Konstantin Kartashov, the attorney defending Penza Network case prisoner Maxim Ivankin, says officials have tried to pressure his client into confessing to involvement in the death of Artyom Dorofeyev and Ekaterina Levchenko. “They started scaring him and hinting at physical violence. They said it would look like a suicide and [investigators] wouldn’t consider other explanations since he’s being held at a federal detention center as a suicide risk,” Kartashov told Novaya Gazeta.
Ivankin’s lawyer says the special agents who threatened him didn’t share their names or say what agency they represented. Ivankin says he lost consciousness after the meeting.
In February, Maxim Ivankin was sentenced to 13 years in prison on charges of involvement in a terrorist network and attempted large-scale drug trafficking.
Alexey Poltavets, another Penza Network case suspect still at large, recently told Meduza that he and Ivankin murdered Artyom Dorofeyev and Ekaterina Levchenko. After Meduza published Poltavets’s confession, police located Levchenko’s remains. (Dorofeyev’s body had been recovered previously.)
Background
- Forensic experts confirm the discovery of Ekaterina Levchenko's remains, corroborating a murder confession reported by ‘Meduza’
- ‘I said sorry before I fired’ Alexey Poltavets confesses to a murder he says was orchestrated by suspects in Russia’s most controversial terrorism case
- Four went in, only two returned How Russia’s controversial terrorism case in Penza and St. Petersburg connects to murder allegations in Ryazan
- ‘Meduza’ answers questions about its investigation into alleged murder committed by multiple Network case defendants
“The Penza Network case”
A group of leftist activists who were sentenced earlier this month to between six and 18 years in prison for supposedly creating a “terrorist organization.” These charges were based on confessions obtained through torture by Federal Security Service agents, but Russian law enforcement has ignored the suspects’ reports that they were abused in custody