Russia jails major general for six years over fraud at military theme park

Major General Vladimir Shesterov was sentenced to six years in prison on Thursday after being found guilty of fraud and forgery in relation to an embezzlement scheme at a military theme park, the RIA state news agency reported. (X/@Archer83Able)
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Updated 17 July 2025
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Russia jails major general for six years over fraud at military theme park

  • Major General Vladimir Shesterov was detained last August for his role in the scheme at the Patriot Park
  • The scandal at Patriot Park is one in a slew of criminal cases against former top officials

MOSCOW: A senior Russian Defense Ministry official was sentenced to six years in prison on Thursday after being found guilty of fraud and forgery in relation to an embezzlement scheme at a military theme park, the RIA state news agency reported.

Major General Vladimir Shesterov was detained last August for his role in the scheme at the Patriot Park, a war-themed tourist attraction outside Moscow. Two other men, including Pavel Popov, a former deputy defense minister, are also facing prosecution.

RIA, citing the investigation materials, said Shesterov and the ex-director of the park, Vyacheslav Akhmedov, who is also in custody, forged documents related to completed construction work at the park in the amount of some 26 million roubles ($332,000).

The scandal at Patriot Park is one in a slew of criminal cases against former top officials that have engulfed the Russian army in recent months.

Shesterov fully admitted guilt, but insisted he had not received any material benefit from the scheme.

“I am to blame, I don’t whitewash myself, I sincerely repent,” he said in court, according to RIA.

Akhmedov has also entered a guilty plea in his trial.

The case against Popov, the former deputy defense minister, is ongoing. RIA reported that Popov had instructed Shesterov and Akhmedov to build him a two-story house, a guest house with a sauna, and a two-story garage on land Popov owned in the Moscow region — with the Defense Ministry footing the bill.

Popov has previously denied wrongdoing. Reuters was unable to contact his lawyer on Thursday.

Patriot Park displays a vast collection of Russian and Soviet weaponry, and offers visitors the chance to clamber on tanks and take part in combat simulations. On its website, it also features a photo gallery of “heroes of the special military operation” — Russia’s official term for its war in Ukraine.


Azerbaijan jails ex-Karabakh leader for 20 years on war crimes charge

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Azerbaijan jails ex-Karabakh leader for 20 years on war crimes charge

BAKU: Azerbaijan on Tuesday sentenced the former Karabakh separatist leader Ruben Vardanyan to 20 years in prison, the latest ruling against Armenian secessionists detained after Baku’s takeover of the region.
Azerbaijan’s seizure of its breakaway enclave of Karabakh in 2023 ended nearly three decades of control by Armenian separatists, prompting the mountainous territory’s entire ethnic Armenian population — more than 100,000 people — to flee.
After regaining control of the region, Baku arrested several separatist leaders on war crimes charges. Armenia has demanded their release.
The Baku Military Court sentenced Vardanyan to 20 years behind bars “under articles of the criminal code relating to crimes against peace and humanity, war crimes, as well as articles connected with terrorism, and financing of terrorism.”
Vardanyan has rejected the charges and declared himself a political prisoner.
A former Russian banker who made his vast fortune as co-founder of the Moscow investment bank Troika Dialog, Vardanyan headed Karabakh’s self-declared Armenian administration between November 2022 and February 2023 after renouncing his Russian nationality.
Forbes magazine estimates his family’s wealth at $1.1 billion.
His trial opened in January 2025, separately from proceedings against 15 other former separatist officials, who were sentenced this month to terms of up to life imprisonment in a war crimes trial.
Armenia has demanded the release of the detainees and said it would pursue “all possible steps,” including international legal action, to protect their rights.
Last year, Amnesty International raised concerns about Vardanyan’s detention conditions and fair trial guarantees, citing allegations that he was held in solitary confinement and pressured to sign documents in a language he does not understand.
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan signed a peace agreement last year, mediated by US President Donald Trump.