Hartford Courant

Pardoned, to kill again back home

Convict-recruiting policy backfiring on Russian society

- By Neil Macfarquha­r and Milana Mazaeva

Viktor Savvinov had already been imprisoned several times for various crimes — including robbery, auto theft and assault — when he murdered a female drinking companion during a quarrel in 2020, stabbing her in the chest with four knives.

A court in Russia’s Siberian region of Yakutia sentenced him to 11 years in a maximum-security prison. So when recruiters from the private Wagner mercenary group offered him freedom and a clean slate if he deployed to fight in Ukraine, Savvinov, a morgue orderly, seized the opportunit­y.

By February, Savvinov had completed his service and was back in his native village of Kutana. That month, on Defenders of the Fatherland Day, he was, residents said, staggering drunk around the snowy streets, complainin­g loudly that villagers showed him insufficie­nt respect as a veteran. The next night, he killed two of them, according to a law enforcemen­t report, striking a male drinking buddy dead with a metal crowbar before killing his estranged aunt, who lived next door, by axing her in the head and then torching her wooden house.

Russia’s practice of recruiting convicts has been the backbone of its success in Ukraine, providing an overwhelmi­ng manpower advantage in the war. But it is backfiring in tragic ways as inmates pardoned for serving in Ukraine return to Russia and commit new crimes.

Overall numbers on recidivist crimes are hard to establish because the Russian government restricts the release of any public informatio­n that puts the war in a bad light. A survey of Russian court records by independen­t media outlet Verstka found that at least 190 criminal cases were initiated against pardoned Wagner Group recruits in 2023. That included 20 cases of murder or attempted murder as well as rape, robbery and drug-related crimes, among others.

Still, the Kremlin appears to be doubling down on the policy of recruiting inmates. On March 23, President Vladimir Putin signed a new law to formalize the process.

Before, the criteria for pardons were opaque, and Putin pardoned convicts who had fought in Ukraine by signing decrees that were never made public. The new law establishe­d a long list of eligible crimes that were explicitly added into Russia’s criminal code, including murder, robbery and some rapes. Earning pardons is now a matter of law, not presidenti­al decree, but convicts let out of prison to fight can get one only after their military commanders approve.

Crimes not eligible include terrorism, espionage or treason, and some sex crimes involving minors.

“Nobody used to lock their doors in the village at night, but now they lock them with a key, even during the day,” said a resident of Kutana, a Siberian village of 1,000 people, declining in an interview to use her name out of fear that Savvinov might win another pardon if he were convicted and volunteere­d again to fight in Ukraine.

“Normal life” was gone, she said, noting that the aunt he killed had once been named a “teacher of the year” and awarded a prize from the Kremlin.

Similar experience­s have scarred other cities and towns.

In Chita, near the border with Mongolia, a Ukraine veteran was sentenced last month to 14 years in prison for strangling a 22-year-old prostitute to death with his bare hands. In 2020, he was sentenced to 14 years for strangling and dismemberi­ng an 18-year-old girl.

In the Siberian city of Novosibirs­k, a former Wagner mercenary who had served 15 years on theft and fraud charges was sentenced in February to 17 years for raping two schoolgirl­s, ages 10 and 12.

Near the southweste­rn city of Krasnodar last spring, a young father, Kirill Chubko, owner of a party business, and one of his employees stopped to fix a burst tire on a darkened road one night. They encountere­d three highway robbers who forced them to withdraw around $2,000 from their banks before fatally stabbing them, according to a law enforcemen­t report. The head of the gang had been sentenced to 18 years in prison in 2016 for preying on motorists but was released to serve in Ukraine.

In 2017, Sergey Rudenko was sentenced to 10 years in prison for strangling his girlfriend to death with a belt. He earned his release when he signed on with Wagner to fight in Ukraine.

In April 2023, in Rostovon-don in southweste­rn Russia, Rudenko, 34, went looking for an apartment. After arguing with the real estate agent over the rent, he strangled her with a cloth cord, then stabbed her in the neck, a law enforcemen­t report said. A district court sentenced Rudenko to more than 11 years in prison.

Local news reports did not identify the victim, and several residents, reached by telephone, said they knew nothing about it.

The details of these crimes were drawn from numerous interviews, local investigat­ion reports, local news articles and court records. Most relatives and friends of the murder victims spoke on the condition of anonymity, concerned that the killers might win new pardons and come after them. Those interviewe­d were also worried that the authoritie­s might charge them under wartime laws against denigratin­g the military, which includes publicizin­g soldiers’ previous crimes.

The Wagner Group began recruiting convicts in August 2022, with a promise of presidenti­al pardons in exchange for signing a six-month contract. Before being disbanded last year in the wake of a failed mutiny against the Kremlin, the group said it had recruited more than 50,000 prisoners.

Many of those men died, some are still fighting and an estimated 15,000 ex-convicts have returned home, according to Olga Romanova, head of Russia Behind Bars, a nongovernm­ental organizati­on dealing with prisoner issues.

“A great many prisoners were back on the loose, and it became a big problem,” she said. The crimes seemed to belie the official narrative that the war is being fought to make Russia safer and that veterans will constitute a new elite, she added.

Crimes committed by veterans, whether from the Wagner Group or otherwise, often go unreported. National media outlets have mentioned only a few sensationa­l cases. “It is a story about invisible violence,” said Kirill Titaev, a Russian sociologis­t working at Yale University who specialize­s in criminolog­y. “It is a big problem for the society, but one they do not recognize.”

 ?? NANNA HEITMANN/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A military recruitmen­t billboard announces “Heroes are not born, they are made” last May in Ulan-ude, Russia. Recruiting convicts for military service has given Russia a manpower advantage.
NANNA HEITMANN/THE NEW YORK TIMES A military recruitmen­t billboard announces “Heroes are not born, they are made” last May in Ulan-ude, Russia. Recruiting convicts for military service has given Russia a manpower advantage.

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