- Sputnik International
Russia
The latest news and stories from Russia. Stay tuned for updates and breaking news on defense, politics, economy and more.

Lawyers for tsar-statue attacker files Supreme Court appeal

Subscribe
MOSCOW, September 7 (RIA Novosti) - A lawyer acting for a member of an extremist group convicted by a Moscow court of targeting monuments to Russia's imperial family in 1997 said Thursday they have appealed his guilty verdict.

On August 31 the Moscow City Court jury found Igor Gubkin, a member of the so-called Revolutionary Military Council, guilty of blowing up a memorial to Russia's last tsar, Nicholas II, in the Moscow Region. He was sentenced to 19 years in prison.

"We filed an appeal against the verdict of the Moscow City Court asking the Supreme Court of Russia to quash the verdict as it was illegal and ungrounded," attorney Dmitry Agranovsky said.

Gubkin was also convicted on the same day of trying to blow up a 95-meter (310 ft) bronze statue of Tsar Peter the Great on the River Moskva in the capital in protest against the proposed reburial of Bolshevik leader Vladimir Lenin, who has been in a mausoleum on Red Square since his death in 1924, but whose removal has been debated since the collapse of the Soviet Union.

Before Gubkin was sentenced, Agranovsky said the prosecution had asked for a 21-year prison sentence.

"The state prosecutor asked that the court convict Gubkin of terrorism, the illegal acquisition, possession and transportation of explosives and explosive devices, the illegal manufacture of explosive devices and fraud," the lawyer said.

The jury said Gubkin deserved leniency in the imperial statue cases, but not on other charges of fraud. His attorney said he asked that the charges relating to the Peter the Great plot be dismissed because his client had changed his mind and failed to go through with the attack.

The jurors also acquitted Gubkin of organizing a revolutionary council and of attempting a coup d'etat.

Gubkin misappropriated investments in the housing company he set up in the late 1990s to finance his organization, which sought to overthrow the "bourgeoisie and reinstate the Soviet regime and the dictatorship of the proletariat," the daily Kommersant reported.

Agranovsky said the court had discontinued criminal proceedings against Gubkin on charges of trying to blow up a gas distribution plant in the Moscow Region town of Lyubertsy in 1997 for lack of proof.

"Gubkin has been in custody since August 2, 1997, but the crime was committed in November of that year," he said.

Newsfeed
0
To participate in the discussion
log in or register
loader
Chats
Заголовок открываемого материала