Skip to main content

Russia drops criminal case against prison torture whistleblower Sergey Savelyev

Source: Gulagu.net

Russian prosecutors have terminated the criminal case against former inmate and whistleblower Sergey Savelyev, reports the human rights group Gulagu.net.

Charges were brought against Savelyev for “illegally accessing computer information” after he came forward as the whistleblower who leaked an “archive” of footage and documents evidencing torture in the Russian prison system.

Savelyev, who served a nine-year prison sentence in Russia for illegal narcotics trafficking, began secretly collected the videos after prison staff gave him a job logging surveillance camera footage. He leaked this “archive” to Gulagu.net upon his release from prison, and identified himself after fleeing Russia and seeking asylum in France.

A Russian court authorized his arrest in absentia in late October. Reportedly, his name was put on an international wanted list.

Gulagu.net began releasing the footage Savelyev leaked in early October, publishing three video clips showing the torture and rape of inmates at the penitentiary service’s Tuberculosis Hospital No. 1 in the Saratov region. The hospital’s leadership was fired and investigators opened several criminal cases on charges of sexual assault and abuse of power.

Gulagu.net released more footage evidencing torture at the Saratov prison hospital on November 9, after which the Saratov department of the Federal Penitentiary Service (FSIN) fired 18 of its employees. The rights group’s founder, Vladimir Osechkin, has promised to release more videos and documents in the coming days that contain the surnames of penitentiary service staff involved in torturing inmates.

read more

‘They’re still trying to shut me up’ Meduza talks to Sergey Savelyev, the former inmate who leaked an ‘archive’ of torture videos from inside Russia’s prison system

read more

‘They’re still trying to shut me up’ Meduza talks to Sergey Savelyev, the former inmate who leaked an ‘archive’ of torture videos from inside Russia’s prison system

Meduza survived 2024 thanks to its readers!

Let’s stick together for 2025.

The world is at a crossroads today, and quality journalism will help shape the decades to come. Real stories must be told at any cost. Please support Meduza by signing up for a recurring donation.

Any amount