USA TODAY International Edition

A Russian leader, a sprawling fortune

Putin’s financial empire built with methodical system

- Josh Meyer

“He has run his financial affairs in a way that’s totally consistent with the biggest organized crime boss on the face of the earth.” David Asher Former State Department and Pentagon official

St. Petersburg was one of the richest seaports in Russia. But in the early 1990s, it was starving.

The city once known as Leningrad was reeling amid the breakup of the Soviet Union. Grocery shelves were bare. So its deputy mayor hatched a plan. St. Petersburg would license the export of some of the region’s natural resources and use the money to feed its people.

Timber, ore and oil departed by sea, but much of the food money never arrived. Instead, investigat­ors later found, it went to export businesses favored by the deputy mayor – a former KGB agent named Vladimir Putin.

Putin had only recently been installed in the government hierarchy there, and while his official responsibi­lities included foreign trade and investment, city officials suspected he was really there to watch over the city for the spy agency’s interests.

The food shortage was not solely because of post- Soviet economic turmoil, either.

Putin had deliveries withheld and rerouted to keep the wares on government- store shelves at a bare minimum, said Karen Greenaway, a former FBI agent who taught in the city at the time and has spent much of her career investigat­ing Russian organized crime. With the pressure to supply food, superiors in Moscow were happy to approve the idea of the export- license deal.

The plan issued noncompeti­tive contracts to companies largely of Putin’s choosing. Another city official later concluded that as much as $ 122 million that could have gone to food instead went to a close circle surroundin­g him – and likely to Putin himself.

“And what does he do with part of the money? He sends it to Spain, where he buys his first villa,” Greenaway told USA TODAY.

In the three decades since his first moves in St. Petersburg, Putin has amassed a fortune that some authoritie­s believe is so vast that it makes him one of the richest people in the world.

Now that wealth is in the crosshairs of the West. Russia’s invasion of Uk

raine, which is believed to have killed thousands of civilians, has triggered economic sanctions that target him, his associates and now his adult children.

But the system that built Putin’s riches has also frustrated U. S. and European efforts to punish him. Each round of sanctions raises new questions about whether those efforts can affect the man who treats the wealth of an entire nation as his own.

That wealth was not built solely by simple corruption or theft, according to statements from an array of government officials, interviews with experts in U. S. intelligen­ce and law enforcemen­t, and a USA TODAY review of thousands of pages of reports and documents. Instead, Putin built a financial empire methodical­ly.

He looted and co- opted public resources, investigat­ors say, in St. Petersburg, as a Kremlin functionar­y, and then on a national scale once he assumed the presidency.

There he reached a turning point. While Putin was far from the first to capitalize on the wealth of the formerly communist country, he turned the tables on Russia’s oligarchs, using the power of his office to put himself in control of their futures – and their fortunes.

He installed his closest allies from St. Petersburg as a new class of oligarchs whose business riches became, effectively, Putin’s own. Today, while Putin declares a $ 123,000 salary, his actual wealth is as hard to imagine as it is to quantify. Billions of dollars reportedly have passed through bank accounts of people close to him, with little way to gauge how much of that money really belongs to the president.

And the final step of amassing riches goes beyond any one person’s bank account. With public resources and entire industries effectively under Putin’s control, intelligen­ce veterans say, his personal wealth has become indistingu­ishable from the wealth of Russia.

“He’s clearly, obviously, been in a position where he can amass pretty much as much as he wants,” said Steven Hall, a onetime Moscow station chief who retired from the CIA in 2015 after 30 years of running and managing intelligen­ce operations in Central Eurasia and Latin America.

“There may be a sort of quibbling question with regard to when Putin, for example, builds one of these huge castles … whether he paid for that out of his quote- unquote personal funds or if he simply used Russia as his personal bank account,” Hall said.

“But that might be sort of a distinctio­n without much of a difference.”

‘ The biggest organized crime boss on the face of the earth’

The web of holdings linked to Putin throughout the world make those of the world’s other tyrants and tycoons look small in comparison, according to David Asher, who has helped lead many of the U. S. government’s economic and financial pressure campaigns against defiant states, terrorist organizati­ons, drug cartels and weapons proliferat­ion networks over the past 25 years, including those targeting Iran, North Korea, the Islamic State group and al- Qaida.

“He has run his financial affairs in a way that’s totally consistent with the biggest organized crime boss on the face of the earth,” said Asher, a former State Department and Pentagon official.

“His networks are highly sophistica­ted, and they are set up in a way that is very difficult for the world to disrupt them. They’re so vast in scale and scope that it is almost mind blowing when you look at them.”

Perhaps the most notorious byproduct of that is “Putin’s Palace,” the Black Sea villa that political adversarie­s say was built under the president’s direct supervisio­n and may be worth more than $ 1 billion.

Other riches, according to investigat­ors and Russian political opponents, include perhaps 20 palaces and villas across Russia and Europe, 43 aircraft and various yachts, including the 459foot Scheheraza­de.

Experts also believe Putin has taken care to amass an overseas stash of personal assets in case his political support dries up. Estimates vary widely, in part because it may sit in the names of relatives, associates and layers of anonymous front companies.

All of Putin’s strategic wealth- building and protection, Asher, Greenaway and other former U. S. officials say, depends on a core group around him. That group’s origins are intertwine­d with the roots of Putin’s political career and the place where his empire began.

The first step: Riches of St. Petersburg

After the Berlin Wall fell in November 1989, Vladimir Putin returned to the city of his birth.

More than 100,000 KGB agents were dismissed as the Soviet Union broke up. Putin, though, remained with the spy agency after leaving his five- year posting in Dresden, East Germany. It was there, running agents from West Germany, that he encountere­d the kinds of material riches that most Russians never see.

In the early 1990s, St. Petersburg was considered a Wild West of sorts, a “state within a state” where the KGB was allpowerfu­l and, investigat­ors say, worked closely with black- market mafias.

Men in St. Petersburg then, like Gennady Timchenko, Yury Kovalchuk and Vladimir Smirnov, would later become some of Putin’s closest friends and allies.

He first oversaw foreign relations at his alma mater, Leningrad University, and soon became a chief aide to St. Petersburg’s mayor, Anatoly Sobchak, who needed someone to liaison with the federal security services.

As deputy mayor, Putin had a broad portfolio, including the new position of promoting foreign relations and trade with the West in the post- Communist era. But his close associatio­ns with former spy colleagues and known organized crime figures raised concerns among some city officials.

“Everyone knew … that Putin was there as KGB and was watching over Sobchak,” St. Petersburg City Council member Nikolai Andruschen­ko would later say in an investigat­ive documentar­y, “Who is Mr. Putin?”

At the time, St. Petersburg – Russia’s second- largest city – was in many ways more strategic than the landlocked capital, Moscow. It had a thriving seaport at the head of the Gulf of Finland and lucrative oil terminals from which the country’s richest resource was shipped to Europe and beyond. Other natural resources also flowed through the port and the Pulkovo internatio­nal airport for sale in the West.

So when Putin offered to raise money for food by issuing export licenses for the sale of a quota of those raw materials, political leadership in Moscow gave their enthusiast­ic approval.

But when little or no food arrived, city official Marina Salye investigat­ed.

“I learned that we had allocated quotas for timber, oil, metals, rare metals and aluminum for barter,” Salye said in a videotaped interview.

“Licenses were issued by the St. Pe

tersburg Committee on External Economic Relations – that is, by Putin,” Salye added. “Then the goods left for abroad, but the foodstuffs … never arrived.”

Salye concluded that as much as $ 122 million overseen by Putin had disappeare­d. Further investigat­ion suggested that as much as $ 900 million from other quota contracts orchestrat­ed by Putin and associates also had vanished – and that he had earned commission­s worth millions of dollars on those too, according to numerous sources.

The investigat­ions turned up no evidence that Putin had benefited personally. But he was widely suspected of receiving kickbacks too from the companies that made a fortune by getting contracts from him to sell off Russian resources overseas, Salye and others said.

Putin would later deny any wrongdoing, suggesting in one videotaped interview that the export quota contracts were never issued. But Salye kept documentat­ion of everything, including contracts with Putin’s signatures on them.

Putin eventually would be tied to numerous other alleged scams in St. Petersburg, connected to the city’s fastgrowin­g casino and gambling industry and other businesses that sprang up as the country moved from communism to capitalism.

When his boss Sobchak lost his bid for reelection in June 1996, Putin was recruited by top federal bureaucrat Pavel Borodin to be his deputy, managing all of the Kremlin’s vast business and property holdings.

In Moscow, Putin was responsibl­e for overseeing the foreign property of the state and the organized transfer of the former assets of the Soviet Union to the Russian Federation. In other words, it was a license to steal, and an opportunit­y to sell off “anything from buildings to art, all of that stuff ” for a cut of the proceeds, Hall said.

Putin was also working for Borodin when he was allegedly handing out inflated contracts for a $ 1 billion- plus renovation of the Grand Kremlin Palace complex.

The scandal became public when Swiss authoritie­s launched a sweeping fraud and money laundering investigat­ion that initially focused on a Swiss constructi­on company, Mabetex, accused of making many secret milliondol­lar payments into the Swiss bank accounts of leading Russian officials in exchange for those refurbishm­ent contracts.

Borodin received more than $ 25 million in commission­s for awarding the contracts, according to documents produced by investigat­ors in Switzerlan­d. In all, $ 62.5 million was paid in bribes for contracts worth $ 492 million on the project, with some of it distribute­d to friends and fellow Kremlin officials, including then- President Boris Yeltsin and his influential daughters, Swiss authoritie­s alleged.

In July 1998, the ailing Yeltsin and his daughters elevated Putin, a relatively obscure functionar­y, to the position of director of the Federal Security Service, or FSB, the successor state security organizati­on to the KGB. A year later, Putin was appointed prime minister, or Yeltsin’s top deputy and heir apparent. Yeltsin soon stepped down, which made Putin president on Dec. 31, 1999, and allowed him to coast to victory in the election that March.

Putin’s activities in St. Petersburg and at the Kremlin were a springboar­d in his rise to the pinnacle of Russian government. So were his successful efforts to block investigat­ions of those activities.

Numerous St. Petersburg officials would ultimately go public in accusing Putin of establishi­ng a highly developed racketeeri­ng enterprise and monetizing his relationsh­ips with contacts in both the KGB and the criminal underworld.

Salye, the former city official who investigat­ed the exports- for- food licensing deal, made public her findings and openly called for Putin to resign.

“The firms were obviously completely fake, phony,” Salye said during a videotaped interview later included in the “Who is Mr. Putin?” documentar­y, which was released by Radio Free Europe.

Salye revived her allegation­s against Putin just as he was assuming the presidency, backing them up with evidence from her investigat­ion. A decade later, she revealed she had been in hiding ever since.

“I have everything in my files,” Salye told a reporter who visited her remote hideaway. She fled in 2000, she said, because she believed “they’re going to kill me.”

Two years later, just weeks after again criticizin­g Putin publicly, Salye died, at 77, of a heart attack that some associates said was suspicious.

Another corruption investigat­ion into Putin’s activities in St. Petersburg had been launched by the major fraud section of the regional government.

As soon as Putin became president, Russia’s top prosecutor shut down the case, and the chief investigat­or, Lt. Col. Andrei Zykov, was fired.

That same month, Swiss authoritie­s issued an arrest warrant for Borodin in the Mabetex probe. Putin appointed him secretary of state overseeing the new union between Russia and Belarus, protecting him from prosecutio­n.

Another of his first acts as president was to grant Yeltsin immunity.

Borodin would later be arrested in New York on money laundering charges but released – mostly because of lack of cooperatio­n from Russian officials, Swiss authoritie­s said.

Putin moved quickly to consolidat­e power with the help of his former KGB network known as the “siloviki,” the Russian term for security strongmen. He launched a major reorganiza­tion of the FSB that would give it broader powers and placed it under his direct control.

The new president also began using his insider knowledge of what Russia owns – at home and internatio­nally – for his personal benefit.

“Because he’s the president of Russia, he can now avail himself of just enormous amounts of property and perks that technicall­y belong to the Kremlin; the leased planes and dachas and ships and all kinds of things,” Putin biographer and former U. S. intelligen­ce analyst Fiona Hill said in an interview.

And he knew exactly how to access it, she said, “because he was the head of the Kremlin property agency.”

Many Russians initially looked to Putin as their savior from the oligarchs who had snapped up the nation’s industries and resources during the rush from communism to capitalism.

Putin, they believed, was the dynamic young leader needed to bring the oligarchs to heel.

As businessma­n Sergey Kolesnikov would later write in a whistleblo­wer letter, “How wrong we were.”

ALABAMA Montgomery: The U. S. Department of Justice on Friday challenged a state law making it a felony for doctors to treat transgende­r people under age 19 with pubertyblo­ckers or hormones to help affirm their gender identity.

ALASKA Juneau: Republican­s in the

state House have removed Rep. David Eastman from their caucus, the minority leader said Friday, citing tensions that have built over time with the Wasilla Republican. Eastman also was removed from two committees.

ARIZONA Phoenix: Former Maricopa County Attorney Allister Adel, who recently resigned amid controvers­y over her job performanc­e, died Saturday of unspecified health complicati­ons, her family said. She was 45.

ARKANSAS Little Rock: The federal retrial of a former state lawmaker accused of bribery and wire fraud has been delayed to November. Ex- Sen. Gilbert Baker is a former chairman of the state Republican Party who ran unsuccessf­ully for the GOP nomination for a U. S. Senate seat in 2010.

CALIFORNIA San Francisco: A mask mandate for commuter rail passengers is back by popular demand in the San Francisco Bay Area. The Bay Area Rapid Transit system had decided last month to drop its rule in line with a federal court ruling, but that decision prompted an outcry, spokeswoma­n Alicia Trost said Friday.

COLORADO Canon City: An equine influenza virus is the likely cause of a respirator­y disease outbreak that has killed about 100 wild horses at a federal holding facility, Bureau of Land Management officials said.

CONNECTICU­T Hartford: A widerangin­g bill aimed at reducing vehicle emissions in the state, including the likely adoption of California’s clean air standards for certain trucks and a requiremen­t that all school buses be emission- free by 2040, was advanced Friday to Gov. Ned Lamont’s desk.

DELAWARE Dover: While the First State’s overall unemployme­nt rate is on a steady decline, with more jobs than job- seekers, Delaware’s disabled community isn’t seeing the same job growth. Unemployed, disabled Delawarean­s total about 3,300 people, and 34,000 are not in the workforce, based on U. S. census figures.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA Washington: A long- sought curbside composting program is one step closer to becoming a reality with a D. C. Council committee’s proposal to fund a pilot project, WUSA- TV reports.

FLORIDA Tallahasse­e: State Supreme Court Justice Alan Lawson announced plans Friday to retire this summer, which gives Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis the opportunit­y to have appointed four of the seven justices.

GEORGIA Savannah: A warehouse along the Savannah River is holding historical treasures that evidence suggests remained lost for more than 240 years – a cache of 19 cannons researcher­s suspect came from British ships scuttled to the river bottom during the American Revolution. Now officials with the U. S. and British government­s, as well as Georgia’s, are working together on an agreement to preserve the newly found guns before putting them on display.

HAWAII Honolulu: A committee of state senators and representa­tives on Friday agreed on legislatio­n creating new management for Mauna Kea, the site of some of the world’s most advanced telescopes and demonstrat­ions against the constructi­on of a new observator­y atop the mountain.

IDAHO Boise: Former state Rep. Aaron von Ehlinger was convicted Friday of raping a 19- year- old legislativ­e intern after a dramatic trial in which the young woman fled the witness stand during testimony, saying, “I can’t do this.”

ILLINOIS Oak Brook: At least two twisters reportedly touched down briefly as part of a storm system that rolled across northeaste­rn Illinois on Saturday. One EF- 0 tornado snapped tree branches and uprooted some trees as it traveled about 2 miles on the ground west of Chicago in Oak Brook, WLS- TV reports. The second EF- 0 was confirmed in Candlewick Lake in northern Boone County.

INDIANA Indianapol­is: A federal judge issued a preliminar­y injunction Friday ordering a Martinsvil­le middle school to allow a transgende­r student to have access to the boys’ restroom.

IOWA Des Moines: It is not a crime for a trailer hitch to partially obscure one figure on a license plate, according to the Iowa Court of Appeals, which ruled Wednesday that an Altoona police officer was wrong to pull over a truck for that reason.

KANSAS Topeka: The state will be tightening its rules for adults receiving food assistance even though critics have warned that its new law is so sloppily written that it will apply to thousands more people than supporters intended. The Republican- controlled Legislatur­e on Thursday overrode Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly’s veto of a GOP bill imposing a new job- training requiremen­t for non- disabled adults.

KENTUCKY Louisville: The largely red state has the most popular Democratic governor in the nation, according to a new survey. Polling firm Morning Consult put Gov. Andy Beshear’s approval rating at 59%.

LOUISIANA New Orleans: The New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival is honoring the many musical icons who have passed since the festival was last held three years ago. Jazz Fest, which began Friday and will conclude May 8, will feature onstage tributes, as well as jazz funeral procession­s that will cross the Fair Grounds and conclude with the unveiling of the honorees’ likenesses alongside the other so- called Ancestors in a memorial garden.

MAINE Augusta: State lawmakers have extended a historic preservati­on tax credit to try to rehabilita­te properties in downtown areas.

MASSACHUSE­TTS Holyoke: The leader of a veterans’ care center where 76 veterans died after contractin­g COVID- 19 in the spring of 2020 lacked both the leadership skills and temperamen­t to run such a facility when he was hired in 2016, according to a blistering state inspector general’s report out Friday.

MICHIGAN Detroit: Drug overdose deaths are at record numbers, yet only slightly more than half the pharmacies in the state have signed on to a program allowing them to dispense the opioid overdose antidote Narcan without a prescripti­on.

MINNESOTA Minneapoli­s: The state Department of Health said it’s investigat­ing several severe cases of hepatitis among children and has reported the cases to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

MISSISSIPP­I Jackson: The state’s medical examiner system has long operated in violation of national standards for death investigat­ions, accruing a severe backlog of reports and autopsies, according to an Associated Press analysis based on state data and documents and interviews of officials and residents.

MISSOURI Jefferson City: Republican state lawmakers on Thursday pushed to restrict transgende­r children’s participat­ion in sports, with the House passing a ban and the Senate debating a bill to strip funding from schools that allow transgende­r girls to play with other girls.

MONTANA Helena: Over five years after a former supervisor at a juvenile detention facility was fired, a jury has awarded him $ 182,000 in damages in a wrongful terminatio­n case, faulting the state for allowing an employee who had expressed bias against him to investigat­e the incident that led to his terminatio­n.

NEBRASKA Lincoln: State employees will get an added job perk starting this summer that will allow their dependent children to attend instate community colleges for free.

NEVADA Las Vegas: The newly constructe­d Holocaust Memorial Plaza at King David Memorial Cemetery was unveiled as part of the commemorat­ion of Yom HaShoah, the Holocaust Remembranc­e Day celebrated April 27 to correspond to the 27th day of Nisan on the Hebrew calendar on the anniversar­y of the Warsaw ghetto uprising.

NEW HAMPSHIRE North Conway: Three people, including two firefighters, were injured in a windswept blaze that ripped through the landmark Red Jacket Mountain View Resort on Saturday afternoon.

NEW JERSEY Atlantic City: A union representi­ng casino dealers is calling on lawmakers to prohibit smoking in their workplaces. The United Auto Workers wrote legislator­s last week asking them to hold hearings on a bill that would close a loophole in state law that leaves casinos as virtually the only indoor workplace where smoking is permitted.

NEW MEXICO Las Vegas: Over 1,000 firefighters backed by bulldozers and aircraft battled the largest active wildfire in the U. S. on Sunday after strong winds pushed it across containmen­t lines and closer to the small northern New Mexico city.

NEW YORK Albany: A judge ordered Friday that the state’s congressio­nal and state Senate primaries be delayed until Aug. 23 to provide time to replace district maps that were ruled unconstitu­tional last week.

NORTH CAROLINA Greensboro: A Madison County music legend has reclaimed a stolen gun after 43 years. Sheriff Buddy Harwood presented Bobby Hicks, a former fiddle player with bluegrass titan Bill Mon

roe, with the pistol Hicks lost in 1978, after a Greensboro Police Department detective called him and told him of the pawn shop finding.

NORTH DAKOTA Bismarck: The state Supreme Court has ruled that thousands of documents related to security during the constructi­on of the heavily protested Dakota Access Pipeline are public and subject to the state’s open records law.

OHIO Columbus: Advocates of marijuana legalizati­on say in a lawsuit filed Friday that Republican legislativ­e leaders are trying to keep the issue off the November ballot. Some GOP lawmakers are instead focused on a bill that would expand Ohio’s medical cannabis program in the hopes that those changes will dissuade stakeholde­rs from funding the adult- use initiative.

OKLAHOMA Oklahoma City: The second- degree murder conviction of a former police officer who fatally shot a man threatenin­g to set fire to himself in 2017 was upheld by the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals.

OREGON Portland: Mayor Ted Wheeler plans to propose spending $ 3.9 million to add 28 unarmed public safety specialist­s to the Police Bureau. He said the goal is to free up sworn police for higher- priority calls.

PENNSYLVAN­IA Norristown: Former state Attorney General Kathleen Kane, who served jail time for leaking grand jury material and lying about it, was taken into custody Friday on an alleged probation violation, more than a month after she was charged with drunken driving, officials said.

RHODE ISLAND Warwick: Parents of special- needs students spoke at a rally Saturday at the Warwick Center of the Arts in support of state legislatio­n that would create an independen­t special education ombudsman to help parents of special- needs children navigate what can be a daunting and discouragi­ng process.

SOUTH CAROLINA Columbia: The state House has approved a bill that would require doctors to tell women seeking abortion- inducing medication that there is a way to reverse the procedure, even though that claim is unproven and disputed by doctors.

SOUTH DAKOTA Rapid City: Military officials are preparing to put on an air show at Ellsworth Air Force Base for the first time in seven years. The Rapid City Journal reports the Ellsworth Air & Space Show, set for May 14- 15, will celebrate the 80th anniversar­y of the base north of Rapid City, as well as the 80th anniversar­y of the Doolittle Raid and the 75th birthday of the Air Force.

TENNESSEE Nashville: Gov. Bill Lee declined to sign off on a new law requiring government­s and businesses to treat immunity from a previous COVID- 19 infection as equal to getting vaccinated in their policies. The legislatio­n became law Friday without the Republican’s signature, taking effect immediatel­y.

TEXAS Canton: Van Zandt County Sheriff Steve Hendrix said he will resign following his arrest and indictment on allegation­s that he lied to investigat­ors about witnessing one of his deputies punch a handcuffed inmate in the face.

UTAH St. George: Former U. S. Secretary of State Condoleezz­a Rice told Southern Utah University graduates to find purpose in what they do as they leave SUU and enter the next phase of their lives during the annual commenceme­nt ceremony Friday. Rice acknowledg­ed the class of 2022 faced additional challenges because of the outbreak of COVID- 19 but told them they have been better prepared for the future by the crisis.

VERMONT Montpelier: A bill that would set the state on a path to a “clean heat standard” was approved by the Vermont Senate on Friday. The proposal aims to regulate businesses that import fossil fuel heat.

VIRGINIA Hampton: A tripod- mounted prototype sensor is tracking the sun on the roof of NASA- Langley Research Center’s just- opened Measuremen­t Systems Lab. The prototype’s size opens the possibilit­y of deploying sensors in small satellites to scoop up more data over much wider geographie­s.

WASHINGTON Spokane: The Spokane Valley City Council, in an unusual move, has banned newspapers from the City Hall lobby, with some members arguing in favor of the move because of campaign ads and election coverage in the papers.

WEST VIRGINIA Charleston: The state Department of Environmen­tal Protection is seeking public comment on its draft water monitoring and assessment report, which includes a list of impaired stream and lake assessment­s across West Virginia.

WISCONSIN Milwaukee: A jury has convicted of a hate crime a white man who was accused of throwing acid on a Latino man’s face in a racist attack in 2019.

WYOMING Casper: Four county- level GOP groups are accused of violating bylaws and enforcing rules selectivel­y, in favor of hard- line conservati­ves, the Casper Star- Tribune reports.

 ?? POOL PHOTO BY ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICH­ENKO ?? Vladimir Putin enters his inaugurati­on ceremony as Russia’s president in 2018, where he took the oath for his fourth term. Opposition leaders have long cited corruption claims.
POOL PHOTO BY ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICH­ENKO Vladimir Putin enters his inaugurati­on ceremony as Russia’s president in 2018, where he took the oath for his fourth term. Opposition leaders have long cited corruption claims.
 ?? FEDERICO SCOPPA/ AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Putin’s empire is believed to include the 459- foot yacht Scheheraza­de, docked in Tuscany, Italy, in March.
FEDERICO SCOPPA/ AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Putin’s empire is believed to include the 459- foot yacht Scheheraza­de, docked in Tuscany, Italy, in March.
 ?? ALEXEY NIKOLSKY/ SPUTNIK/ AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Warships take part in Russia’s Navy Day in 2021 in St. Petersburg, where Putin’s political career began.
ALEXEY NIKOLSKY/ SPUTNIK/ AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Warships take part in Russia’s Navy Day in 2021 in St. Petersburg, where Putin’s political career began.
 ?? DMITRI LOVETSKY/ AP ?? Anatoly Sobchak, then the mayor of St. Petersburg, left, stands with Putin in 1994.
DMITRI LOVETSKY/ AP Anatoly Sobchak, then the mayor of St. Petersburg, left, stands with Putin in 1994.
 ?? AP ?? Former Russian President Boris Yeltsin’s top aide Pavel Borodin, right, recruited Vladimir Putin to be his deputy in June 1996.
AP Former Russian President Boris Yeltsin’s top aide Pavel Borodin, right, recruited Vladimir Putin to be his deputy in June 1996.
 ?? OLGA MALTSEVA/ AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? A container ship at the port of St. Petersburg, Russia, in 2018.
OLGA MALTSEVA/ AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES A container ship at the port of St. Petersburg, Russia, in 2018.
 ?? ?? Timchenko
Timchenko

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States