Confusion at the very top - you will not understand who runs the country ... inter-clan squabbles ... betrayal of the boyars ... theft and arbitrariness ... robbery in the streets ... invasion from the West.Yuri Ekishev became a member of the NOMP headquarters and Kvachkov's chief assistant, who in 2007 was sentenced to two years in prison for inciting ethnic hatred.
According to investigators, on the morning of August 2, 2011 (on the Paratroopers' Day), several armed combat detachments with a backbone of former special forces were supposed to break into the buildings of the Yekaterinburg branches of GUVD, FSB, MChS and kill their leaders.
Groups of saboteurs were supposed to blow up the power substations of Yekaterinburg in order to de-energize the city and spread panic among the population.
Further, the rebels allegedly planned to mobilize and arm the entire male population of Yekaterinburg and hold the defense with such forces until they receive help from neighboring regions.
The leader of the fighting cell is called entrepreneur Alexander Ermakov, who, according to the investigation, not only developed a plan for the insurrection, code-named "Dawn", but also recruited supporters among retired military and security officials dissatisfied with the reforms in the country.
Four more - 64-year-old colonel-"afghan" Leonid Khabarov, former criminal investigator Vladislav Ladeyshchikov, entrepreneur Sergei Katnikov, doctor of sciences, inventor Viktor Kralin were detained on July 19 in Ermakov's office.
[7][8] On February 8, 2013, the Moscow City Court sentenced Vladimir Kvachkov to 13 years in a strict regime colony for preparing an armed mutiny.
One of the main pieces of evidence in the case was the recording of a conversation between several supporters of Kvachkov, when they were developing a plan for a sortie into Kovrov, intelligence, distribution of funds and human resources.
In particular, he had to find ways for the militants to approach and withdraw to the building of the Yekaterinburg synagogue, track the schedule and routes of movement of the Sverdlovsk rabbi Zelig Ashkenazi for his subsequent liquidation.
222, part 2 (illegal acquisition, transfer, sale and storage of ammunition and explosive devices) of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation.