Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:02):
Media.
Speaker 2 (00:03):
Something strange is going on. Another member of the Russian
elite has been found dead.
Speaker 3 (00:08):
Reports suggests that he fell out of a window, poisoned
with mushrooms.
Speaker 2 (00:12):
Died of heart failure, died of carbon monoxide poisoning. How
comesy are they?
Speaker 1 (00:18):
Dozens of Russian oligachs, politically motivated millionaires have died in
the space for three years, most of them in suspicious circumstances.
Many have hidden links to the Kremlin. This is sad
Oligach Season two, an ongoing investigation into these recently dead
(00:38):
Russian power brokers. Sad Oligach is created by me jake
Hanrahan and my Ukrainian colleague Sergei Slipchenkov. This is a
H eleven studio and Coolso Media production. December seventeenth, twenty
(00:59):
twenty three. Fifty year old senior accountant Evgeny Postragan is
in the garage of his private home in the closed
city of jelen Nogorsk, hidden away in central Siberia. This
is a place unlike any other, its secret clandestine. Postragan
(01:21):
works for a state satellite development company. Postragan is tying
a knot.
Speaker 2 (01:27):
In a thick rope.
Speaker 1 (01:29):
He pulls the ends toward test the slack. He's making
a noose. Even in the garage. His breath catches in
the cold. Small wisps of white eke from his lips
as he fixes the rope. At this time of year,
it's deadly freezing outside. Jelein Agause hits lows of around
(01:50):
a minus twenty in the winter. A few feet beyond
the garage walls, everything is snow and ice. This is
the Siberia Agent after all. Postragan has finished his noose.
He pulls off a stool, stands on it, and ties
(02:12):
it to the rafters. Above a tear drop loop of
ropes weayhs inches from his face, the vast unknown expanse
of the afterlife just moments away. Posture Gan pulls the
noose over his head and kicks away the stool. He drops,
(02:32):
his body weight slowly chokes him. The rope tightens stiff
around his neck, his legs dangling and kicking in the air.
Everything goes dark. Eventually he stops struggling ef Guinea, Postragan
chokes to death by his own hand. Sadly, Postragan's wife
(02:58):
found him hanging from the rafters, his feet dangling his
heart still, his life gone. This is the official story
from the Russian State of how Evgeny Postragan died. Of course,
the Russian State is most definitely not a reliable source.
(03:21):
Before we get into what kind of a man Evgeny
Postragan was, let's have a look at the kind of
place Zeleno Gorsk is. In short, it's a clandestine city
in Russia built up to produce nuclear weapons for the government.
Serious location with a shadowy mo. I speak to journalist
(03:43):
Matthew Gault. He runs the publication Angry Planet and is
extremely knowledgeable on all things nuclear. So I think maybe
the first thing would be maybe to kind of explain
why these closed ease happened, why would they started up,
and what was their purpose.
Speaker 3 (04:03):
They predate nuclear weapons because there were like some there
were some planned cities that they were making kind of
east of the Ural mountains before nukes because they needed
like an industrial base kind of overnight to produce weapons.
But then like it really gets going in nineteen fifty
(04:24):
when the Soviets go real big on nukes and they
kind of adopt this model that they'd seen the Americans use.
The Americans when they were doing the Manhattan Project set
up these secret cities Oakridge, Los Alamos, where they brought
in all of the scientists and the scientists' families and
all of the labors that they needed and kind of
(04:46):
built these closed cities almost overnight. And the Soviet Union
does the same thing at like a massive scale. And
they need them because, like, nuclear weapons are very secretive
and you don't want people to know where your stuff is,
and that's why they get started, and like why there's
so many of them, like in the Siberian area in
(05:06):
like in eastern Russia in general.
Speaker 1 (05:08):
This place was from what I understand, primarily made for
the production of nuclear weapons. Right, there's plutonium. How does
that all work? Is that something they would mine? Is
that something they would produce? It's going over my head
a little bit, I'll be honest.
Speaker 3 (05:24):
So it's pretty fascinating the project that happens in this
city specifically. Have you seen the Have you seen like
the city's flag or it's cut of arms.
Speaker 2 (05:34):
It's incredible.
Speaker 1 (05:35):
It's one of the coolest flags of the bear right
in the atom. Believe it or not, this clandestine closed
city actually has one of the coolest, most eye catching
flags I've ever seen.
Speaker 2 (05:48):
The background is bright red.
Speaker 1 (05:50):
On top of that, there's a yellow bear inside an
atom symbol at the center. The bear, with an angry face,
is trying to break apart the atomic core. It's cracking
in two, literally split in the atom. Now this isn't
some relic from the Soviet era either. Back in those days,
jelener Gorsk was actually called Krasnoyask twenty six. Its flag
(06:15):
back then was a blue and orange checkered background with
a red and yellow lion's crest in the center. The
lion is holding a shovel and of course a sickle.
The current flag, though for Jelen a goorsk with the
bear and the atom symbol, was approved and put into
use in twenty twelve. The closed city's description of it,
(06:38):
which varies quite differently from mine, shows just.
Speaker 2 (06:41):
How proud they are of it all. Quote.
Speaker 1 (06:44):
In a scarlet field, there is a silver sign of
an atom with three intertwined orbits, and inside the orbits
there is a golden bear threaded through them with silver
fangs and claws, rising straight and turning to the right,
tearing the silver core on the sign of the atom
with its front paws and resting its hind paws on
(07:04):
two of the three orbits end the quote Jellen and
Gorsk might be private and closed off, but Russia is
most definitely proud of its current utility and history. To
be fair, the way they built the place is a
serious feat of engineering.
Speaker 3 (07:20):
So the city, you think it got up to about
one hundred thousand people like in its heyday. And what
they do is they bring in a bunch of goolag labor.
They hollow out a nearby mountain and they build three
nuclear reactors in there. And the nuclear reactors are dual use,
so they produce they like heat and cool the city.
(07:41):
They do like they power the whole city, but they
also produce plutonium that is used in the manufacture of
nuclear weapons. I think like at the end of the day,
something like a third of all of the plutonium that
was used in the Soviet nuclear weapons is produced in
this mountain.
Speaker 2 (07:58):
It's hard to explain.
Speaker 1 (07:59):
It's it's like almost a warehouse setting, but it's actually
hollowed out in the mountain.
Speaker 2 (08:03):
Is that what you mean.
Speaker 3 (08:05):
Yeah, it's almost like they it's almost like some supervillain stuff.
Speaker 2 (08:10):
Yeah, it sounds very James Bond, you know.
Speaker 3 (08:12):
Yeah, Well, they have this huge mountain, they hollow it out,
they build these nuclear reactors under there, and they ferry.
The mountain is like a I think it's like twenty
thirty kilometers away from the city itself, and people live
in the city and take shuttles back and forth, and
they're the whole city is kind of based around this,
(08:33):
like producing plutonium for the Soviet nuclear weapons program. And
it's really interesting because at a time when it's not
great to live in Soviet society, this is the place
to be.
Speaker 1 (08:48):
The thing with the society of the USSA is that
it was, of course communist ostensibly anyway of communist friends
who tell me real.
Speaker 2 (08:59):
Communism has never been.
Speaker 1 (09:00):
Tried, and I tell them they've never tried real life.
But anyway, in the Soviet Union, private ownership was highly restricted.
What you got would often depend on class status, which
was often linked to someone's employment. Really not much different
from the systems we have now. Similarly, the elite of
the USSR group fat and had whatever they wanted, but
(09:23):
the workers were not so lucky. Jelly n Gorsk, though,
was a rare place in Siberia that gave employees a
lot more access to otherwise restricted goods.
Speaker 2 (09:34):
It was not just a job.
Speaker 3 (09:37):
For like forty years. These are probably some of the
best treated citizens in the Soviet Union. They've got the
best foods, they've got the best clothing, they've got the
best you know, the best housing. It is good. Do
they have chocolate, which like other places don't have. Some
of the stories are about how much chocolate they got
(09:58):
to eat.
Speaker 1 (09:59):
Yeah, I read it was one of the few places
where you could have a car as well. Okay, now
it's time for a quick outbreak, all.
Speaker 2 (10:12):
Right, not for that. Now back to the shore.
Speaker 3 (10:17):
Now. The downside is that it's sealed. There are there
are guards at the entrances and exits of the entire city,
and it's monitored by Soviets secret police. Like the whole
place is watched over. So like it's it's a gilded cage,
but it's still a cage.
Speaker 1 (10:37):
Say you were living there, obviously, you work there, you
live there. It's how it works. It's kind of feudal
in a way. But if you're living there, can you
just freely go in and out? Like it's not just
to stop people getting in, from what I understand, it
also kind of stops people getting out.
Speaker 3 (10:53):
Yeah, no, No, they don't want you to leave because
there's like if you work in the plutonium and if
you work in the plutonium factories, like you have secret
knowledge of how the Soviet unit is producing the fuel
that makes its nukes. And this is a It's also
interesting because like Los Alamos are like Oak Ridge, the
(11:14):
culture is very mixed, meaning that you've got people that
are laborers and like working class people, but then you
also have nuclear scientists, like some of the smartest people
that are in the country live in this live and
work in the city and are doing like fringe science
and so and they you don't want those people leaving either.
(11:39):
So that's why you build it like in Siberia, which
is an easier place to like keep people in and yeah,
you aren't getting in or out of there.
Speaker 2 (11:48):
That is crazy.
Speaker 1 (11:49):
So the proximity to the plutonium production, how how does
one produce plutonium?
Speaker 3 (11:59):
The would do is they would bring in the minerals
from outside and they would put them in these reactors,
and these reactors would they would both power the city
and then they would also spit out plutonium plutonium. I'm
gonna screw up the designation. It's like two thirty six,
I think, which is what they would use in their
weapons program. And the way they would this is kind
(12:21):
of wild. They would cool the reactors with the nearby river,
which also flows downstream and has a bunch of other
cities that are feeding off of it. Especially this time,
nuclear reactors are not they're pumping the waste into the ground,
but also like it's backsplashing into that river that they're
using to cool everything, and if kind of irradiating all
(12:43):
of the citizens and everybody that lives downstream from them,
so like incidents of breast cancer and birth defects in
that city and then like everybody that lives downstream from
the city are pretty high. They keep producing plutonium there
for a while. So at the end of like when
the Soviet Union collapses, they shut down two of the reactors,
(13:05):
and the way the reactors work, they can't keep going
and not make It's like always going to be outputting
plutonium that you can only kind of use in weapons,
and so it becomes this weird problem. Like in the
early nineties, when they shut the reactors down, Russia is
like dismantling nuclear weapons. They're left with this one reactor
(13:26):
that is like spitting out plutoni like weapons grade plutonium
constantly and like piling up, and they don't know what
to do with but they can't turn it off because
then the city, like the city doesn't have power.
Speaker 1 (13:35):
Basically, eventually, in twenty ten, with international help, Russia managed
to shut down all the old reactors. In that time,
though serious pollution had damaged the area, still business had
to keep on moving weapons to build profit to make
new state companies of the New Russia took over when
(13:59):
the Postagon ended up working for We'll hear more about
that in a bit, but for now, just understand that
we live in a time where nukes are very much
back on the table. This could be relevant. This place
is jelen Agusk. It's potentially a lot more significant, especially
considering the war in Ukraine, which a lot of this
(14:21):
points to that. You know, they were talking about tactical
nukes and now you've got Trump talking about nukes. If
there's ever a time when the uptick of production or
watchful eyes on the region of this closed platonium place
in jelen a Gausk, I feel like it will be now.
Speaker 3 (14:39):
Yeah, I think so. But unfortunately it's really wild. What's
happened like in the past ten years. It's like after
the collapse of the Soviet Union, we had this nice
twenty year period where we have some really great treaties.
People were kind of drawing down their nukes. America was
in the Soviet Union a whole lot helped with a
(15:01):
lot of the cleanup and a lot of the study
and a lot of the shutting down of the reactors
in that mountain. Now, post Trump won, post COVID, like
all the old treaties are on hold. Russia's not coming
into American inspecting anything. America is not going over to
Russian inspecting anything. If you were doing something in that
mountain you didn't want anyone in the international community to see,
(15:23):
now would be a great time to do it, because
no one's watching anyone in the way that they used
to be watching anyone.
Speaker 1 (15:31):
It turns out that there is plenty going on in
Jelling of Gauze that shouldn't be. We've dug deep and
eventually we found some payda. First, though, let's take a
closer look at Postragan. December seventeenth, back on the night
of his death, Evgenny Postragan headed out of the house
(15:54):
before he hanged himself, where too no one seems to know,
came back and did the d Perhaps he went out
for a walk just to clear his head and decided
that he was definitely going to take his own life
when he got back.
Speaker 2 (16:11):
It's more than likely.
Speaker 1 (16:14):
Another possibility he went out to meet an undisclosed person
who gave him some very bad news, so bad that
Postragan could see only one way out. The cloak and
dagger nature of a closed nuclear city in the heart
of Siberia means there's very little to go on. But
(16:37):
what we have found out is that Postragan was largely
liked by his peers and the local community. One person
anonymously describes him as a quote kind and decent man.
Locals say they don't feel he would have committed suicide.
It would have been his fifty first birthday, four days.
Speaker 2 (16:58):
After his death.
Speaker 1 (17:00):
Apparently he didn't seem depressed or preoccupied. No, not to them,
who knows what's going on in someone's head. According to
state media, Postragand had actually been posting depressive messages on
his VK page. He allegedly posted up pessimistic Japanese poems
hayakus of melancholy. Perhaps the works of the famous Japanese
(17:25):
poet Matsuo bashoal sick on a journey my dreams, wonder
the withered fields over still fields of snow, or winter
solitude in a world of one color, the sound of wind,
or weather beaten skeleton. That is all the remains of
a once gallant samurai who knows. We didn't get a
(17:50):
chance to see which depressive Japanese poems Postragan posted. His
VK page was disabled shortly after his death. In fact,
all of Postragan's social media was wiped as soon as
he died. It was all gone disabled with haste. What
(18:10):
we do know, however, is that he was last online
on VK at six thirty three pm on December sixteenth,
one day before he died. It's also this day that
he went out on his own again, with nobody knowing.
Speaker 2 (18:26):
Where he went.
Speaker 1 (18:28):
Could just be a walk to clear his head, or
it could be something else. If Postragan's suicide was actually
just a suicide, why did he do it? Why take
his own life? Well, according to state controlled Russian media,
(18:50):
it was maybe because of quote a lot of funds
from the company he worked for, reshet Nev Information Satellite
systems really rolls off the tongue. This company is a
subsidiary of the Russian space agency ros Cosmos. We know
from two episodes back that you do not mess with
(19:13):
ross Cosmos. As we heard earlier from Matthew Gault Zellner,
Gorsk is a closed area with multiple defense manufacturing facilities.
They produce weapons grade plutonium. The line of work Postragan
was involved in, though, was to do with the satellite systems.
(19:37):
Russia's satellite network is supposed to arrival the GPS system
we have in the West. It's also used by Russian
military to assist with Putin's ongoing invasion of Ukraine. Okay,
now it's time for a quick outbreak. All right, enough
(20:03):
of that, Now back.
Speaker 2 (20:05):
To the shot.
Speaker 1 (20:10):
As you've probably noticed through series one and two of
sad Oligarch, feels as if all roads lead to Ukraine.
It's through the prism of Putin's disastrous invasion in twenty
twenty two that oligarchs and the power brokers in their
(20:32):
orbit began dropping like flights. However, Postragan was not an oligach,
but he was most definitely in the sad Oligarch sphere
of influence.
Speaker 2 (20:46):
And disaster.
Speaker 1 (20:48):
His role as a senior accountant at reshat Nev possibly
put him in the crosshairs when the company's coffers began
to run dry.
Speaker 3 (20:57):
Where is the money going to come from?
Speaker 1 (20:58):
The lost fun the Russian media spoke about in the
report on Postragans suicide begins at about eighty billion rubles,
that's almost a billion US dollars in twenty twenty three.
This was the amount of money rashat Nev lost. They
(21:20):
lost almost one billion dollars. That's a hell of a problem.
We've been chipping away at this case, and whilst on
the surface it might seem like a cut and dryer suicide,
there is obviously a lot more going on, specifically with
(21:40):
postra Gans place of employment.
Speaker 2 (21:43):
Let's talk to sergery.
Speaker 1 (21:45):
It's funny, I think we see this connection with basically
almost every single suspected or suspect death in this series,
especially where it all seems to tie back to Ukraine,
especially with this company the same as Ross Cosmos, like rockets,
that kind of thing. It's all the same technology, and
(22:06):
this again it's a it's a company that's directly tied
to the state, like the Kremlin owns this company.
Speaker 2 (22:12):
Essentially, right, yeah.
Speaker 4 (22:13):
One hundred percent. So again, ros Cosmos, the state like
space agency, essentially owned this company one hundred percent. Ros
Costmos is the parent company and they basically own it,
they oversee it ros Cosmos, But more so the government
kind of decides the leadership and stuff like that. Right,
So if there's a change in the CEO or whoever,
like the director general, it's going to come from Moscow,
(22:34):
even though this this thing is like, you know, thousands
kilometers away from Moscow in Siberia. Yeah, Like ros Cosmos
is the main owner of this company.
Speaker 1 (22:44):
And as is with pretty much every company that we've
come across, there's there's a lot.
Speaker 2 (22:52):
Of corruption at this place. Right.
Speaker 1 (22:54):
So again it seems to be this pattern at the
minute of very little information out there. But then and
when we dig in and have a look, there's embezzlement
seems to be at the center of all these cases.
Post Gan he himself was let's say, attached by a
proxy at best and completely involved in the embezzlement at worst.
Speaker 4 (23:14):
Right, Postergen was the CFO, I guess we would call
him right in the West, chief financial officer. I think
they called him the head accountant of the place, so
he was leading the financial department. From by understanding, he
started as just an accountant of the company, like back
in two thousands, and over the years he ended up
leading the place. The person that was in charge of
(23:36):
the actual company was Nikolai Destodov. I don't know if
he's officially under an investigation, but he was definitely involved
with the comms directors fraud investigation, who has been criminally,
if not charged, definitely investigated for fraud and embezzlement.
Speaker 1 (23:51):
It's here we start to understand where the missing billions
might have gone. Everyone from the communication officers to the
boardroom execs seems to be some way involved in mass
embezzlement at rishat Nev. As the head of financial management
at this company, how could Postugan not have known.
Speaker 4 (24:12):
It would be hard to deny that, you know, the
head of the financial department had no idea about any
fraud or embezzlement. It would kind of seem like the
thing that he should, if you know, if not at
least be involved, be aware of or understand that money
is going somewhere where it's not supposed to. But there's yeah,
the company was corrupt. The Sutlan and Bashkova. She was
(24:34):
in charge of the direct communications and she basically had
a company that it looks like it was a fake company,
but she created Prometheus Medium and she would get like
contracts for the company to create like in the in
the court filing, it was like media products, so I
think like videos, maybe like advertisements, things like that. And
(24:58):
despite the act company like Rashnatiev actually having their only
press corp press service or whatever, like basically media people
who could do this already, and she would sign contracts.
It says that like over I think it was like
six years, she basically gave this fake company that she
created over one hundred contracts totaling like forty three million
(25:22):
rules when all the work was actually just done by
the team that they already had.
Speaker 1 (25:27):
This is some next level brazen theft of company funds.
The communications officer made a fake company, gave said fake
company media contracts from her own job, and then just
got her staff to do the media work she was
meant to hire out to a creative third party. The
audacity of this scheme, coupled with the higher up embezzlement,
(25:51):
will have no doubt enraged Moscow when it was discovered it.
Speaker 4 (25:55):
Was supposed to be like a third party contractor that
she claimed had like equipment that they didn't, when apparently
the company is like a balanced it or whatever listed
all this equipment that was used in the end. So
it seems like she just kind of used it as
like a way to funnel money out of the company.
Speaker 1 (26:11):
So it's the sort of thing where, especially the department
that he's in, I'm gonna say, it's very unlikely he
wouldn't have seen this happening, right, especially if it's embezzlement,
it's money, He surely would have seen this. He's got
to deal with the accounts.
Speaker 4 (26:28):
Yeah, Like this money isn't just appearing out of nowhere, right.
This is a state sponsored or state owned company, so
this money is coming from Moscow, probably being approved by
in the budget. Like this should be accounted for. He
should know where things are going, what's happening. And again
it's kind of hard to imagine that he just is
(26:48):
blind to over like what five years, six years, almost
fifty million rubles just disappearing. There must have been kind
of an understanding of like, okay, something is not right,
And it sounds like, again the CEO hasn't been charged
from what I could see, but it seems like at
least the CEO knew, and then if the CEO was
in on it, it wasn't like just Bashkova, not just
(27:10):
the comms director doing all this stuff. I find it
hard to believe that the guy in charge of all
the finances for the entire company had no idea that
something was wrong. If not, you know, be directly involved.
Speaker 1 (27:22):
Once again, it comes back to this thing of stealing
from the state. Do you think it's possible that he
realized he was going to get caught, he was going
to be in some hot water, and he said, you
know what, the pressure of this, I might as well
just kill myself again, another kind of murder by proxy
(27:42):
via suicide, if that makes sense.
Speaker 4 (27:44):
I think this is one of the more clear cut
cases for that. So in twenty twenty two is when
the previous CEO Testodov. I don't know if resigns or
I think one thing I saw was somebody said basically replaced.
Like I said, like Moscow is kind of in charge
of right, whether it's at Roskosmos, whether it's somebody closer
to putin or even putin himself, a person from Moscow
(28:06):
comes in. His name is if Ganianisterov. He's he's much
younger for reference, like the previous CEO's like a seventy
three year old academic, kind of Soviet era person who
actually like worked on some satellites and you know that tech.
I guess he like works his way up to be
the CEO. He again either quits, you know, maybe forcefully
(28:27):
retires or whatever. He's not at the company anymore. Twenty
twenty two, a young guy forties, but you know, compared
to these other people, he's pretty young. He comes in.
He ran some startups in Moscow. He I think he
taught at a university or something like that related to
kind of like the space and satellites. And he comes
over in twenty twenty two, and it kind of looks
(28:50):
like he's there to clear house because shortly after he joins,
Boshkowa quickly retires or quits, like she kind of gives
in her resignation from what I understand, and then soon
after she's you know, undergoing these criminal charges. Very soon
after Pastriking kills himself. And then there was I think
(29:11):
I mentioned to you the smaller cases where like employees
receive like a bonus of like it wasn't too big.
It was like a million rubles, which is like I
think a couple thousand dollars. But three people get arrested
for giving out these bonuses and then keeping them for themselves.
So clearly like it sounds like this new person nested
of came in to kind of get rid of this
(29:31):
corruption and figure out what's happening, because I mean, there's
sanctions and things like that on this company that's making
you lose money, but it's losing a ton of money,
you know, money going down the train when this is
supposed to be a big like defense company.
Speaker 1 (29:46):
So with all this knowledge of posture, guns, corrupt employment,
does this look like an actual suicide?
Speaker 2 (29:52):
Still?
Speaker 1 (29:54):
I think it's still quite likely. All the embezzlement pressure
and the huge one of Harry losses at the state
company Postragan worked at would have no doubt caused serious stress,
stress that does not go away. I don't for a
second believe Postragan didn't know all this was happening. He
(30:18):
lived in the closed state run city where secrecy and
stepping in line are paramount. He then killed himself shortly
after a new government appointed boss is brought in to
fix the leaky ship. He would have known full well
that the Kremlin's shadowy operatives set examples and punish people
(30:39):
who steal from the state. Ultimately, Postragan was in charge
of the money. As the money went missing, where is
the money? As the sad Oligach pattern shows in Putin's Russia,
the head must roll. As I said, suicide to avoid
worse fate at the hands of the government is quite likely.
(31:03):
There are, though, a few other things about this case
that have me curious still. For example, I would be
interested to know if Postragan met with anyone in the
moments when he went for a long walk alone in
the deadly cold of the Siberian winter twice in two
days before his death. Will probably never know. And there
(31:30):
is the other possibility that Postugan was got rid of
when the shit hit the fan for what was effectively
a Zelenegorusk embezzlement ring. Get this, Exactly one week after
Postragan's death, a deputy head at rashatnv's parent company, ross
Cosmos was arrested for fraud, large scale fraud. It's alleged
(31:57):
by the state that he stole of four hundred million rubles.
That's over four million dollars. This guy's name is Oleg Frolov.
Along with two other accomplices, he stole money from budgets
that were allocated to purchase equipment. This is similar to
(32:18):
the brazen embezzlement of Reshetv's fake media contracts. At the
same time as all of this, another man named Yevgeny
Formachief was arrested for a different case of fraud roz Cosmos.
They're all at it. And then prior to this, there
(32:39):
were even more claims of corruption. Remember the Russian satellite
navigation system we mentioned earlier. The people running that accused
reshet Nev of purposely delayed joint operations in order to
quote suck in more money from the funding. Remember, the
(32:59):
satellite work has direct implications on the battlefield in Ukraine,
a very touchy subject for the Kremlin. So with all
these mounting issues, all fingers are pointed at the senior
accountant at the center of the scandal, Evgeny Postrogan. As
(33:20):
this house of Kurds falls apart, many elite Kremlin adjacent
professionals are headed for their day in court. It's fair
to assume, considering his role the Postragan would have had
a stack of evidence to maybe dig himself out of
this hole and cooperate with the case. But I guess
(33:42):
we'll never actually know. The man with his eyes on
the accounts as all of this fraud happened, is now
dead and dead men tell no tales. How incredibly convenient
for the acute us. You've been listening to sad Oliga
(34:17):
season two, produced by H eleven Studios for Cool Zone Media. Writing, editing, producing,
concept and recording by myself, Jake Hanrahan. Research and reporting
by Sergei Slipchenko, me and Victim Mihail. Executive producing by
(34:38):
Sophie Lichtman. Music by Sam Black, artwork by George Juteful,
sound mixed by Splicing Bloc. See my other projects at
Hanrahan dot tv. Get me on social media at Jake
under School Hanrahan.
Speaker 2 (34:56):
That's h A n R A h A.
Speaker 3 (35:00):
A cat like cot Ca canty
Speaker 4 (35:04):
Ca ca cas Catholic, Catholic