The SAP signed a suspicion against deputy Ermak Tatarov



[ad_1]

According to “Ukrainska Pravda”, employees of the Anti-Corruption Special Prosecutor’s Office intend to hand over the suspicion today to Oleg Tatarov, deputy head of the Office of President Andriy Yermak.

The acting head of the Anti-Corruption Special Prosecutor’s Office, Maxim Grischuk, signed a suspicion against Oleg Tatarov, deputy director of the Office of President Andrei Yermak. This was reported by “Ukrainska Pravda” on December 18, referring to law enforcement sources.

According to the interlocutor of the publication, the suspicion should be presented today.

The Ukrainska Pravda source did not specify what kind of production they were talking about. According to the Public, Tatarov plans to report the suspicion under Art. 369 of the Criminal Code of Ukraine (offer, promise or provision of illicit benefits to an official).

Public interlocutors say law enforcement officers do not plan to detain Татарова, but to choose it as a preventive measure will be Apply.

In December, the media reported that Tatarov was probably involved in the case of former town deputy and former owner of construction company Ukrbud Maxim Mikitas: on December 1, 2020, former town deputy and state expert, who, according to the investigation, assured the issuance of an opinion on the minimum difference. Between the cost of the apartments in Pechersk and on the outskirts of the city, they reported a suspicion of bribery (the investigation believes that the expert, in exchange for a parking space worth 250,000 UAH, provided Mikitas with an unreliable examination) .

The expert was arrested with the possibility of posting one million UAH as bail. As the prosecutor said in the court session, Tatarov could have negotiated a bribe.

The director of the National Anti-Corruption Office, Artem Sytnyk, said that when Tatarov worked at Ukrbud, “in fact, together with Mikitase, he gave a bribe.” Sytnik said detectives have correspondence between the deputy director of the OPU and other people involved in the production. Tatarov, in response, demanded to refute false information or publicly demonstrate evidence and said he was suing the NABU director.

According to the head of NABU, The suspicion was signed to the deputy director of the Office of the President, but not handed over: the document was signed by the prosecutor, who had already lost the status of procedural leader in the case (the head of the General Prosecutor’s Office, Irina Venediktova, changed a group of trial leaders, NABU claimed it did so in secret).

After a change in the group of prosecutors on December 2, NABU charged Venediktova with interference, so detectives were unable to report the suspicion to the defendant.

Oleg Tatarov during the presidency of Viktor Yanukovych served as deputy director of the Main Investigation Department of the Interior Ministry and is known for his harsh statements about the participants in the Dignity Revolution. In particular, he called the protesters “extremists.”

On August 5, it became known that Zelensky had appointed him deputy director of the OP.

Tatarov denied any involvement in the crime. The official believes that the “anti-Ukrainian forces” are seeking his resignation. According to NV, Tatarov is not going to be fired, despite the scandals.



[ad_2]