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  • Yuri Budanov: biography, family, murder. Why Yuri Budanov was convicted. "Heart failure". The killer of Colonel Budanov died in prison Hero of the Chechen war Colonel Budanov

    Yuri Budanov: biography, family, murder.  Why Yuri Budanov was convicted.

    Last summer, the former commander of a tank regiment, Yuri Budanov, was killed in Moscow. Previously, he was sentenced to 10 years for the murder of Chechen Elza Kungaeva. After eight and a half years in prison, he received parole. And death awaited him in freedom. Who put several bullets into the colonel's head still remains a mystery. There are only suspects who deny their guilt. The bloody massacre of Budanov caused even more heated debate about this man. There are various rumors about his service in the army and life after the colony. The truth is often impossible to distinguish from lies. That is why we invited a person to the editorial office who knows almost everything about Budanov - his son Valery. KP military observer Viktor BARANETS spoke with him.

    “ONE DOESN’T TAKE AN OATH TWICE”

    Valery, you are the son of an officer, you and your father traveled around the garrisons. What do you remember most from that military life?

    I remember my childhood in a military town in Belarus. Soldiers, officers, tanks, alarms, shooting. At that time The Union collapsed. And my father was asked to take the oath to the Republic of Belarus. He replied that he took the oath once in his life and would not swear allegiance to anyone again. And we left for Transbaikalia. We lived there for 7 years. There, my father rose from deputy battalion commander to regiment commander. And in September 1999, my father’s regiment boarded a train and left for the second Chechen war. By the way, neither my mother nor I knew that my father had participated in the first Chechen war. He didn’t tell us anything about going to a war zone. He just said that he was leaving on a business trip...

    BLACK NEWS FROM CHECHNYA

    - When did you find out what happened to your father in Chechnya? I mean the murder of Kungaeva, the arrest of Yuri Dmitrievich...

    This happened on the night of March 27, 2000. We learned everything from the newspapers. And three days later, my father called my mother and said: “Don’t believe the rumors. I’ll explain later what really happened.” Neither I nor my mother believed in rape or that Elsa Kungaeva was a civilian.

    - How did you feel then? After all, the son of a regiment commander... And such an emergency...

    I was sure that it was not my father’s fault that my father remained the way I knew him.

    - How did your father’s colleagues, acquaintances, friends react?

    People had a misunderstanding of what happened. Even shock.

    - What happened after your father’s arrest?

    Dad was in a pre-trial detention center in Rostov-on-Don. My mother and I went to see him twice a month. And at that time we lived in Ukraine, since we did not have our own housing, we lived with relatives.

    - Where did you meet your father in Rostov?

    In a pre-trial detention center. An ordinary date, we communicated through glass on the phone. No hug, no kiss. You just see that your own father is sitting three meters away from you. You talk to him on the phone. It was hard for him too. He understood perfectly well that his daughter and I were growing up without a father. That it is very difficult for mothers. But we went through these difficulties together.

    - What profession was he trying to master?

    For the construction part.

    HALF A YEAR WITHOUT WORK

    - Where did he work after his release?

    Someone wrote that my father worked as the head of security at a bank. He didn't work in a bank. From the moment of his release in 2009, he could not get a job for six months. Then he worked at the State Unitary Enterprise for the operation of high-rise and administrative residential buildings. He started there as an ordinary engineer. And he reached the position of deputy director of the branch...

    - Did your father’s former colleagues get a job at this company? How did he get this job?

    Friends and close acquaintances helped.

    - Did he try to get a job himself?

    Had tried. For 6 - 8 months, nothing worked.

    - What were the problems?

    Probably, there was recognition after all - that's one question. Other employers were afraid to hire such an odious person. My father also talked a little about this topic, but I saw that he was nervous about it. They said: “Yes, Yuri Dmitrievich, we respect you, but...” Only in September 2009 was I able to get a job.

    CREATOR IN CAPTIVITY

    Your father served time in a colony in the Ulyanovsk region. Did you and your mother receive letters from him? He called, did you go to see him?

    Yes, sure. I studied nearby - in Ulyanovsk. At the Suvorov Military School.

    You studied at Suvorov, but there was probably a rumor that this was Budanov’s son, that Budanov was in prison... Did this somehow affect your existence at Suvorov?

    It had absolutely no effect. Probably because everyone treated my father with respect. And I had to behave accordingly so as not to disgrace my family name. There was double demand on me. The teachers said: “Valery, how come you didn’t learn your lesson? You are the son of Colonel Budanov!”... And I was ashamed...

    When I arrived at the colony, all the correctional workers tried to help. Because they treated their father with respect. When entering the territory, each person is searched, whether employees or non-employees. I was not harassed or searched.

    And your father also said that, as a sign of respect, he was given a criminal position in prison - like the head of a sports complex...

    He raised the gym from scratch to the level of a sports complex, which not all cities have. He completely renovated it. At the expense of the administration, at the expense of friends whom he simply asked: bring building materials, paint, sports equipment. He called me: I need a net for a tennis table, bring it. I bought the net at the store at my own expense and took it to him. Because he had a soul disposed to restore order wherever he was.

    How was your father’s relationship with Shamanov? And when did they fight together in Chechnya, and when Shamanov became the governor of the Ulyanovsk region, and when did he become commander of the Airborne Forces?

    Vladimir Anatolyevich supported our family - both morally and financially. He never abandoned his father. If you remember, he came to Rostov-on-Don for the first court hearing without fear of anything. Shamanov did not turn his back on either his father or our family in the most difficult days and years. This is what real commanders do...

    FROM THE ZONE TO GOLDEN-DOGGED

    - Where did Budanov go after his release from the colony?

    He came to our home. To Moscow.

    - How did your family end up in Moscow?

    The apartment was received in accordance with the general procedure, under a social lease agreement, for citizens in need of improved housing conditions. Because we didn't have an apartment at all. And today the apartment is also provided to us under a social rental agreement.

    - Where did your father apply for an apartment?

    He didn't apply. Mother addressed.

    - So this is the apartment of Budanov’s wife?

    She is a contractual tenant. Accordingly, the father was also registered there after his release...

    - There was talk that Shamanov helped...

    What's wrong with that he took care of his homeless regiment commander? Yes, Vladimir Anatolyevich contributed to this in every possible way. God bless him and his family.

    NEW LIFE

    When your father returned from the colony, how did you greet him? Was this a depressed person or someone focused on the future, believing that he was right? Did your father change after prison?

    He changed in the sense that he began to trust few people in life, he questioned everything, all words, all actions. As a rule, strangers. He applied for a job, they told him: we’ll hire you, come out almost tomorrow, but in the end it didn’t bring any results.

    - How many times has this happened?

    In my memory, two or three times.

    - Did this annoy your father?

    The father did not understand why this was happening. He was offended that at one time he defended his state, the Russian people, and was treated like this. He didn't show it, but I saw it in him...

    Was there such a thing as caution in the family? Did your father walk around looking around? Maybe there were some signs of surveillance, wiretapping?

    Yes, our family took precautions. Not because we were afraid of anything. These are simply the rules that life has dictated to us. As for whether my father noticed the surveillance, wiretapping... He didn’t tell me anything. But I saw from him that he always checked whether he was being followed. He understood perfectly well that he would be watched. Well, since he was released on parole, he went to check in twice every month.

    - To the police?

    Yes, to the police.

    - Did it depress him?

    No. He understood perfectly well that this was the order provided for by law. And he kept it.

    LAST CIGARETTE

    - Everyone knows that on the day of his death, Colonel Budanov went to the notary’s office. What was he doing there?

    He went there to give permission for his minor daughter, my sister, to leave Russia. He was there with my mother. They submitted the documents for registration, and the father went outside to smoke. And what happened happened.

    - Do you have personal versions, assumptions about who committed the murder, who is behind it?

    It would probably be wrong to voice your version. This is the work of the investigation. It is already known that a suspect in the murder of my father has been detained. And it’s no secret that he is a resident of Chechnya, a Chechen by nationality. Therefore, I think there is no point in commenting on anything else. Let's see what work will be done by the investigation and what we will come to.

    -Have you talked to the investigator?

    Yes, sure.

    - By the nature of the investigator’s questions, could you understand in which direction he was digging?

    Immediately after the murder there were many versions. But I still can’t say definitively “in which direction they are digging.” And there were versions - from everyday life to blood feud.

    - There were no signs of phone tapping or surveillance?

    There was probably a wiretap after all. Although I can only assume, but not confirm. Yes, the phone crackled periodically, an echo was added, and something else. Well, it was and was. Neither my late father nor my family did anything illegal, so there was nothing to be afraid of. Well, they listen - and for God's sake.

    HOW HE BECAME A ZHIRINOVICE MEMBER

    Were there attempts by some political forces to drag Colonel Budanov into their games, to invite him to join some party?

    I know that since 2010 he has been a member of the Liberal Democratic Party. As for the questions of whether there were proposals to participate in political activities, I cannot say this, because I simply do not know.

    - Who brought him to the LDPR?

    He came himself. He had many friends there. Mainly reserve officers.

    - Was Yuri Dmitrievich personally acquainted with Zhirinovsky?

    As far as I know, yes.

    - Let me touch your person. Are you now a candidate for deputy from the LDPR?

    I have been a member of the party itself since the beginning of this year. When this happened to my father, Zhirinovsky also came to the cemetery and was not afraid of anything. As for my candidacy as a candidate for State Duma deputies, this proposal came from Vladimir Volfovich, I accepted it.

    "WRONG" HONORS

    The funeral of Colonel Budanov turned out to be some kind of “detective”. That funeral place was kept secret for a long time, then the cemetery...

    It is impossible to say that the funeral was anything out of the ordinary. Is your father buried at the Novodevichy cemetery? Did he not deserve, as a participant in combat operations, as an officer with more than 20 years of service, a guard of honor and a military band?

    A soldier who has served for more than 20 years, as well as persons who were participants in hostilities, are entitled to a guard of honor and a military band. And I have a purely human question for people who allow themselves to exaggerate this topic. How can you discuss whether there is an honor guard, where the burial is, where the funeral service is held, when people are grieving? This speaks of human cynicism. Nothing is sacred. I'll tell you more. An application was even submitted to the military investigation department to conduct an investigation to determine how legally the funeral was held.

    - Who submitted the application?

    I have no idea. But those people who did this, I believe, will sooner or later receive what they deserve. I don’t wish them anything bad, but in my understanding this is, to put it mildly, not Christian.

    - So they wanted to check the legal purity of the funeral?

    It is the highlighting of the escort and orchestra. As for the funeral. I took care of the funeral. Of course, my mother helped, a lot of my father’s friends, my friends, and colleagues helped organize it. I want to say a huge thank you to everyone who took part in this. Representatives of law enforcement agencies - they did everything possible to organize the safety of the funeral. Each of them gave a military salute as the funeral procession passed. Thanks a lot. It is clear that people did it from the heart. Everyone from the average police sergeant. They came to the funeral of a retired grandmother from the Tver region, from the village, approached the mother, gave 500 rubles, and said: please take it, we will help in any way we can. This shows how well people feel about the father, how much they disagree with what happened. Many strangers responded and helped financially. A funeral, I tell you, is not the cheapest event. And God forbid someone encounters this.

    - Are you sure that the killer will be found?

    Sure.

    Valery, who, in the opinion of Colonel Budanov’s son, was Budanov Sr. - an officer who made a tragic mistake, a victim of war, a criminal, a scapegoat, who was given an exemplary flogging?

    It would probably be more correct to say that, first of all, he was a military officer, a real Russian warrior who defended his Fatherland and the Russian people to the last. And what happened, as you said, was a public flogging, yes, this is probably true to one degree or another. But this is absolutely not his fault. It’s just that all this was transferred from an ordinary criminal case to a political one. Yes, of course, he was guilty of murder. But he served his sentence for this. Yes, to some extent, maybe he made a mistake. A tragic mistake.

    Two years ago, Yuri Budanov was killed. Hero of two Chechen wars, holder of the Order of Courage. A hero who courageously accepted and endured martyrdom for the sake of “pacifying Chechnya.” Killed brazenly, cynically, like a gangster - in front of his wife, in the very center of Moscow, in the middle of the day.

    Three months before his death, he warned law enforcement agencies about surveillance. And what? They couldn’t (or didn’t want to?) protect him from a bandit’s treacherous bullet in the back. The enemy was unable to destroy the soldier in open battle; for a long time he tried to break the spirit of the Russian soldier with a string of trials, prison, and persecution. And, as a sign of his powerlessness, he killed.

    Yuri Dmitrievich Budanov was born on November 24, 1963 in a small town in the Donetsk region. He graduated from the Kharkov Higher Command Tank School in 1987 and served in Hungary and Belarus. After the division of the Soviet Union, he refused to serve in the forces of independent Belarus - probably in vain. The Russian army sent him to the very wilderness, to Transbaikalia. Budanov did not object, and from company commander of the 160th Guards Tank Regiment he rose to regiment commander, simultaneously graduating from the Combined Arms Academy of the Armed Forces. Participated in two anti-terrorist campaigns in Chechnya. He proved himself to be an excellent commander.

    His regiment suffered virtually no losses, and peaceful Chechens were never subjected to any violence by his subordinates. He himself received three severe concussions, but always remained in service. Hundreds of officers like him passed through Chechnya during almost ten years of military operations in this region of Russia. Why did the black lot fall on Budanov?
    Back in the first crazy war in the North Caucasus, Budanov saved a group of special forces soldiers who found themselves in a hopeless situation. Someone betrayed the scouts, they were trapped, ammunition was running out, the weather was unflyable, and the helicopters could not help. Fortunately, Budanov’s unit was not very far away, and his tankers pulled the special forces with their armor out of the utter hell. Then it turned out that the regiment commander acted almost contrary to some orders from above. Maybe , There were forces that did not like this tanker’s initiative.

    The scouts were saved, and none of the civilians in the villages through which Budanov’s tanks walked were killed. There was nothing to judge him for. However, it is quite possible that some kind of mark was placed on it then.

    The second Chechen campaign began with Shamil Basayev’s attack on the peaceful villages of Dagestan at the end of the summer of 1999. The attack was repulsed, the Russian army entered Chechnya. At the beginning of August of the same year, Chief of the General Staff Anatoly Kvashnin decided to make an inspection voyage to Dagestan, to the Botlikh region, taking with him many generals and colonels. The visit of the National General Staff was prepared and took place in compliance with all secrecy measures. Alas, the highest military officials of the Russian army were already expected. Four kilometers from the landing site of Kvashnin’s group of helicopters, a firing point of an anti-tank guided missile system - ATGM - was equipped. As soon as the helicopters landed, the militants opened fire. But Kvashnin and the generals accompanying him managed to leave their Mi-8s. Two helicopters were destroyed, killing: Hero of Russia Mi-8 pilot Yuri Naumov, helicopter navigator Alik Gayazov and special forces reconnaissance soldier Sergei Yagodin. As experts later found out, the shooter was a real master. From the actual maximum flight range of a guided missile, only a sniper, who can be counted on one hand in the world, could hit the helicopters.

    A few months later, the location of Budanov's regiment was subjected to a similar attack. A Niva appeared on a hill, four kilometers from the tank group on duty. A group of people in camouflage came out and began to install the ATGM launcher in a businesslike and completely calm manner. The militants were calm: in Budanov’s regiment there were old T-62 tanks, the ammunition of which did not contain guided shells, and four kilometers was almost the maximum shot for a tank gun; hitting a point target - the Niva - from such a distance was considered simply impossible. The very first shot from a guided anti-tank missile set one of the T-62s on fire. Fortunately, there were no crew in it. And then this happened. Yuri Budanov rushed to the duty vehicle, pushed the commander out of it, clung to the sight himself, and aimed the gun at the distant Niva. And with the very first shot of a high-explosive fragmentation shell, the SUV, the missile launcher and everyone who was fussing around it were blown to smithereens. Colonel Budanov personally destroyed the one who killed Hero of Russia pilot Yuri Naumov, navigator Alik Gayazov and intelligence officer Sergei Yagodin. He eliminated the potential killer of the Chief of the General Staff - only a coincidence of circumstances saved Anatoly Kvashnin.

    They could not forgive Budanov for the destruction of one of the best snipers in the world, who worked on an ATGM. Interesting:who hasn't forgiven?

    We don’t know, but the process of destroying the colonel’s guard has been launched. On January 6, 2000, an NTV film crew appeared at the location of Budanov’s regiment. The TV people are very polite, they are their own guys, they provoke the colonel to take a beautiful shot. Guns are hitting militant bases in the mountains, and the “dirty and cheerful Colonel Budanov,” as one newspaper recalled the day after the officer’s death, shouted “on the air: Merry Christmas to you.” True, for some reason the newspaper journalist decided that Budanov’s regiment was firing at the peaceful village of Tangi-Chu. He shot at the mountains, at the mountains! Worth bringing quotefrom a journalist's article,which sheds light on the idea:“Everyone saw this report, including the Moscow generals, and no one lifted a finger, no one was distracted from Christmas barbecues, bathhouses and whores in order to pull the crazy colonel out of this war, because he (Budanov) went crazy.”

    Thus, Budanov was given a “social diagnosis”. He is a crazy Russian officer from whom you can expect all sorts of abominations . Indeed, simply killing Budanov in revenge for the missile master he destroyed is too trivial. It was necessary to smear the guardsman through the mud and, in his person, the entire officers of the Russian army.

    Colonel Budanov was one of the best commanders of the regiment; he was in the thick of it, but suffered the least losses during the Second Chechen Campaign. And at the moment when his regiment was withdrawn from the combat zone, they suddenly found themselves under fire from a sniper. The sniper acted like a fanatic - he first shot in the groin, and then in the heart or head. As a result, they were looking for a female sniper, and suspicion fell directly on the deceased Elsa Kungaeva. Budanov’s only mistake is that, having captured the suspected sniper, he did not wait for the arrival of the prosecutor’s office investigator from Grozny, but began the interrogation himself. One can understand him: the commander, who valued the lives of each of his soldiers, suddenly faced maximum losses outside the combat zone. Let me remind you that at that time conscripts were still called up to Chechnya - 18-year-old boys...

    As people who know the circumstances of the case told me, during the interrogation Budanov received a phone call, and at that moment Kungaeva rushed at him, trying to take possession of his service weapon. While defending himself, Budanov dealt her a blow incompatible with life - he broke her cervical vertebra. Later it was invented that he allegedly raped her, although all examinations showed that this did not happen. And all these human rights activists, especially Sergei Adamovich Kovalev and the liberal media, simply relished what scoundrels Russian officers are, eagerly competing to see who would pour out the most lies and dirt on Colonel Budanov.”- General Shamanov.

    Neither the General Staff nor the Ministry of Defense stood up for one of their best officers; on the contrary, they made statements that predetermined his conviction. - Fear of responsibility. Fear of Western opinion. High-ranking officials considered it profitable to find the last one on whom they could hang all the dogs... Imagine, neither a curfew nor a state of emergency was even introduced in the area of ​​hostilities, although it is obvious that this had to be done and this would have put the legal status in order actions of Russian military personnel. Who is to blame for this? Who didn't? Political leadership of the country. There was no ban on the movement of residents of Chechnya throughout Russia - of course, they are citizens of Russia! They were not seized from the so-called. “civilian population” trucks, dump trucks and other heavy vehicles, although it is obvious that they were used to transport weapons and ammunition for the militants.

    Even while in prison, even being defamed, Budanov retains the honor of a Russian officer and loyalty to the oath. They told him: Colonel, keep in mind that your early release from prison will cause a bad resonance in the leadership of the Chechen Republic, and if we deny you a pardon or amnesty, this will cause a bad resonance among the Russian officers and the public, so you better not make any requests at all serve. And Budanov withdraws his request for pardon, covering up the country’s political leadership to his detriment.

    In 2006-2007 An arbitrary court decision repeatedly denied the parole of Colonel Yu.D. Budanov, who was wrongfully convicted for actions he took in conditions of danger to life and in a combat situation. The court determined that the pretext for refusing release was the fact that “ The statement of the convicted person admitting guilt in the crimes committed and repenting of his deeds is of a formal nature and is not confirmed by anything. Despite the fact that the court did not make a decision to compensate the victims for the harm caused, the absence on the part of the convicted person of attempts in any form to compensate for the harm caused to the victims, to smooth out the consequences of the suffering suffered by the victims, indicates that the restoration of social justice in the case has not been achieved, and the fact that the correction of the convicted person has not been achieved“. This decision was made by the judge of the Dimitrovgrad City Court of the Ulyanovsk Region Gerasimov N.V.

    In court decisions against Russian officers, a hidden political motive is visible, connected with the relationship between the federal government and the authorities of the Chechen Republic, with attempts to pacify ethnobandits.

    At the beginning of 2009, Colonel Yu.D. Budanov was released on parole. As a provocation to the media, false information was spread that the colonel would have to go back to jail in the case of the kidnapping of three people. Information was disseminated by representatives of the investigative departmentSKP RF on Chechnya. The case was initiated back in 2000, and Budanov’s involvement in it arose just at the time of his release. The previously closed case was reopened for provocative purposes at the end of 2008 - after an appeal from the Chechen OmbudsmanNurdi Nukhazhieva, as well as statements from relatives of the victims. Nukhazhiev and relatives of the victims of the kidnappers suddenly began to claim that Yuri Budanov was involved in the crime. Witnesses confirmed the investigators' guesses during the identification procedure, carried out using a photograph of Budanov, who was immediately “remembered.”

    The media used the release of Colonel Budanov to once again repeat their dirty lies about the officer who fought for the Motherland and was sent to prison for it. Fabrications were again raised that Budanov was drunk when Kungaeva was detained, that he raped her and then killed her. Budanov never denied the fact of the murder, he always regretted it, and the investigation has already responded negatively to the slanderers’ fabrications. None of the colonel's subordinates, despite the pressure and threats, testified against their commander.

    As one of the leaders of gangs operating in Chechnya, Kadyrov could not calmly bear the fact of the release from prison of Colonel Yuri Budanov, who, on trumped-up grounds, spent 8.5 years behind barbed wire. Kadyrov slandered a Russian officer: "Budanov is a schizophrenic and a murderer." “Budanov is a recognized enemy of the Chechen people. He insulted our people. Every man, woman and child believes that as long as Budanov exists, the shame has not been removed from us. He insulted the honor of Russian officers. How can you protect it? What judge could release him? Behind him are dozens of human lives. I think the federal center will make the right decision - he will be put in prison for life. And this is not enough for him. But a life sentence will at least ease our suffering a little. We do not tolerate insults. If a decision is not made, the consequences will be bad. I will strive, write, knock on doors so that he gets what he deserves. And our army, our strong army of a strong state, must also throw off this shame.”

    Such statements are a direct insult to all Russian people. The fact that the federal government does not make personnel decisions and does not remove the bandit from power indicates the collusion of the highest leadership levels of this government with terrorist groups. In the “Budanov case” we have the fact of systematic Russophobia on the part of the authorities, the investigation, the agents of Chechen gangs in the government system, the courts, journalism, and the “human rights” environment. The systematic nature is explained by the personal position of Budanov, who in an interview with Komsomolskaya Pravda stated that before committing the crime he considered himself an officer of the Russian army. Not Russian, just Russian.

    Today we understand that the authorities betrayed everyone! But we have “Heroes of Russia”! About a year later, after the trial of Colonel Budanov, the Chairman of the Government of the Chechen Republic, Ramzan Kadyrov, was awarded the title “Hero of Russia” in 2004! Having gone over to the side of the federal government together with his father, a prominent supporter of Chechen independence, R. Kadyrov fought with Russian troops from 1996 to the end of 1999! And Colonel Budanov fought, as befits a military officer, on the orders of the military command of the Russian Federation, which in turn carried out the will of the politicians!

    In an address to his loved ones on the eve of the new year 2000, Colonel Yu.D. Budanov said:« Please take my word for it, we live normally. We ourselves already have this war, but we need to fight it, that’s our job» Simple words from a combat officer about his work that needs to be done and he did this war until the very last breath, until the very last minute. He fought, even after returning from the war, it did not leave him and the executioner’s bullet stopped the heart of the Russian hero, but did not stop our hearts, ignited by the shed blood of Russian soldiers and officers, abandoned to destruction by the traitors and enslavers of the Russian people and our Motherland - Russia.

    Colonel Yu.D. Budanov will forever remain in the hearts of the Russian people and his feat of resisting the forces of evil, his confession of the Orthodox faith before a pack of corrupt politicians, lawyers, military leaders, and judges will find its place in the glorious history of the Russian people and Russia.

    And today Colonel Budanov reminds (he said on the day of his release from prison): “Yes, it’s a shame, but I swore an oath to serve the people. I did and am doing this work. And if you understand that the people of Russia are in danger, that we are all surrounded - don't wait for an order, perhaps no one will give it. You know what to do..."

    Good news! The vile Chechen bandit and murderer Yusup Temirkhanov, convicted of murdering the Russian hero Colonel Budanov, died in prison.

    Yusup Temirkhanov, convicted of the murder of former Colonel Yuri Budanov, died in the Omsk colony, a lawyer named Roza Magomedova told RIA Novosti.

    "He died in the medical unit of the colony from cardiac arrest. He always had health problems, The defense tried to get him released due to illness, but was unsuccessful,” she said.

    Temirkhanov received 15 years in prison for the murder of Budanov in June 2011. An incredibly short sentence for premeditated murder, the Chechen killer was sure that he would not serve that either and would be released early on orders from above. But, there is God’s judgment and the murderer died where he belonged in prison!

    Stop guessing: he was killed by Basayev's friend and "hero of Putin's Russia" Kadyrov, with the tacit consent of the Kremlin...Russian people's hero Yuri Budanov was killed because he loved our Motherland - Russia!


    Chechen bandit and murderer Yusup Temirkhanov

    Let's remember how it was!

    On June 10, 2011, Yuri Budanov was killed with a vile shot in the back...a Russian soldier, a tank colonel, betrayed and sold by those who sent him to defend his Motherland. He was deprived of titles and awards, but they could not deprive us of the memory of him, just as they could not deprive him of the honor of a Russian officer. Yuri Dmitrievich Budanov was killed openly, in broad daylight, in a crowded place, on the eve of the day that modern Russian authorities is presented as “Russian Independence Day”.

    The Internet and the media with relish posted a photo of a military officer lying on the ground and reminded everyone that this was a former colonel of the Russian army, accused of murder and rape of a Chechen girl, demoted and deprived of military awards, keeping silent about the fact that the investigation into the rape article fell apart in court , and the girl is a sniper, responsible for the lives of many Russian soldiers. The words spoken in Norway by the father of the Chechen sniper strangled by Budanov immediately appeared in the press and were widely replicated: “A dog is a dog’s death”...
    Correspondents tried to photograph the soldier's face in order to place him on the pages of their liberal publications, to the delight of his enemies. The soldier did not give them such an opportunity, he was lying face down... The speaking and writing brethren immediately began to put forward versions of the murder... Revenge of the Chechens or the machinations of provocateurs...

    Stop guessing: he was killed because he loved Russia!

    This is how the life of one of the best Russian officers ended! He endured everything: the envy of his superiors, the betrayal of his subordinates, the deception of management, slander, trial, prison and threats. With the greatest humility he endured rejection, deprivation of merit, awards and general indifference, and feared only for the lives of his family and friends.
    He received bullets from an unknown killer as retribution for the fear he instilled in the Chechen bandits. He was killed when, as they say, it is customary to take revenge: in the Russian Federation they have already forgotten about his case, which became a show trial of the “crimes” of federal forces in the second Chechen military campaign. Only in Chechnya did many shudder with hatred at the mention of his name, and the leader of Chechnya, Ramzan Kadyrov, publicly stated that he would find an opportunity to “repay what he deserves” after learning about his parole.

    For the Chechens, Budanov is a symbol of a strong Russia, a symbol of a Russian soldier who inspires fear in his enemies.

    A man who saved hundreds of lives of his soldiers and officers in Chechnya and was ready to gnaw out the enemy’s throat for each of them was boldly and openly killed. A commander who experienced the death of his subordinates as a deep personal tragedy was killed. Are there such officers in our army now? After the murder of Budanov, all officials remained silent, without making a single statement.

    Putin was silent, Medvedev was silent, the United Russia party was silent, the newborn Popular Front took water in its mouth... They have nothing to say... Budanov’s crippled fate is the work of those people who invented the term “counter-terrorist operation” and ordered it to be carried out by military parts of the Russian army. They have nothing to say, because only thanks to people like Budanov, the Russian army was able to crush a gangster den in Chechnya in 2000 and provide the Russian authorities with a relatively peaceful decade of rule.
    Budanov’s martyrdom is only confirmation of his sacrificial life. He became the sacrifice that the cowardly Russian authorities agreed to make to their liberal god with the goal of the mythical pacification of Chechnya. No words are heard on the central channels in defense of the soldier who fell from bandit bullets, who defended Russia no matter what. In an era of general betrayal, the pursuit of profit, contempt for sacred things, he showed the image of a real officer, contrary to the orders of the incompetent leadership, coming to the rescue of the dying special forces, honoring his military duty, faithful to the oath.

    He's gone. What a pity that he is no more! He did not participate in any political actions, did not strive for power and did not lie to the people, as many false patriots do. He simply loved Russia and the Russian people and always liked to say that he was serving not in the Russian army, but in the Russian army. He was simply doing what he loved, which he had dreamed of since childhood: to be a soldier. And he did it very well. His 160th Tank Regiment was the best in General Shamanov’s strike force when Russia needed a victory over the rebellious Chechnya. And the Chechens called him “animal”: the tankers spoiled too much blood for the militants... The fact that he was one of the best officers is confirmed by the facts: in his regiment the losses were an order of magnitude lower than in other regiments, and Khattab promised 100 thousand for Budanov’s head dollars.

    Those who sent Colonel Budanov to Chechnya with arms in hand to defend the peace of Russian cities, brought him to trial and tried him not according to wartime laws, but according to peacetime laws to please PACE and the Chechen bandits...

    Yuri Budanov... How much dirt was poured on him in the lengthy opuses of our pseudo-human rights activists, who faithfully worked out their foreign currency, how much betrayal and slander in court! The fate of a man that became a bargaining chip: a Russian officer was presented by the Russian authorities as a public whipping boy... He had his own truth, and this truth is much closer to ordinary Russian people. It is close to the soldiers of his regiment: 1,500 soldiers and officers, who, under pressure, refused to testify against their commander, and who were ready for an uprising, did not want to hand him over to the tribunal... Budanov’s truth turned out to be clearer to the judges of the North Caucasus District Military Court, who released him from criminal liability.

    But his enemies had a different truth... Three Moscow lawyers repeated at the trial the accusations against Budanov that were heard in PACE and the OSCE regarding Russia, and stated that they would not allow the trial of the Russian officer to be transferred from political to criminal. Members of the European Parliament, who were not killed at Stalingrad, were constantly interested in the progress of the trial, and foreign media with pleasure “sucked up” the details of the “crime”.

    The Russian supreme power silently observed the progress of the show trial... Silently? Did you observe? His regiment, which came to the defense of its commander, was disbanded in four days... The acquittal was overturned, the composition of the court was changed... He was sentenced to 10 years. They were stripped of two Orders of Courage and demoted to the rank and file...

    Anyone would have broken down... But it was Budanov. An unbending man... He calmly accepted his lot and accomplished a new, spiritual feat, enduring all the suffering, not blaming anyone for anything... Only sometimes, when he was about to be accused of new “crimes,” did he declare that he would bring a counterclaim for hundreds of killed, tortured, Russian soldiers and officers executed, strangled, buried, burned in Chechnya...

    Russian colonel Yuri Dmitrievich Budanov with his whole life confirmed the truth of the old Russian proverb: “And there is only one warrior in the field - if he is cut in Russian”! Having gone through the difficult life path of a Russian officer through the crucible of reforms and the collapse of the army, Budanov became a person personifying the best cadres of the Russian army during the sad Yeltsin-Putin reforms. Having survived the retreat from Eastern Europe and the collapse of the USSR, he refused to swear allegiance to Belarus, where he ended up, and to go live in Ukraine with his parents. He wanted to serve Russia. And he served her at the risk of his life, living at the same time in a wretched barracks “Khrushchev” in Transbaikalia with his wife and two children...

    Having served almost the entire sentence assigned to him, he was released from prison on parole. But his war was not over. He was threatened and he understood that sooner or later they would get him... He turned to Russian law enforcement agencies for protection, but he was denied protection... He was killed on Friday, the last working day on the eve of the long weekend, on the eve of the day of Yeltsin's Russia, which he served and who openly betrayed him...

    It’s hard on my soul... Because people like Budanov suffer and die tragically in Russia... But people like Abramovich, Chubais, Kadyrov and a whole legion of similar enemies of Russia live well... It’s hard because there’s no end in sight this timelessness...

    He was deprived of titles and awards, but they could not deprive us of the memory of him, just as they could not deprive him of the honor of a Russian officer.

    Sleep well, great Russian soldier!

    It was hot July 2010... My friends and I met on Poklonnaya Hill near the Monument to the Internationalist Warrior. The meeting of combatants was organized by young guys - veterans and disabled people of the wars in South Ossetia and Chechnya. We contacted each other online and agreed to meet. There weren't many of us gathered - about a hundred people, but from all over Russia. There were also Afghans - guys our age, and very young boys... Two front-line priests were preparing to serve a memorial service for the dead at the Monument. The weather was beautiful and everyone was in a great mood. Many knew each other, but had not seen each other for a long time; they hugged, laughed, and talked. There were wives and children here. I was told that Yuri Budanov might come to the meeting. I really wanted to meet him. He came up somehow unexpectedly and immediately to our group. I recognized him. "Budanov Yuri Dmitrievich!" - he said simply and with dignity and extended his hand. So he said to each of us, shaking hands. And then he took off his dark glasses and smiled broadly. We made eye contact and I saw his eyes. Blue, amazingly beautiful eyes that I will never forget. It seemed to me that I looked into those eyes for so long that in that short moment I was able to look into his soul, as bright and pure as those eyes, incapable of lying or betraying. Never and not for anything in the world. So Yura Budanov entered my heart and my life and remained there, deep in my heart and soul forever...

    FATHER...

    I was in the hospital getting ready for surgery. The hospital is specialized, nuclear industry workers, nuclear weapons testers and liquidators of various accidents at nuclear power plants underwent surgery here. The men are mostly middle-aged, well-educated and experienced in life, with high intelligence and a sense of humor. Fate brought them together in one place and with one misfortune. There was no time to be despondent - everyone was fighting for life. Some had a chemotherapy session, some went under the surgeon’s knife, some were recovering from surgery. It’s strange, but in this establishment there was positivity and good spirits in the atmosphere, although most of the diagnoses sounded like a death sentence - cancer. These were amazing men! There were so many long intimate conversations at night, it was impossible to sleep, so fascinating were these stories about youth, life and work - the very essence of which is Feat. In the morning, Yura Khabarov came to see me - a surgeon from God, with golden hands and a heart, who, not for the first time, saved the life of me and a huge number of other people. “Dmitry Ivanovich Budanov, the father of Colonel Budanov, came to our surgery. I will operate on him. Do you want to go see him?” Dmitry Ivanovich turned out to be a tall, gray-haired man with intelligent and lively eyes. I told him about my attitude towards his son Yuri, and we easily became friends. It was clear how serious his illness was, but he laughed, joked and behaved well. Only when it came to Yuri did he become gloomy and dark with pain for his son, but everyone, literally everyone around him so unconditionally told him that his son Yuri was a real Hero, to which Dmitry Ivanovich smiled quietly, feeling enormous moral support, and it was clear - it’s better than not saying anything about Yura. “Eh, I should wait for Yurka, drink a hundred grams with him and die in peace!” “You’ll wait, Dmitry Ivanovich! You have no other choice. Yura is waiting too,” we told him. Then he waited for another two long years, fading away, but his voice on the phone was cheerful even through the pain. Yura left prison and hugged his father in his home. “He was a man of amazing will, Dad...” Yura told me later. “He drank exactly one hundred grams and died a week later.” How much pain and suffering did the father endure during the years of his son’s captivity? And the mother? Dmitry Ivanovich set himself the task of waiting for his son from prison. And he , like a real military man, he completed this task. He did not want to go on a date and see his son behind bars. There was something aristocratic about him, despite the simplicity and military directness of the tanker. Blessed Memory to him!



    WAR…

    Guard Colonel Yuri Budanov participated in two Chechen companies. No, he participated - this is not about him, Yura fought in Chechnya. He fought great, for real. When a soldier or officer is REAL, this is especially evident in war... As well as vice versa. Yura Budanov was real. A man, a soldier, a commander, a friend. A real warrior, loved by his own and feared by strangers. Yes, his enemies feared and hated him, but they respected him. It was a very rare combination of exactly opposite feelings, but it was real! What is war? War is an extreme degree of social evil in which all its participants suffer, all without exception. How did the Chechen war begin and was it fair? There is no definite answer to this question, although everyone has their own, but I advise you to find and read the Report of the Parliamentary Commission's investigation into the events in Chechnya from 1991 to 1994, preceding the start of the first Chechen War. This commission was led by an honest and respected person, a deservedly beloved director and State Duma deputy, Stanislav Govorukhin. He later published this Report in the form of a small book. The blood runs cold from the atrocities committed by Chechen bandits in Grozny, Bamut, Shali, Urus-Martan, Tolstoy-Yurt and other settlements of Chechnya... They killed and raped, took away cars and property, drove Russians and Armenians out of their homes and took them into slavery , Jews - there was no mercy for either the elderly or children. The Chechens, normal people who tried to stand up for their neighbors with whom they lived next to for many years, also suffered. They were also killed and their property was taken away. But, of course, the Russians suffered the most... The war in Chechnya began in 1991 from the moment these terrible crimes began, for which many criminals never received any punishment. Now they prefer to remain silent about it, this is understandable and explainable, but the truth does not cease to be true, even if someone does not recognize it. The First Chechen War was a direct consequence of atrocities that could not help but be stopped, both from a legal and human point of view, but only through military operations of the army in Chechnya and the destruction of armed gangs that were growing like a cancer inside Russia... Is it possible was there an agreement? Don't know. But would you like to negotiate anything with murderers of people and rapists of children? I think there would be no sense in these conversations and agreements. That's what happened, exactly what happened. Then there was the New Year's assault on Grozny, to please the idiotic ambitions of stupid armchair false generals. Our boys and commanders fought heroically, dying in brigades in the crucible of the avenues of Grozny burning from the bombing. Then there were stubborn bloody battles for the cities and villages of Chechnya. There was heroism and cowardice, high deeds and betrayal, victories and defeats. Then there was a real war - where the grief and pain of each individual person merges in small tears into a cruel mountain river of tears, sweeping away in its path everything good and good that remained in a past, peaceful life. It was in this fierce real war (just and unjust at the same time, like any civil war on the territory of any state) that the real Colonel Yuri Budanov fought. He commanded a tank regiment, personally went into reconnaissance and hand-to-hand combat, cherished the life of each of his soldiers and officers like the apple of his eye, was a father-commander and a brilliant commander, awarded by his Motherland with two Orders of Courage - the highest military awards after the Star of the Hero of Russia, to which he There was very little left. For the feat of saving almost two hundred GRU special forces, when he, contrary to the orders of the command, jumped into a tank and, together with his deputy, recaptured an entire special forces company from the militants from an ambush in the mountains, giving the guys salvation from certain death, Colonel Budanov, without a doubt, would deservedly receive Gold Star of the Hero of Russia.

    And although at the moment when Yura made the decision and accomplished this feat, he least of all thought about the Star of the Hero and about his life, his life would certainly have turned out differently if that terrible tragedy had not happened in the mountain village of Tangi-chu Urus-Martan region of Chechnya in the spring of 2000...



    TRAGEDY…

    This tragedy is known to everyone. Guard Colonel Yuri Budanov lost several of his soldiers and officers killed just shortly before the end of the Chechen mission and the return of the 160th Guards Tank Regiment home. Young guys died from a sniper’s bullet in the area of ​​the mountain village of Tangi. Yura fought so skillfully that he very rarely lost his fighters.

    He deeply, precisely as a personal tragedy, experienced the loss of each of his people. Having received information about a sniper point in the village of Tangi, Yuri Budanov brought the alleged sniper, the girl Elza Kungaeva, to the regiment for interrogation. During the interrogation, Elsa died as a result of strangulation. There is no doubt that this is a deep tragedy and a terrible coincidence of circumstances. Tragedy for the Kungaev family. A tragedy for the Budanov family. A tragedy for relations between the Russian and Chechen people. A tragedy for all people who do not want hatred and war, but want peace and harmony. For everyone, except for some scum who sow evil and hatred, and also make personal PR and political capital from this human tragedy. “If I had known what would happen there that evening, I would have left that same day, sailed away, walked across the mountains from there...” Yura later told us bitterly. But it was already too late. Politics intervened in this matter. And there was a trial, a verdict and a many-year prison sentence. Streams of lies, slander and dirt in newspapers and on television began to pour out in tons on Yura Budanov. Dozens of examinations, even with all their bias, could not prove the fact of rape, although with the capabilities of modern forensic science it is impossible to hide this fact if it actually happened. Hundreds of corrupt journalists and “human rights activists” continued to stubbornly squeal about this violence, as if they were not protected by Yuri Budanov from terrorists, bandits and murderers who, with explosions, grief and pain, came to our homes in Moscow, Beslan, Stavropol, Makhachkala and in many other cities of Russia. Yura Budanov drank his cup to the bottom, although it is difficult to imagine what kind of human strength and will one must have in order to survive all this and not break. Two brutal wars, blood and death on both sides, many years of captivity in prison, severe psychological pressure and enormous mental breakdown. What kind of person can withstand such a test? Too much for one person. But he returned and won again. His father, mother, wife and children were waiting for him at home. Yura now just wanted to live, because so many trials had already befallen him. His enemies could not defeat him. And then they decided to kill him insidiously and demonstrably...



    MEMORY…

    On June 10, 2010, in the center of Moscow, at noon, in the courtyard near the playground, where children were walking carefree, a terrorist killer shot Yura Budanov six times in the back and head. The vile killer was afraid to meet Colonel Yuri Budanov face to face. Warriors don't shoot in the back. Jackals and terrorists shoot in the back, just as they shot in the backs of men, women and children at the Beslan school, the Budenovskaya hospital and the Dubrovka Theater Center in Moscow. The terrorists managed to kill Guard Colonel Yuri Budanov, but they failed to defeat him and will never defeat him. Like George the Victorious, the warrior Yuri (baptized Georgy) Budanov, defeated the forces of evil and ascended to heaven to, together with the Holy Warriors in the Kingdom of Heaven, protect his Russia, which he loved selflessly, fought for it with enemies and died in battle for it . “Sleep well, Hero”, “Eternal Memory to the Russian Colonel”, “Yuri Budanov - Hero of Russia!” - huge posters with these words appeared at football stadiums in the hands of fans of the Spartak and CSKA clubs, and on the streets of Russian cities immediately after the murder of Yuri Budanov. Photos of posters with these sincere words of gratitude to Yuri Budanov and recognition of his services to the Fatherland and people are on the Internet. This is what the people say, and you cannot deceive the people, the people are always right. It is no coincidence that in Russia they say: “The voice of the people is the voice of God!” The people themselves returned to Yuri Budanov the Colonel's shoulder straps, military awards - two Orders of Courage and awarded the title of Hero of Russia... People's Hero is, perhaps, the most important and worthy title of Colonel Yuri Budanov.

    Sleep well, Hero! Your Russia will never forget you. Eternal Memory to the warrior Georgy Budanov!!!

    Vadim Savateev - Chairman of the Board of the Foundation for Assistance to Combat Veterans "FAITH AND VALOR", Head of the working group of the Council for Disabled People under the President of the Russian Federation

    “He died in the medical unit of the colony from cardiac arrest. He has always had health problems, the defense tried to get him released due to illness, but was unsuccessful,” Magomedova said.

    In May 2013, by a verdict of the Moscow City Court, Yusup Temerkhanov was convicted of... Part 1 Art. 105 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation and Part 1 of Art. 222 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation to 15 years in prison for the murder of Yuri Budanov, as well as for storing and carrying firearms.

    In September 2014 lawyer Murad Musaev reported that Yusup Temerkhanov was taken to the colony hospital in serious condition. “Doctors first assumed a stroke or a brain tumor, then a malignant tumor in one of the abdominal organs, then tuberculosis. We consistently excluded all these diseases using various CT and MRI scans,” the lawyer argued. The defense lawyer insisted on transferring the convict from the prison to a regular hospital.

    Budanov case

    The commander of the 160th Guards Tank Regiment, Yuri Budanov, was arrested on March 27, 2000, on charges of kidnapping, rape and murder of an eighteen-year-old Elsa Kungaeva.

    Colonel Budanov, who went through the First Chechen Campaign and had several wounds, was awarded the Order of Courage in January 2000.

    According to the preliminary investigation materials, at about 1 am on March 27, Budanov arrived in the village of Tangi in an infantry fighting vehicle. Together with the military personnel Grigoriev And Lee Young Show he entered the Kungaevs’ house, where Elsa Kungaeva was with four minor brothers and sisters. By order of Budanov, Grigoriev and Lee Yong Shou wrapped Kungaeva in a blanket and placed her in an infantry fighting vehicle. Then Kungaeva was taken to the territory of military unit 13206 to the premises where Budanov lived.

    The colonel himself explained that in the area where the regiment was located, female snipers operated from the militants. Budanov interrogated Kungaeva, although, according to his testimony, the suspects included not her, but her relative. During the interrogation, the officer strangled Kungaeva and then ordered her body to be buried. A few hours later Budanov came to acting commander of the "West" group, Major General Valery Gerasimov and wrote a confession.

    The friend of Elsa Kungaeva, for whose kidnapping and murder Yuri Budanov was convicted, holds a photograph of the murdered woman. Photo: RIA Novosti / Said Gutsiev

    “If he had not been convicted, there could have been big troubles”

    Throughout the investigation and trial of Budanov, the question of his mental state remained open. On December 31, 2002, the North Caucasus District Military Court declared Budanov insane and freed him from criminal liability. On February 28, 2003, the Military Collegium of the Supreme Court of the Russian Federation overturned the decision, sending the case for a new trial.

    Forensic psychiatrist of the highest qualification category, Doctor of Medical Sciences Fedor Kondratyev, who previously participated in the examination Andrei Chikatilo and other serial killers, in an interview with Neskuchny Sad magazine he stated: “I had many hours of conversations with him and am still absolutely convinced that he was in a state of temporary mental disorder at the time of the crime. This state was provoked by a Chechen woman who told him that she would wrap his daughter’s intestines around a machine gun and grabbed the weapon. And it was his daughter’s birthday. But the court ordered a second examination when she repeated my conclusion - a third. And the third examination made the same conclusion. Then an examination was ordered in Chechnya. There, psychiatrists decided that he could be held accountable for his actions, and he was convicted. Of course, if he had not been convicted, there could have been big troubles, new terrorist attacks, attacks on psychiatrists, but I repeat: I am sure that we made the right conclusion.”

    Pardon and threats

    On July 25, 2003, Budanov was found guilty under three articles of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation: Art. 286, part 3 (“Excess of official powers”), art. 126, part 3 (“Kidnapping”) and Art. 105, part 2 (“Intentional murder with aggravating circumstances”). By partial addition of sentences, the court sentenced Budanov to 10 years in prison. In accordance with Article 48 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation, Yuri Budanov was deprived of a state award - the Order of Courage - and the military rank of “Colonel”.

    Yuri Budanov, accused of murdering Chechen Elza Kungaeva, at his trial in the North Caucasus District Military Court in the city of Rostov-on-Don. Photo: RIA Novosti / Sergey Venyavsky

    Even after Budanov ended up in prison, passions continued to simmer. For example, petitions for pardon submitted by convicts caused violent protests among human rights activists and the Chechen public.

    Ramzan Kadyrov, who held the post of Deputy Prime Minister of the Chechen government in 2004, stated at a meeting of commanders of security forces: “Even in war, murder and violence against civilians is a crime. We do not allow the possibility of releasing the criminal. If Budanov’s pardon occurs, we will find an opportunity to give him what he deserves.”

    And yet, at the end of 2008, Budanov’s next petition for pardon was granted. In January 2009, he was released.

    Execution in the center of Moscow

    Despite the fact that Budanov was a popular figure in nationalist circles, he was not involved in political activities. With the help of army friends, he got a job as the head of the passenger car fleet of the State Unitary Enterprise "EVAZhD" (for the operation of high-rise buildings).

    Yuri Budanov was killed demonstratively, in broad daylight, not far from the center of Moscow. On June 10, 2011, he arrived at the notary’s office located in house No. 38/16 on Komsomolsky Prospekt to formalize consent for his minor daughter to travel abroad.

    The killer fired six bullets at Budanov, four of which hit the head. He had no chance to survive. The killer and his accomplice fled the scene in a car.

    For the authorities, Budanov’s murder became no less a problem than his own murder of Elza Kungaeva. If in Chechnya many considered the reprisal against Budanov a triumph of justice, then in other regions there were many who wanted to take revenge again, this time for the murdered colonel. This could only be prevented by promptly solving a new crime.

    He laughed while listening to the verdict

    On August 30, 2011, a certain Magomed Suleymanov was detained, who in fact turned out to be a native of Chechnya, Yusup Temerkhanov. The suspect refused to cooperate with the investigation. According to law enforcement agencies, Temerkhanov, whose father died during the counter-terrorism operation, decided to take revenge on Budanov for this. Temerkhanov did not know the specific killers of his father, and decided to deal with the one whom “all of Chechnya hated.”

    On July 6, 2012, the Main Investigation Department of the Investigative Committee for Moscow brought final charges against Temerkhanov under clause “l”, part 2 of article 105 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation. According to this document, the accused killed a former Russian army colonel “for reasons of political, ideological, racial, national or religious hatred or enmity, or for reasons of hatred or enmity against any social group.” In addition, he was charged with illegal arms trafficking (Article 222 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation). On April 29, 2013, a jury of the Moscow City Court found Temerkhanov guilty of the murder of Budanov. As already mentioned, on May 7, 2013, Yusup Temerkhanov was sentenced to 15 years in prison. The condemned man greeted the verdict with laughter.

    Temerkhanov's death puts an end to this whole story. At least I would like to hope so.