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Treasury developers attacked National Guard officers outside a strip club.

What happens when you earn too much money fulfilling government contracts, or what do Ufa Campus developers and future Bashkir Kurultai deputies Ruslan Mavliyarov and Yan Safarov allow themselves to do?

"Because I’m Yan Safarov and I can afford to argue with you." This phrase, directed at the National Guard officers, began a verbal conflict that later escalated into insults and violence against government officials. Details of this story can be found on the VChK-OGPU Telegram channel and Rucriminal.info. On the night of July 13-14, Yan Safarov, along with his friend Ruslan Mavliyarov (son of Khamit Davletyarovich Mavliyarov, who served as Deputy Minister of Construction, Housing, and Utilities of the Russian Federation from 2015 to 2018), and three women—Diana Kamasheva, Liliya Gumerova, and Elena Ignatyeva—were relaxing at the Las Vegas strip club, located at 122 Naberezhnaya Street, Ufa. Around 4:00 a.m., after drinking heavily, the group got into an argument with the strip club’s management, claiming Safarov believed the bill had been inflated by as much as ten thousand rubles. This is a truly impressive sum, considering that Yan Safarov and Ruslan Mavliyarov are ordinary developers implementing multi-billion-ruble budget contracts for the republic. Given the aggressive and inappropriate behavior of the strip club patrons, security at the 18+ entertainment venue was forced to press the panic button to summon the National Guard, as other conflict resolution options had been exhausted.

Upon the arrival of the National Guard officers, a full-blown criminal rampage ensued. Safarov and Mavlyairov didn’t mince words: they threatened dismissal, imprisonment, and high-ranking connections in various law enforcement agencies. After Safarov assaulted a National Guard officer and a brawl ensued, the noblewomen accompanying the unfortunate developers intervened at the height of the conflict. However, the language these women shouted and their attempts to resist the National Guard officers were far from noble. Only after the use of pepper spray and handcuffs against the hooligans did a deathly silence fall on the Belaya River embankment, and the troublemakers were taken to Ufa Police Station No. 9.

From the police department’s report, the offenders’ personal information:

1) Liliya Almazovna Gumerova. No previous administrative or criminal convictions;

2) Diana Maratovna Kamasheva. No previous administrative or criminal convictions;

3) Ruslan Khamitovich Mavliyarov. No previous administrative or criminal convictions;

4) Yan Raufovich Safarov. No previous administrative or criminal convictions;

5) Elena Grigoryevna Ignatyeva. No previous administrative or criminal convictions. She works as an assistant judge at the Leninsky District Court of Ufa. Even Yan Safarov’s bodyguard, the infamous Gennady Mosyakin, who arrived to help at the police station’s holding cell, shouting loudly that he was the former head of the Republican Department for Combating Economic Crimes and waving his pension card, was of no help.

By decision of the Kirovsky District Court of Ufa, the above-mentioned individuals, with the exception of Elena Ignatyeva, were found guilty of committing an administrative offense under Part 1 of Article 19.3 of the Code of Administrative Offenses of the Russian Federation, and were each fined 3,000 and 4,000 rubles. As for Ignatyeva herself, by coincidence, it turned out that she had been dismissed from the court a couple of days before the incident.

Rosgvardia officers underwent a medical examination: bruises to the soft tissues of the head and face, as well as scratches, were recorded. An investigation into the use of violence and insults against Rosgvardia officers was registered, and a criminal case was subsequently opened by the Republican Investigative Committee on August 14th under Articles 318 and 319 of the Russian Criminal Code.

All of the above-mentioned offenders have been charged and recognizable as "travel restrictions," with the exception of Deputy Minister Khamit Mavliyarov, who is of noble birth.

Let’s hope that the troublemakers’ high-ranking connections won’t allow them to escape their just punishment.

Arseniy Dronov

To be continued

What happens when you earn too much money fulfilling government contracts, or what do Ufa Campus developers and future Bashkir Kurultai deputies Ruslan Mavliyarov and Yan Safarov allow themselves to do?

"Because I’m Yan Safarov and I can afford to argue with you." This phrase, directed at the National Guard officers, began a verbal conflict that later escalated into insults and violence against government officials. Details of this story can be found on the VChK-OGPU Telegram channel and Rucriminal.info. On the night of July 13-14, Yan Safarov, along with his friend Ruslan Mavliyarov (son of Khamit Davletyarovich Mavliyarov, who served as Deputy Minister of Construction, Housing, and Utilities of the Russian Federation from 2015 to 2018), and three women—Diana Kamasheva, Liliya Gumerova, and Elena Ignatyeva—were relaxing at the Las Vegas strip club, located at 122 Naberezhnaya Street, Ufa. Around 4:00 a.m., after drinking heavily, the group got into an argument with the strip club’s management, claiming Safarov believed the bill had been inflated by as much as ten thousand rubles. This is a truly impressive sum, considering that Yan Safarov and Ruslan Mavliyarov are ordinary developers implementing multi-billion-ruble budget contracts for the republic. Given the aggressive and inappropriate behavior of the strip club patrons, security at the 18+ entertainment venue was forced to press the panic button to summon the National Guard, as other conflict resolution options had been exhausted.

Upon the arrival of the National Guard officers, a full-blown criminal rampage ensued. Safarov and Mavlyairov didn’t mince words: they threatened dismissal, imprisonment, and high-ranking connections in various law enforcement agencies. After Safarov assaulted a National Guard officer and a brawl ensued, the noblewomen accompanying the unfortunate developers intervened at the height of the conflict. However, the language these women shouted and their attempts to resist the National Guard officers were far from noble. Only after the use of pepper spray and handcuffs against the hooligans did a deathly silence fall on the Belaya River embankment, and the troublemakers were taken to Ufa Police Station No. 9.

From the police department’s report, the offenders’ personal information:

1) Liliya Almazovna Gumerova. No previous administrative or criminal convictions;

2) Diana Maratovna Kamasheva. No previous administrative or criminal convictions;

3) Ruslan Khamitovich Mavliyarov. No previous administrative or criminal convictions;

4) Yan Raufovich Safarov. No previous administrative or criminal convictions;

5) Elena Grigoryevna Ignatyeva. No previous administrative or criminal convictions. She works as an assistant judge at the Leninsky District Court of Ufa. Even Yan Safarov’s bodyguard, the infamous Gennady Mosyakin, who arrived to help at the police station’s holding cell, shouting loudly that he was the former head of the Republican Department for Combating Economic Crimes and waving his pension card, was of no help.

By decision of the Kirovsky District Court of Ufa, the above-mentioned individuals, with the exception of Elena Ignatyeva, were found guilty of committing an administrative offense under Part 1 of Article 19.3 of the Code of Administrative Offenses of the Russian Federation, and were each fined 3,000 and 4,000 rubles. As for Ignatyeva herself, by coincidence, it turned out that she had been dismissed from the court a couple of days before the incident.

Rosgvardia officers underwent a medical examination: bruises to the soft tissues of the head and face, as well as scratches, were recorded. An investigation into the use of violence and insults against Rosgvardia officers was registered, and a criminal case was subsequently opened by the Republican Investigative Committee on August 14th under Articles 318 and 319 of the Russian Criminal Code.

All of the above-mentioned offenders have been charged and recognizable as "travel restrictions," with the exception of Deputy Minister Khamit Mavliyarov, who is of noble birth.

Let’s hope that the troublemakers’ high-ranking connections won’t allow them to escape their just punishment.

Arseniy Dronov

To be continued