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Investigative Bureau chief Oleksiy Sukhachov traveled to Khmelnytskiy, a town 350 kilometers southwest of Kyiv, and approved the destruction of some of the material there, according to an internal memo.
Investigative Bureau chief Oleksiy Sukhachov traveled to Khmelnytskiy, a town 350 kilometers southwest of Kyiv, and approved the destruction of some of the material there, according to an internal memo.

Ukraine’s State Investigative Bureau destroyed secret documents pertaining to major criminal cases, including against leading political figures, hours before and after Russia’s invasion in February, three law enforcement sources told Current Time.

It is unclear whether the documents were destroyed to prevent them from falling into the hands of Russian forces or to hinder prosecution of the cases.

The material destroyed involved investigations into former President Petro Poroshenko; Viktor Medvedchuk, a deputy who is a close friend of Russian President Vladimir Putin; as well as Oleksandr Yakimenko, the former head of Ukraine’s Security Service (SBU) who ordered the shooting of protesters in Kyiv in 2014.

The State Investigative Bureau, which probes non-corruption crimes committed by top officials and is similar to the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI), said it could not immediately comment on the allegations and requested 20 working days to respond.

However, the Prosecutor-General's Office on July 8 confirmed in a statement to Current Time that "some material containing secret information from the criminal cases in question...was destroyed by the Department of Information Security of the State Investigative Bureau." The office added that prosecutors working on the cases "were not consulted about the destruction of the material."

The Prosecutor-General's Office added that prosecutors are currently attempting to reconstruct the destroyed information using archived case files.

According to an internal law enforcement memo received by Current Time from one of the law enforcement sources, documents pertaining to 140 criminal cases were withdrawn from the State Investigative Bureau’s headquarters in Kyiv at 1:30 a.m. on February 24, just two and a half hours before Russia launched its invasion.

The material that was destroyed involved investigations into former President Petro Poroshenko and others.
The material that was destroyed involved investigations into former President Petro Poroshenko and others.

Some of the documents were destroyed in Kyiv while the rest were taken to Khmelnytskiy, a town 350 kilometers southwest of the capital.

Investigative Bureau chief Oleksiy Sukhachov traveled to Khmelnytskiy later that morning and approved the destruction of the rest of the material, which took place over the course of two days, according to the internal memo.

Among the material destroyed were 500 pieces of covert evidence, such as secretive audio and video recordings.

Former Ukrainian prosecutor Serhiy Horbatyuk: “If they were destroyed, it would not only be illegal, there would be criminal liability for noncompliance or destruction of secret material."
Former Ukrainian prosecutor Serhiy Horbatyuk: “If they were destroyed, it would not only be illegal, there would be criminal liability for noncompliance or destruction of secret material."

Serhiy Horbatyuk, a former prosecutor, questioned why material was destroyed in Khmelnytskiy if the city was not in danger of being sacked by Russian forces.

He said if there was a threat to the city, Investigative Bureau officials should have safely transported the documents further west.

“If they were destroyed, it would not only be illegal, there would be criminal liability for noncompliance or destruction of secret material,” he said.

Vitaliy Tytych, a Ukrainian lawyer, told Current Time there should be an investigation to determine what happened and why. Current Time is the Russian-language channel run by RFE/RL in cooperation with VOA.

The material destroyed also included an investigation into former President Viktor Yanukovych’s controversial 2010 deal with former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, as well as a probe into the repeated transfer of military equipment, including fighter jets and helicopters, to Russia between 1992 and 2014 that undermined Ukraine’s armed forces, the sources said.

The material destroyed included an investigation into a controversial 2010 deal between former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych (right) and former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev.
The material destroyed included an investigation into a controversial 2010 deal between former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych (right) and former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev.

Yanukovych and Medvedev agreed that Russia would sell Ukraine natural gas below market prices in exchange for Ukraine agreeing to extend Russia’s lease of the Black Sea naval port in Crimea until 2042.

The deal sparked outrage among Western-leaning politicians in Ukraine. Russia used its naval sources in Crimea to seize and annex the peninsula in 2014 from Ukraine.

The internal memo stated that the destruction of the documents made it “doubtful” that the investigations could be continued and the cases eventually brought to court.

Horbatyuk said the destruction of the material would “significantly hinder” the prosecution of the cases but not bring it to a close.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy appointed Sukhachov as head of the State Investigative Bureau on December 31 following a selection process that some activists said was rigged.

He had been serving as acting chief since September 2020.

Sukhachov worked at the SBU from 2000 to 2017 and then at the Prosecutor-General's Office from 2017 to 2019.

He was fired from the latter after he failed to pass a test of legal knowledge as part of a vetting procedure.

Sukhachov is believed to be a protege of Oleh Tatarov, who was the deputy head of the main investigation department of the Interior Ministry under Yanukovych.

Mostafa Tajzadeh has been accused of "a conspiracy to act against the country's security," the Mehr news agency said late on July 8. (file photo)
Mostafa Tajzadeh has been accused of "a conspiracy to act against the country's security," the Mehr news agency said late on July 8. (file photo)

Iranian state media has announced the arrest of Mostafa Tajzadeh, the deputy interior minister in former President Mohammad Khatami's government and one of the most prominent reformist figures in the Islamic republic.

Tajzadeh has been accused of "a conspiracy to act against the country's security," the Mehr news agency said late on July 8.

Tajzadeh also was charged with "publishing falsehoods to disturb the public mind,” adding that this is the reason authorities issued a warrant for his arrest.

The report gave no further details.

Neither the arresting agency nor the location where he is being held was disclosed.

Tajzadeh was arrested and sentenced to six years in prison following the disputed reelection of President Mahmud Ahmadinejad in 2009. The sentence was later increased by one year.

Tajzadeh is an outspoken critic of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. While serving his previous sentence he published open letters addressed to Khamenei from inside the prison.

The reformist activist also registered to run in a subsequent presidential election but was disqualified in preelection vetting by the Guardians Council.

The arrest of Tajzadeh coincided with the arrest of Mohammad Rasoulov and Mostafa al-Ahmed, two Iranian cinematographers and signatories of an anti-violence protest statement.

More than 100 Iranian cinematographers backed the statement, demanding that soldiers, who they wrote "have turned into the people's oppressors," lay down their weapons and "return to the arms of the nation."

Iranian state media has said the two filmmakers have been accused of "association with counterrevolution" and "inflammation and disrupting the psychological security of society" since the collapse in May of a residential tower in the southwestern city of Abadan, killing dozens of people.

Protests that took place after the collapse pointed the finger at government negligence and endemic corruption. As of mid-June, 13 people had been reported to have been arrested for construction violations.

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"Watchdog" is a blog with a singular mission -- to monitor the latest developments concerning human rights, civil society, and press freedom. We'll pay particular attention to reports concerning countries in RFE/RL's broadcast region.

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