Summary
A Russian court sentenced Alexei Smirnov, the former governor of Kursk, to 14 years in prison for corruption related to Ukraine's incursion into the region. Smirnov was found guilty of accepting bribes which led to weak defenses at the border. This legal case is part of a wider crackdown by the Kremlin following Ukraine's offensive into Russian territory.
Key Facts
- Alexei Smirnov, former Kursk governor, was jailed for 14 years for corruption linked to Ukraine's border incursion.
- Smirnov pleaded guilty to accepting bribes to use cheap materials for border defenses.
- The court fined Smirnov 400 million roubles (about $4.9 million) and banned him from working for 10 years.
- Over 20 million roubles ($220,000) were seized from Smirnov's assets.
- Smirnov became governor in May 2024 and resigned in December of that year.
- He admitted his predecessor, Roman Starovoit, recommended taking bribes.
- Starovoit later became Russia's transport minister and was found dead in an apparent suicide after being dismissed.
- Ukraine's incursion into Kursk involved one division of 11,000 soldiers and exposed weaknesses in Russia's defenses.