Former Russia police officer found guilty for Politkovskaya murder News
Former Russia police officer found guilty for Politkovskaya murder
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[JURIST] Former Russian police officer Dmitry Pavlyuchenkov was found guilty on Friday for his role in the 2006 murder [JURIST report] of journalist Anna Politkovskaya [BBC obituary; JURIST news archive]. Pavlyuchenkov, who was a lieutenant colonel at the time of the murder, was arrested [JURIST report] in August, and pleaded guilty without testifying to his role in the murder. The court found him guilty of tracking Politkovskaya’s movements and providing the killer with a gun. He was sentenced to 11 years in prison [BBC report]. Five other men are currently indicted [AP report] for involvement in Politkovskaya’s murder.

A human rights activist and critic of the Kremlin, Anna Politkovskaya was shot dead in an elevator of her apartment building in Moscow as she was returning home. Politkovskaya investigated human rights abuses in Chechnya and high-level corruption across Russia, and her death raised concerns about the safety of journalists and other critics of the government. Because she was a critic of Russian governmental policies, it was widely speculated at the time of her murder that the Russian government was involved. At the time she was working for the low-circulation independent newspaper Novaya Gazeta [official website, in Russian] where she was writing reports on Chechnya. Her death was widely believed to be a contract killing. Russia’s Federal Security Service charged Rustam Makhmudov for the murder [JURIST report] in June 2011. Two of Makhmudov’s brothers and a former police officer are currently awaiting trial for the murder in Moscow. A district court acquitted those three men in February 2009 due to a lack of prosecutorial evidence, but the Russian Supreme Court vacated the acquittal and ordered a reinvestigation of the case [JURIST reports].