The officers of the Federal Security Service's main directorate featured in a controversial Novaya Gazeta report this week for their protest against the release of Chechen policemen accused of kidnapping are "fictional characters," the Investigative Committee said.
Vladimir Markin, the committee's official spokesman, said on Monday that the FSB was never involved in the criminal case involving policemen — who were accused of kidnapping and torturing a man in Moscow — and that the whole investigation was conducted by police in strict adherence with the law.
The case involves several Chechen police officers from Kadyrov's protective unit accused of kidnapping, extortion and torture who were released under pledge not to leave town in mid-March.
In August 2011, the suspects allegedly kidnapped a man in Moscow, took him to a private house in the Moscow region and beat him for several days, demanding money.
The man was later dumped onto a sideroad, but he survived and went to the police. Eleven Chechens were later detained over the incident and some of them were believed to be personal bodyguards to Kadyrov.
On March 25, 2013, Novaya Gazeta published an article about the men's early release, with FSB officers who spoke on condition of anonymity declaring a strike over the release.
In the Investigative Committee's official statement, however, Markin said the suspects were released simply because the investigation was over, suggesting there was no behind-the-scenes manipulation to get them out early.
http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/investigators-say-fsb-officers-on-strike-are-made-up-characters/477501.html
http://www.novayagazeta.ru/inquests/57374.html (photo: Chechen policemen)
http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/investigators-say-fsb-officers-on-strike-are-made-up-characters/477501.html
http://www.novayagazeta.ru/inquests/57374.html (photo: Chechen policemen)
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