Hitman mercenary
The story of Alexander Druzhinin, a hitman from St. Petersburg who recently signed a contract with PMC Wagner and left for Ukraine ‘to do his thing for the good of the state’

Alexander Druzhinin was set to be released from prison in eight years at the minimum. He was deceived by the state before and did not believe he would have his term reduced after going to Ukraine for a few months. “I’ll go and take a walk in the fresh air. I’m sort of used to this kind of thing anyway...” he told his wife.
They were not afraid of prison as they knew Europe was like a holiday resort for them. They did not kill anyone, though. If Europol was a thing back then, using an integrated database, they would have been caught pretty soon.
Yakovlev listened to both sides and concluded that his men were beaten up in Kirovsk and took revenge on their attackers, which was fine in terms of the gang “rulebook” back then.
However, this legend was not confirmed. After two and a half years, Druzhinin changed his testimony and said the paymaster was Vladimir Kulibaba.
He was told to give 150,000 rubles to Druzhinin’s mother, leave some part of the money for an associate of Druzhinin’s, and to keep the rest (around $5,000).

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