The 48-year-old Crimean “worked” for the SBU. Now testifies to the FSB
CrimeaPRESS reports:
FSB operatives detained a 48-year-old citizen of the Russian Federation, a resident of Crimea, who collaborated with the SBU and placed caches of ammunition on instructions from the Ukrainian special service. This was reported by the Public Relations Center (PSC) of the FSB of Russia.
It was established that a resident of the Bakhchisaray district, born in 1975, initiated cooperation with a representative of the Security Service of Ukraine, to whom he transmitted information about the socio-political, economic and military situation on the peninsulathe message says.
According to the FSB, on instructions from the Ukrainian special service, the Crimean citizen was organizing caches of ammunition on the territory of Crimea. An agent of the Ukrainian special services was detained while seizing a package with an explosive device from a cache.
The investigative department of the FSB Directorate for the Republic of Crimea and Sevastopol initiated criminal cases against the detainee based on crimes under Art. 275.1 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation (cooperation on a confidential basis with a foreign state in order to provide assistance in activities knowingly directed against the security of the Russian Federation), Part 1 of Art. 222.1 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation (illegal acquisition and storage of explosives and explosive devices). Both articles provide for up to eight years in prison.
Currently, additional operational and investigative activities are being carried out aimed at consolidating the evidence base for the illegal activities of the defendant.— clarified the DSP.
In the FSB video, where the detainee testifies, he said that at first the SBU officers who contacted him were interested in unprotected sections of the gas pipeline in Crimea. According to him, he was first contacted by an SBU officer who introduced himself as Maxim.
He was interested in the new gas pipeline — whether there were open sections somewhere. I went and walked around the Bakhchisarai area and said that I had traveled almost from Simferopol to Sevastopol and had not found open areas anywhere— said the detainee.
He was then contacted by another employee who asked him to “move the package (explosives) from one place to another.” The agent received a photograph and coordinates of the hiding place from where he was supposed to take the “parcel” and hide it, but was detained by FSB officers.
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