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AVTANDIL KHURTSIDZE

Russian crime lords, the FBI and 40-year prison stretches. Thomas Kershaw tells the shocking story of Avtandil Khurtsidze

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A shocking story of Russian crime lords, the FBI and 40-year prison stretches

WHEN Georgian middleweig­ht Avtandil Khurtsidze arrived in the UK in 2017, he became an instant cult icon. “I’m crazy man,” he said, with his wild grin cracking a pumice-like complexion. “I’m crazy black man. I’m Brooklyn man. I’m Russian man. I’m Ukrainian man. I’m Georgian man. I’m a very beautiful man, man.”

But just a month before his scheduled bout with WBO champion Billy Joe Saunders, Khurtsidze was arrested by the FBI under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organisati­ons (RICO) Act and, after being found guilty in June, faces up to 40 years in prison. But how did Georgia’s greatest boxer become the chief enforcer to Razhden Shulaia, one of post-soviet Russia’s most powerful crime lords and a key member in the most prolific criminal syndicate in the US, accused of everything from contract killings and kidnapping­s to the snatching of cigarettes and chocolate?

*** SPRAWLED across the banks below the Northern Imeriti Foothills, Avtandil Khurtsidze grew up in Georgia’s third largest city, Kutaisi. Fronted by villas, verandas and an array of pastel-tinted roofs, tucked between the Tuscan imitations lie deteriorat­ing Soviet housing blocks and dilapidate­d factories. The heartland of empires throughout history, the city has been consistent­ly ransacked and, aside from the last remaining Soviet statues, it’s the palatial graveyards, embellishe­d with life-size effigies, which most readily illustrate its history.

They are the graves of Kutaisi’s deceased despots known as the Vory – an elite society of Soviet criminals born in Lenin’s gulags. Despite casually being referred to today as the Russian mafia, 80 per cent of the Vory are thought to originate from Georgia, largely split between two clans – those from Kutaisi and those from the country’s capital, Tbilisi.

A known street fighter nicknamed “Chachuku” in his hometown – Georgian for sledgehamm­er – Khurtsidze soared through the amateur ranks after taking up boxing as a means of protection. However, despite being the country’s No. 1 amateur, his slugging comeforwar­d style was deemed unsuited to the unpaid code’s point-scoring system, meaning Khurtsidze was overlooked for a place at the 2000 Sydney Olympics. Begrudged, he immediatel­y turned profession­al and, under the guidance of Doc Nowicki, a mechanictu­rned-boxing engineer, he emigrated to Philadelph­ia to live with three other highly

touted Georgian boxers – Koba Gogoladze, $VODQEHN .RG]RHY DQG 5DPD]DQ 3DOLDQL b After a positive start in the US, Khurtsidze’s career was derailed by a shock defeat to fading two-time world title challenger, Tony Marshall. Having coasted through the first six rounds, in the seventh a desperate Marshall inflicted a barrage below Khurtsidze’s beltline, causing the Georgian to keel over in agony. To the horror of those at ringside, the referee waved the fight off. Despite being labelled by onlookers as one of the most blatant ill-justices witnessed in a boxing ring, Nowicki’s appeals to the New York Commission were fruitless. Khurtsidze packed his bags and returned to Kutaisi with his career in ruins. Khurtsidze’s return coincided with the homecoming of the leader of the Kutaisi Clan, Tariel Oniani. The crime lord, wanted by Interpol, was forced to flee Spain after learning that 400 police officers were preparing to pounce on his ³

THEY HAVE PREPARED SPECIAL GLOVES FOR ME SO WE FIGHT EVERY DAY IN PRISON... THE OTHER DAY SOMEONE BROUGHT ME A CHICKEN DRUMSTICK”

lavish coastal hideouts. His return enlivened criminal activity and mafia power struggles in Georgia, and as the government sought to regain control, sundry Vors and their underlings were incarcerat­ed – pictures of a younger Khurtsidze, with a noticeably more proliferat­ed buzz cut, leaning against cell bars, indicate he spent at least some time in prison during WKLV SHULRG b

He was spotted by hallmarked trainer Alexander Lichter and recommende­d as a sparring partner to Zaurbek Baysanguro­v – a Russian superwelte­rweight and future world champion. After impressing during the spars, he was signed to the Klitschko brothers’ promotiona­l company, K2 East, racking up 15 straight wins in Ukraine. Once, when fighting in front of a raucous crowd in Odessa against Jamel Bakhi in 2009, Khurtsidze apologised in his post-fight interview in the ring for not knocking out his opponent sooner. Not only had the Georgian music blaring from the stands wrangled with his rhythm, he claimed it also precipitat­ed an irrepressi­ble urge to break into dance mid-bout.

It’s unclear how Khurtsidze first met the Russian Vor Razhden Shulaia, however, his defence lawyer admitted the pair were longtime acquaintan­ces in post-soviet Georgia

and had frequently socialised together. Incidental­ly, Khurtsidze was not the first boxer that Shulaia was seen to have close connection­s with either, after being photograph­ed leaving a meeting in 2009 with former two-time world heavyweigh­t champion Nikolay Valuev, which caused headlines in Russia due to Shulaia’s FULPLQDO VWDWXV b

In 2010, after losing a tight decision to hometown favourite Hassan N’dam N’jikam in Paris, Khurtsidze began spending more time with Shulaia, and they became close accomplice­s. Aslan Usoyan, the leader of the rival Tbilisi Clan and head of the so-called Russian mafia with ties to the FSB (Russia’s Federal Security Service), was shot by a sniper on the streets of Moscow. Italian police swooped on senior members of the Kutaisi Clan and Shulaia was arrested in Lithuania. After being inexplicab­ly released, Shulaia fled to New York and establishe­d a fierce jurisdicti­on in Brighton Beach, a notorious Soviet deluge in southern Brooklyn, once described as “the land of pelmeni, matryoshka­s, tracksuits and vodka.” In no little coincidenc­e, Khurtsidze too re-emerged in the neighbourh­ood. Shulaia made base above a quaint family restaurant on the seafront, which he converted into an illegal poker house where

I WILL NOT BE HERE FOR FIVE YEARS. TAKING INTO VIEW MY GOOD BEHAVIOUR I’LL GET OUT IN TWO”

he and Khurtsidze were recorded by the FBI plotting numerous extortion schemes and attacks on rival enterprise­s. One video showed Khurtsidze repeatedly assaulting a Georgian man, who had insulted Shulaia in public, only pausing between strikes to recite sermons on his power and status in the criminal world. An informant even reported seeing Khurtsidze and Shulaia emerge from behind the poker house with a severely bloodied man, only for the Vor to ask .KXUWVLG]H ZK\ KH KDGBKLW WKH YLFWLP VR KDUG

Shulaia also demanded an ‘obshchak’ – a form of tribute – be paid to him by all the criminals operating in the area, and Khurtsidze was responsibl­e for its collection. He was spotted by FBI officers collecting thousands of dollars in cash on the pavement, as well as seizing jewellery in compensati­on. Khurtsidze was nicknamed “Suicide” by these lower-rung criminals – the only way to combat him if his temper was provoked.

However, Khurtsidze wasn’t safe from retaliatio­n either. In the year he returned to the US with Shulaia, he was attacked by a group of henchmen supposedly working for an Armenian Vor based in Los Angeles. Shulaia retaliated by taking 20 armed members from the syndicate to exact revenge for his long-time friend, even pistol-whipping one of his associates he deemed not to have involved himself with necessary vigour.

Despite having collected irrefutabl­e evidence of Khurtsidze’s criminal involvemen­t, the FBI still required further proof to bring down the enterprise, and thus the boxer’s career continued unperturbe­d. He was signed by Dibella Entertainm­ent soon after his re-arrival in America and recorded five straight stoppage victories under the promotiona­l banner in a little over a year-and-a-half. Yet only after stepping in at two weeks’ notice to face the unbeaten Antoine Douglas on Showtime in March 2016 did Khurtsidze become known to the wider boxing public. He inflicted a fierce pasting on the helpless American, before stopping him in the 10th round. Khurtsidze landed a frightenin­g 276 power punches during the bout.

The victory secured Khurtsidze mandatory status to the WBO title and, after accepting step-aside money so Saunders could attempt to arrange a fight with Gennady Golovkin, the Georgian arrived in the UK in April 2017 to take on Birmingham’s Tommy Langford for the vacant Interim belt, again winning in brutal fashion.

Meanwhile, the enterprise had spread far beyond the gloomy poker attic. Branches appeared in New Jersey, Atlanta and Las Vegas, and the syndicate

were involved in extortion rackets, arms-traffickin­g, contract killings, kidnapping­s, gun-running, chloroform robberies, drugs and gambling rings, and numerous money-laundering schemes. One ingenious ploy even saw them utilise a new technologi­cal scam to hack casino machines, defrauding them of thousands of dollars per night. %XW LURQLFDOO\ DIWHUBD OLWDQ\ RIBVRXU SXUVXLWV LW ZDV

the sickly steal of over 10 thousand dollars’ worth of chocolate which proved to be the final evidence the )%Ζ UHTXLUHG WR PRYH LQ RQ WKH HQWHUSULVH B7ZR RI LWV

members, who had stolen the cargo from a trucking company, were in search of a buyer. The consumer ZKR FDPH IRUZDUG" $Q XQGHUFRYHU )%Ζ DJHQW b

So, with Saunders’ promoter Frank Warren none the wiser, the FBI finally busted the enterprise just a month before Khurtsidze’s scheduled bout with the WBO champion in London. Thirty-three members of the syndicate, all with links to the Kutaisi Clan, were arrested. Khurtsidze was denied bail and held in prison due to the assaults captured on video in the poker house. He was also charged with wire fraud relating to $17,800 of stolen cigarettes.

Just two weeks into the time on remand, Khurtsidze released a message from prison to his followers via his Facebook page. He claimed to be the happiest inmate in jail, teaching daily boxing classes to over 100 of his fellow prisoners. When his trial was finally heard in June this year and Khurtsidze was found guilty on one count of racketeeri­ng conspiracy and one count of wire fraud conspiracy, he was reported by the American press to be facing 40 years behind bars. Khurtsidze soon released another message…

“Final sentence will not be more than five years,” the 39-year-old said. “Taking into view my good behaviour, I will get out in two years. Do not believe fake informers. I am not a terrorist to face imprisonme­nt up to 40 years. I’ll be back and defeat many others in a boxing ring. They have prepared special gloves for me, so we fight every day [in prison]. Besides, I have lots of free time and nothing else to do – workout, nutrition and sleep. I am not in a bad place. If I had had conditions like this in Kutaisi, probably I would have achieved much more. The other day someone brought me a chicken drumstick and ice cream, I thought it was a joke.”

The charisma of boxing’s cult hero turned cult villain UHPDLQVBLP­PXWDEOH DQG LQIHFWLRXV EXW HYHQ LQ D VSRUW

so wedded to crime and corruption, the free-grinning Georgian is surely its most rampant culprit in its history.

 ?? Photo: AMANDA WESTCOTT/SHOWTIME ?? CALL OF THE WILD: Khurtsidze screams in delight after halting Douglas in March 2016
Photo: AMANDA WESTCOTT/SHOWTIME CALL OF THE WILD: Khurtsidze screams in delight after halting Douglas in March 2016
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 ?? Photo: ACTION IMAGES/ANDREW COULDRIDGE ?? THE JOKER: Khurtsidze [above] laughs as he promotes the challenge to Saunders that never was
Photo: ACTION IMAGES/ANDREW COULDRIDGE THE JOKER: Khurtsidze [above] laughs as he promotes the challenge to Saunders that never was
 ??  ?? CONSPICUOU­S WEALTH: Khurtsidze adjusts his leather jacket as he sits on a Range Rover
CONSPICUOU­S WEALTH: Khurtsidze adjusts his leather jacket as he sits on a Range Rover

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