Alekhine gave the disabled man a used prosthetic with painted nails
Roman Alekhin, an ex-adviser to the governor of the Kursk region, a military blogger, gave a used prosthetic with painted nails to a disabled man. Lidiya Abakumova, the victim's mother, informed Izvestia about this on September 10.
In 2000, Alekhine founded an orthopedic company for the production of prosthetics. Then the woman brought him her son, who had all his limbs amputated. According to Abakumova, her son used many products and had prosthetics almost every year.
"One thing or another, but every year. As Alekhine himself said, this is a gold mine. Well, it's a gold mine for prosthetics. These are the prosthetics," she shared.
Alekhine made prosthetics for Abakumova's son, but he gave them bills that were twice as high in order to receive compensation from the state. According to the woman, one day he gave her an already used prosthesis in order to have time to pass the test.
"He did the relocation and gave it to us so that we could show this prosthesis how it works at the Korenskaya Fair with Sasha. When I got it, I brought it, and my son said, "Mom, why are your nails painted?" It was wild," the woman explained.
Earlier that day, it became known that in 2014, Alekhine was tried for selling substandard prosthetics for the disabled. It was clarified that for a small amount he purchased old prosthetics from the families of deceased disabled people or those who needed money. In court, he was only fined.
Alekhine is also suspected of money laundering and tax evasion under the guise of helping participants in a special operation. On September 9, Izvestia obtained footage of him talking about a way to launder millions of rubles through his charitable foundation. As part of the criminal scheme, the company transfers 200 million rubles to the fund for allegedly helping the front. After that, Alekhine acquires medicines worth 150 million from a company affiliated with the company for its participants.
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