russians support this intelligence service from their own pockets and have the right to demand an account.

Myths and leadership

Like any government structure, the FSB is a complex mechanism where the interests of various clans, communities and groups are intertwined. Now at the helm are the St. Petersburg clan and people close to former director FSB Nikolay Patrushev(now Secretary of the Security Council). They are the ones who make the difference in Lubyanka. Judge for yourself.

Director of the FSB Alexander Bortnikov— graduated from the Leningrad Institute of Engineers railway transport. From 2003 to 2004 - head of the FSB department for St. Petersburg and the Leningrad region. Under Patrushev, he headed the economic security service (SEB) of the FSB.

First Deputy Sergei Smirnov - began his service in the KGB department for the Leningrad region. From 2001 to 2003 - head of the FSB department for St. Petersburg and the region. In 2003 he was transferred to the capital.

First Deputy, Director of the Border Service Vladimir Pronichev - in 1994 he was appointed head of the FSK department for Karelia, replacing Patrushev in this post. In 2001, Patrushev took Pronichev to Moscow. After the tragic events of the hostage taking and death at the Dubrovka Theater Center in Moscow in 2004, by secret decree of Putin he was awarded the title “Hero of Russia.”

Deputy Director Vyacheslav Ushakov - in 1998 he was the plenipotentiary representative of the president in Karelia (he worked simultaneously with Patrushev). Since 2002 - Head of the Operational Information Coordination Department (UKOI). In July 2003, he was appointed deputy director of the FSB. The only exceptions are three of Bortnikov’s deputies: Muscovites Yuri Gorbunov and Sergei Buravlev, as well as Vladimir Kuleshov, who previously headed the FSB Directorate for Saratov region.

Even the chairman of the public council under the FSB, Vasily Titov (vice-president of VTB) and his deputy Alexander Afronichev (chairman of the board of directors of OJSC Nord) are both natives of St. Petersburg. The rest of the council members are mostly businessmen with a KGB background, police officers, former State Duma deputies and the rector of the Church of Sophia the Wisdom of God on Lubyanka and the Church of the Great Martyr and Healer Panteleimon at the FSB hospital, Archpriest Alexander (Mironov).

At the same time, there is not a single prominent public figure, human rights activist or independent journalist on the council.

In places

Smaller generals, if they are not from the banks of the Neva, have a completely different flight path. Some wander around the outback. Others still make it to the capital.

For example, the current head of the FSB Directorate for the Volgograd Region, Sergei Kokorin, began his service in the KGB of Kazakhstan. Then he commanded security officers in Orenburg and the Sakhalin region. At the age of 52 he was transferred to Volgograd. According to our source, General Kokorin was twice going to be transferred to Moscow, but at the last moment the decision was canceled.

Now clouds have gathered over the chief security officer of Volgograd. Firstly, a strategic bridge across the Volga “danced” under his nose, during the construction of which Accounts Chamber revealed gross financial irregularities. And, secondly, last year there was a big scandal within the department: after an open letter to the president, the head of the department for combating terrorism and extremism, Colonel Pyotr Samarsky, disappeared without a trace.

According to the official version, Samarsky was detained by FSB officers at Domodedovo airport and escaped while being transported to Volgograd. But relatives do not believe the officials and believe that the colonel was killed or kidnapped by his colleagues. The other day, Samarsky’s mother sent a video message to President Medvedev to the editor, where she begs him to find her son.

But for other heads of the FSB, no scandals are an obstacle, and they manage to move to the central office. By a strange coincidence, the “lucky ones” tirelessly fought against smuggling, illegal fishing and were seen in stories involving the redistribution of large property.

For example, a long-time hero of our publications - former boss UFSB Primorye Lieutenant General Yuri Aleshin. This character appeared in history when entrepreneurs and security officials close to them divided shares in the Nakhodka fishing port. Among other things, on the Novaya website we posted telephone wiretaps obtained as part of criminal case No. 4802. One of the participants in telephone conversations, in a voice reminiscent of the voice of General Aleshin, advised the assistant director of the port which of the FSB officers was better to contact in order to prevent entrepreneurs get shares, or how to organize police support and stop bailiffs. In addition, according to media reports, Aleshin’s relatives turned out to be a man with a troubled criminal past. The husband of the eldest daughter, Kanakbek Kurmangaliev, nicknamed Kan, previously served a prison sentence for torture and kidnapping. Now Yuri Nikolaevich holds a responsible position in the FSB SEB.

By the way, our experts put forward three versions of why the income and property declarations of the FSB leadership were not made public:

a) allegedly obvious bullshit was placed on the president’s desk, and the head of state demanded to present a new document;

b) the property allegedly indicated in the declarations somehow did not fit with “cool heads, warm hearts and clean hands”;

c) the declarations showed that the FSB was overstaffed, and the Kremlin took a break.

Blatnye

Following the St. Petersburg generals and the lucky generals in the unspoken hierarchy are the thieves. In other words, those employees whose relatives are generals, high-ranking officials or respectable businessmen. Usually, such “security officers” leave the service after five to seven years and move to cushy places in large banks and oil companies - supposedly to monitor business affairs on behalf of the “watchful eye.”

The most striking example is the sons of the same Security Council Secretary Patrushev - Dmitry and Andrey. Both are graduates of the FSB Academy. Today Dmitry works as a senior vice president at VTB and is responsible for working with large state-owned companies. And Andrey in 2006 was appointed advisor to the chairman of the board of directors of Rosneft.

Another example is the eldest daughter of FSB deputy director Ushakov, Marianna. After graduating from school, the girl entered the FSB Academy. Now Marianna is no longer fighting external and internal enemies - her name can be seen among the founders of the Arizo trading house, Unika MS LLC (production and sales finishing materials), Platon Service CJSC, Eigers LLC (renting space in Sheremetyevo) and the Youth Leisure Center (office in the central air terminal).

Roofers

But not everyone achieves success thanks to kinship. The majority of security officers are “self-made men.” Basically, they “made themselves” at the expense of the KGB roofs. Roofers must be divided into several categories. Some faces actually come to the arrows with bandits and settle conflict situations with corrupt cops, officials and shielding companies from financial audits. Others receive bribes without leaving their offices. The latter are the majority. As a rule, the protectors are involved in smuggling, drug supplies and illegal financial flows. Businessmen pay some roofs just in case. But the benefits of this “cooperation” are minimal.

A couple of years ago, bandits kidnapped the son of a famous Moscow businessman and announced a multimillion-dollar ransom. The unfortunate father turned for help to his roof - the FSB general, to whom he paid 30 thousand dollars a month. During the conversation, the general said that 100 thousand dollars would be needed to investigate the crime. Then he asked for another 25 thousand bucks. But the son never returned home. (The names of all participants in the drama are known to the editors.)

In the end, the businessman hired a private detective, who freed the hostage.

— Did the general return the money? - I asked.

— He said that the cops cheated him. Although I know that he didn’t lift a finger,” the businessman answered.

Ransomware

According to our source, Russian courts They are simply overwhelmed with criminal cases in which FSB officers appear as extortionists.

Now the military prosecutor's office is investigating criminal case No. 33/03/0111-10. Three FSB officers are involved in the case (an investigator from the capital's FSB Directorate, an employee of the FSB TsOS and a colonel from the internal security department), two policemen (one serves in the internal security department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs) and a senior investigator for special important matters ATC Central Administrative District. According to investigators, first the security officers and their accomplices tried to squeeze the business out of the businessman, and then extorted a foreign car from his common-law wife. The story received loud publicity thanks to the courage of Muscovite Olesya N.

“Many people told me, don’t get involved with the FSB and give them everything,” the girl recalls. “But I said to myself: “Why should I be afraid of these punks with the Xivs?”

The story is like this. Olesya’s common-law husband, Alexey V., decided to go into the restaurant business. Soon it was found suitable premises, but during the registration process it turned out that the previous owner owed rent. Alexey turned for help to his close friend, security officer Andrei Matalin, who had connections in the Moscow government. A couple of months later, Alexey inquired about the results. In response, Matalin proposed to include his businessman brother among the founders. Alexey refused and demanded that the documents for the restaurant be returned.

And Alexei started to get into trouble: police officers from the Central Administrative District Internal Affairs Directorate opened a criminal case against him and put him on the federal wanted list. Having learned about this, Matalin involved his colleague - 24-year-old employee of the FSB TsOS Vladislav Kotyukov. They arranged a meeting for the businessman near the Novoslobodskaya metro station, where they allegedly wanted to solve problems with the restaurant. True, the operatives of the Central Administrative District Internal Affairs Directorate were informed in advance about the upcoming rendezvous. As soon as the fugitive appeared, he was immediately arrested.

Matalin: “...Kotyukov and I were guided by the desire to assist the police in apprehending the criminal. I informed Krylov and another criminal investigation officer who was with him about the proposed meeting. We immediately asked Krylov not to make the arrest in our presence and not to inform him that Kotyukov and I had assisted him. We also told Krylov that V. always has a traumatic pistol with him...”

Kotyukov: “...Having been left alone with Matalin in a cafe after V.’s arrest, we realized that he would immediately understand that we were involved in this, but we didn’t want that. Subsequently, in order to ward off suspicions of involvement in the arrest, we decided after work to visit investigator Bykov at the Internal Affairs Directorate of the Central Administrative District of Moscow and demonstrate V.’s participation in his fate. For this we bought for him mineral water and cigarettes..."

But Matalin and Kotyukov decided not to stop at charity. They told his common-law wife that they could release Alexey for a certain fee, and demanded her Nissan Murano car as a fee. Olesya agreed.

A week later, the girl began to wonder why her husband was still under arrest? To which the security officers said: it has not yet been possible to release him, but they allegedly agreed that Alexei would be placed in a good cell where the criminals would not “let him go.” Olesya was smart enough - she recorded all the conversations on a voice recorder:

“They immediately returned the Nissan, albeit all broken, and began to beg me to take back the application. They turned out to be very nice and polite people,” Olesya smiles.

There is one more detail in the case that eloquently shows how young security officers lose their basic sense of self-preservation due to impunity. Who do you think Kotyukov registered the Nissan for? To a distant relative, acquaintance, neighbor? No matter how it is: on your wife!

In turn, the security officers’ lawyers are going to prove in court that there was no extortion and Olesya herself provoked the situation.

The scammers

The following characters in the office do not need a furry hand. The dark deeds of these characters flourish thanks to the old fear of Russians of the Cheka-KGB-FSB, when it is enough to flash your face and everyone will fall in line. In fact, the scammers have never seen a living spy, since they serve as petty operatives, technicians, or sort through pieces of paper. Their destiny is to breed suckers. The special operation is divided into several stages:

a) choice of victim;

b) creating a nervous environment;

c) nightmare;

d) confidential conversation;

e) receiving money or other preferences.

This is how Roman M., a businessman from the Moscow region, described his situation. At some party, he was introduced to the supposed curator of the district through the FSB - a certain Mikhail Anatolyevich (later he turned out to be an employee technical department).

“I heard, I heard about you,” Mikhail Anatolyevich said, shaking his hand. Have you already solved your problems?

“I have no problems,” the businessman answered in surprise.

- It’s strange, but my boys work for you...

Throughout the next month, Roman was on pins and needles. It seemed to him that he was being watched and his phones were being tapped. At the same time, some people called the office and asked what tax office he submits declarations. Finally, Roman could not stand it and contacted Mikhail Anatolyevich.

“When he showed me some kind of certificate for 2003, where I allegedly did not pay taxes in full, I realized that I was being scammed. I asked directly what he needed? In response, Mikhail Anatolyevich asked to include his brother among the founders.

“We agreed that I pay for his brother’s lunches at a nearby cafe.”

Hard workers

The hard workers are FSB special forces soldiers and operatives who often go on business trips to hot spots and rescue hostages. These faces die first and know perfectly well what awaits them if they are captured by the militants. Hence the excessive cruelty during special operations, “frostbite” and disregard for the lives of others. And there are no prospects ahead. After leaving the service, only a few get jobs as security guards for wealthy businessmen or bandits. The rest will be scattered in private security companies and will open and close the gates for the rest of their lives.

It has long been noticed: when you start talking about corruption in the FSB, it is not the hard workers who are most indignant, but their bosses in official foreign cars with flashing lights.