Husband of Valentina Solovyova. Valentina Solovyova (Vlastilina) - biography, information, personal life. “...I need your help now! And I pray to God, as a true Russian Orthodox daughter, I must report not to the court and investigation, but to everyone and

Today, Moscow police clarified the details of the detention of the former owner of the “Lord” financial pyramid, Valentina Solovyova. A few days ago she was taken into custody again.

After her previous sentence, Solovyova was released on parole; she again, as in the early 90s, began selling cars at half price. And so as not to be recognized, she appeared in front of customers in a wig.

NTV correspondent Vladimir Kobyakov tells the details.

“Vlastelina” no longer exists, but there is the “Russian Merchant Fund”. Many people have heard about its president, Valentina Solovyova, in 1999. She was often shown on television news. After 6 years, only a few people recognize Solovyov.

Tatyana Koroleva, an employee of the press service of the Internal Affairs Directorate of the South-Eastern District of Moscow: “She changed wigs, changed hair color, changed her image in general, so it was very difficult to find her, to somehow recognize her.”

For former leader“Lords” and the current president of the “Merchant Fund” is already the fourth criminal case. The first time she was arrested was in 1995. Then investigators talked about 17 thousand defrauded investors and a trillion lost rubles. Now she has been arrested again: they suspect that she was building a new pyramid in Moscow.

Valentina Solovyova preferred the old proven scheme: in order to get a brand new “ten”, or even more than one, the client must first hand over five thousand dollars, and then bring two friends, who are obliged to shell out another five thousand dollars.

This time, Solovyova was let down by the fact that her client turned out to be an operational employee of the Moscow Criminal Investigation Department. He handed over the money, brought friends, but never received the car, and wrote a statement to the police.

The department for combating organized crime called this operation in the southeast of Moscow “Operational Experiment.” The experiment with Solovyova worked, but in the criminal case there is only one victim so far - policeman Yolkin.

Tatyana Koroleva, press officer of the Internal Affairs Directorate of the South-Eastern District of Moscow: “Citizen Yolkin and two young men came to the so-called deal, where Citizen Solovyova was present. They gave her another five thousand dollars. While handing over the money, citizen Solovyova was detained by the Organized Crime Control Department officers.”

Solovyova herself explains that policeman Yolkin’s money was spent on the development of the “Russian Merchant Fund”, and she will soon present all the documents.

Valentina Solovyova also wanted to reveal all the economic schemes during the investigation of the “Vlastelina” case. She argued that the depositors’ money was in one commercial bank, and she would definitely take it away.

Valentina Solovyova: “The money was not found, there is no money. This means that the pyramid took from some and gave to others. Is this so?

In 1999, the head of Vlastelina was sentenced to 7 years in prison, but after hearing the verdict, she promised not to forget about her clients, including Alla Pugacheva, who entrusted the company with 1 million 700 thousand dollars.

Valentina Solovyova: “Alla Borisovna, apparently, understood me very well, and is still confident that if I am free, I will settle accounts with her.”

Upon release, Solovyova returned to business. New company Interline promised cars for the price of a moped. Her clients again came to the prosecutor's office, but Solovyova proved that she had nothing to do with it. All documents were issued to a friend, Lyudmila Ivanovskaya, who is still wanted.

Once again the creator of “Lords” was detained a year ago. She again promised two Muscovites cars at half price. But Solovyova was released even then; the police did not have enough evidence. Now Valentina Solovyova is working with lawyers in the pre-trial detention center.

The fate of the legendary Sovereign

In the 90s, everyone brought money to Valentina Solovyova. They carried millions. And ordinary people and pop stars, including Pugacheva, Kirkorov, Rosenbaum, Shifrin. And she doubled, tripled these millions, and in a short time, it is not clear how. I kept the cash at home in ordinary diplomats. Thanks to this money, she opened any doors. Whatever they called her - both the swindler of the century and a giant pump for pumping money out of gullible people. Vlastelina (as the Belarusian grandmother with gypsy roots wanted to call Valentina) was included in the list of 100 greatest adventurers. On October 9, Valentina Solovyova came to the studio.

Valentina Solovyova created her financial pyramid "Vlastelina" in one of the most difficult periods our history. In a confident voice, she promised people both a car and a full life. This is what Valentina Ivanovna told Boris Korchevnikov: “I started with my own company “Dozator”. The bank gave a loan (one and a half billion rubles) for the construction of cottages. I concluded contracts, bought land (initially for 30 houses). The second site was already for 70 cottages. "I always worked in parallel. Therefore, I also sold furniture, chandeliers, refrigerators, cars. My husband was on business trips, two children, I had to somehow find a job."

Valentina Ivanovna was born on Sakhalin. I didn’t graduate from the university (I dropped out of a pedagogical university in my last year). With the words “happiness has come to you,” the determined Valentina entered the offices of the plant directors. She was ready to take away all the furniture that had already been made and leave orders for new ones. Everything is for cash. Soon business woman Sponsors appeared ready to help her. The money also went into investments. Monthly volume (incoming and outgoing) - trillion.

In 1994 alone, Valentina Solovyova sold 16,000 cars at half price. Where did the offended come from? People came, rented, received money or a car, and immediately rented again. Simple people they barely scraped enough money for one car, while some brought money for 50 or even 100 cars at once.

"I brought meat, stewed meat at half price, restored Agriculture, built pigsties, organized concerts with the participation of stars."

Valentina Ivanovna was about to be arrested, but she was still being given huge sums of money in both rubles and dollars. The last contribution from Pugacheva is $1,750,000. The singer brought the money a few days before her arrest. In return, she was supposed to receive the Forum cinema to create her own song theater. A month later, Valentina Solovyova promised to give back 3,500,000. “I asked to give me six months to a year to return everything and pay off. I wanted to implement everything myself, sell all the cottages and apartments in Moscow. Only I knew to whom and how much I owed. But what remains will be judged for that...”

In 1995, Solovyova was arrested, she was sitting in a common cell (47 people), all visits and transfers were prohibited. The husband, who remained free, committed suicide. Although Valentina Ivanovna is sure that he was killed. Two years later, only in 1999, Valentina was informed of the death of her husband and father (he died of a stroke). “For three days I just lay there, didn’t eat, didn’t drink, since then I just haven’t had any more tears...”

What was her main mistake? What broke her fate? Why did she handcuff her husband to the radiator? And why were the children categorically against filming the program? Revelations of the legendary "Lords" are in the program.

In the early 90s, Valentina Ivanovna Solovyova founded the Vlastilina company. The woman deceived tens of thousands of people. The damage from the fraudster’s actions amounted to more than 500 billion; in 1994, her criminal business collapsed.

Valentina Solovyova came to the studio of the “Actually” program with Dmitry Shepelev. The fraudster decided to repent to the people she deceived, and also to explain how the “Vlastilin” financial pyramid worked.

Solovyova's company was engaged in sales of low prices cars, apartments and mansions, as well as accepting deposits at high interest rates. At the program, the woman admitted that she wanted to help people. She set herself the goal of enriching the population. According to Valentina Ivanovna, she does not consider her business criminal, although she does not deny that she was patronized by thieves in law and officials working in the White House.

“I literally helped everyone, without exception. Why should I refuse if money comes from their side? Everyone wanted to get rich quickly,” the woman shared with experts and guests in the studio.

According to the victims, Solovyova adored the actors and often offered them free cars in exchange for advertising. As Yana Poplavskaya admitted, she also fell for Valentina Ivanovna’s bait.

“I bought a red “Seven” on preferential terms. They told me through word of mouth that “Vlastilina” loves actors very much,” the artist recalled.

The program expert asked Solovyova a number of questions, to which she gave false answers. The detector showed: the woman repeatedly deceived people, she was really in friendly relations with many crime bosses. Valentina Ivanovna was often invited to “gatherings.”

“I had 650 billion. These were funds from the Vlastilina company,” Solovyova said.

The scammer noted that she only feels guilty for not being able to help people and not saving their invested money. "Not ashamed. It’s my fault that I still failed to protect money and people. I repent, these are not just words, not only in front of you. My repentance was also in the churches,” Solovyova said. The fraudster promised to come to the affected people who came to the program in the Moscow region and try to make amends.

At the end of the program, the woman said that while she was in prison, her husband died. According to the fraudster, this is punishment for her crimes.

“He was left alone when I was imprisoned. He was addicted to vodka and tried to meet me. I told him: “Lenya, divorce me,” Solovyova told the guests and experts of the talk show. The man did not wait for Lyudmila Ivanovna and hanged himself.

More than 16 thousand defrauded investors. The damage, according to various estimates, amounted to up to 2 trillion. rubles These are brief summary activities of entrepreneur Valentina Solovyova, founder of the notorious financial pyramid, sonorously called “Vlastilina”.

Valentina Ivanovna Solovyova(nee Samoilova) was born in 1951 on Sakhalin, where her mother worked in logging, and her father underwent emergency medical work. military service. Ivan served and, leaving his wife and daughter, went to Kuibyshev (now Samara), but received a scolding from his parents for this, and soon the whole family ended up in Kuibyshev, where they lived until the mid-1980s. In the late 80s, the family moved to Ivanteevka, near Moscow, to her husband’s homeland.

Solovyova could not boast of any special education - her “universities” amounted to eight years and a year at the Kuibyshev Pedagogical College (she was expelled in 1970 for poor academic performance).

A criminal masterpiece. For some time, Valentina worked as a cashier in a small hairdressing salon.

In the early 90s, Valentina Ivanovna was hired as a police agent to uncover illegal gold traders. They assigned her the role of buyer, gave her money and sent her to work. She disappeared. This was her first experience in the field of fraud.

In the late 80s, her first husband opened the Dozator company in Ivanteevka, repaired and adjusted equipment at agricultural enterprises, and Valentina was a supplier. In 1991, in Lyubertsy, she registered her own trade and purchasing company, “Dispenser”, and began to engage in trade and intermediary operations.

In November 1992, Solovyova moved to Podolsk and opened the private enterprise “Vlastilina” there (in some media the name is written with an “e”: “Vlastelina”).

The Podolsk individual private enterprise "Vlastilina" began with the sale of consumer goods produced at the Podolsk Electromechanical Plant: Solovyova entered into a cooperation agreement with its director.

Soon she took up the construction of a financial pyramid. The first “clients” were the workers of the above-mentioned plant and a few employees of Vlastilina itself.

Valentina Ivanovna offered the employees of her company to give her 3,900,000 rubles each in order to receive a Moskvich in a week, which at that time cost 8,000,000. And she really fulfilled these promises. The fame of the lucky ones, and then of Solovyova herself, spread throughout Russia. The advertising had its effect, and money from numerous new investors began flowing to Solovyova.

But for them, the time frame for receiving cars was already different - first a month, then three, and then six months. The scammer calmly took the money, promising to return it along with fabulous interest (200% per annum!). For those who were in no hurry to withdraw their deposits after the agreed time, Solovyova also offered to purchase cars and apartments in Moscow and the Moscow region at a price almost half the price of the most modest car dealership.

But at the same time, the amount of the minimum contribution to such a profitable enterprise should have been at least 50 million rubles.

The work of the “Lords” pyramid was well established: money flowed like a river and not only from the cities of Russia, but also from Ukraine, Belarus and Kazakhstan. But it was different from other similar fraudulent companies. Here the emphasis was placed primarily on collective investors. The calculation turned out to be correct. The number of "Lords" clients grew at an astonishing rate. People mortgaged apartments and dachas, got into debt and took Solovyova’s money.

In the early 90s, no one could imagine that a simple cashier at a Podolsk hair salon, Valentina Solovyova, would ever become the richest woman in the country. People gave “Vlastelina” every penny. Moreover, there are many celebrities among them: Alla Pugacheva, Nadezhda Babkina, as well as influential officials and major bandits.

She could casually say to a client who came for a payment: “Here, take it from the box!” And I didn't check. There were no financial records - only receipts to investors for the amounts deposited. A billion more or less - what a difference! Huge amounts of money were spent on charity events. There were concerts in Podolsk almost every day. Many celebrities have been there. Even crime calmed down: while the company was operating, investing was more profitable than robbing!

The operation scheme of “Lords” was typical: the owners received money from new investors, kept part of the collected amount for themselves, and the rest went to pay those who donated earlier. This pattern was repeated daily.

The collapse of the "pyramid". But in the fall of 1994, the well-functioning mechanism of the pyramid began to shake. Payments began to occur intermittently. Investors were explained that due to temporary difficulties in this moment there is no money, but there will definitely be some later. People waited because they had no other choice.

At the beginning of October 1994, the tax inspectorate, which had been monitoring Solovyova for a long time, began its own investigation. It turned out that the company, which had billions in turnover, had virtually no serious accounting or an accurate register of all its investors. There was simply no need for this, since Solovyova knew that the pyramid would soon collapse.

On October 7, 1994, the Podolsk prosecutor's office opened a criminal case accusing the Vlastelina company of fraud. Solovyova hid from the investigation.

The Moscow Rubopovites and the leaders of the Podolsk group were the first to find their bearings. Both of them sent their people to Solovyova’s office to rescue the money. The teams arrived at the office at the same time. Everything threatened a serious shootout, but the battle did not happen. The Podolskys gave in to the police: there was still little money. The group, according to some sources, lost more than three hundred thousand dollars. However, the bandits decided not to take revenge on Valentina. But their other “colleagues” made a different decision. A wave of murders swept across the country. The reason is the non-refund of money lost in "Lord".

Hiding from the investigation, Solovyova gave interviews, promising to pay everyone off. With the help of deputy Konstantin Borovoy, she even managed to collect another 12 billion rubles and pay off 550 clients. Soon she was found.

Valentina Solovyova was arrested on July 7, 1995 by FSB officers and sent to the Kapotnya pre-trial detention center on charges of defrauding 16.6 thousand investors in the amount of 536.6 billion rubles and $2.67 million. However, Solovyova herself claims that she should more than 1 trillion. rubles 28 thousand investors.

But it still remains unknown where all the money went. Solovyova’s own property was valued at 18 million rubles, plus a small two-room apartment on Ryazansky Prospekt in Moscow, registered in the name of her husband. Another two-room apartment belonged to her daughter. For L.V. Solovyov also owns a used Moskvich-2141, the same one that was used to mainly transport bags and boxes of money.

There are also apartments in Moscow in that police inventory:

    a nine-room apartment on Sretensky Boulevard worth $400,000;

    three three-room apartments near the Belorussky railway station for $120,000 each;

    four two-room apartments in Mitino and Northern Butovo for $59,000 each.

IN total the seized property amounted to 3% of the debt amount. The location of the rest of the money will apparently remain a mystery.

While in prison, Solovyova began to list her patrons, including 23 law enforcement officers who took part in the investigation of the case. A scandal arose. Generals and colonels were interrogated. When she was called in for questioning, and this was a hundred meters from where she was sitting, she was transported in a special vehicle under the protection of riot police. The car would stop so that she would be straight out of the van and into the room. They were afraid that suddenly snipers had settled in the houses surrounding the prison and wanted to free the prisoner. During each interrogation, “Vlastelina” kept calling out the names of government officials who allegedly “laundered” money in her company. During the investigation, it turned out that Solovyova, referring to big names, was bluffing. The media wrote that she eats caviar with spoons in her cell and wears fur coats for interrogations. But the fur coat appeared in court with the permission of the investigator. And in the cell she ate only prison rations.

The trial of "Vlastelina" began on March 30, 1996. The investigation and trial lasted five years. In 1999, Valentina Ivanovna Solovyova was sentenced to seven years in prison with confiscation of property for fraud on an especially large scale. Valentina did not admit her guilt...

Valentina Ivanovna Solovyova will leave prison in just over a year. On October 17, 2000, she was released early for “exemplary behavior.” The reason for the early release of Valentina Solovyova was, among other things, a petition from the trade union of entrepreneurs of the Moscow region.

For the same rake. Upon release, Solovyova immediately creates a new “pyramid”. In the winter of 2002, in Podolsk, she became the owner of Interline CJSC, buying it for 100 thousand rubles. controlling stake. Retired military doctor Evgeniy Ivanov was appointed general director. A few months later he was replaced in this post by a certain Lyudmila Ivanovskaya.

As noted in the Ministry of Internal Affairs, Interline worked according to the same scheme as Vlastilina - customers were offered new cars for 50% of their price with a delay of receipt for a month. Buyers were told that Interline works directly with car factories and therefore does not have to pay extra money to intermediaries. The number of Solovyova’s clients, according to the most conservative estimates, was about 4 thousand people. The Podolsk prosecutor's office decided not to wait for the collapse of another pyramid and in the spring of 2002 opened a criminal case for fraud. True, Solovyova appeared in it only as a witness, since she was not formally the head of the company. At the same time, the tax police began an investigation into Interline’s failure to pay taxes amounting to 1 million rubles.

However, Valentina Solovyova was not at all embarrassed by the close interest of the special services. First, she opened a division of Interline in Tula, and then moved her office, which began to operate under the guise of the Charitable Merchant Fund, to the intersection of the Moscow Ring Road and Entuziastov Highway. People were allowed in there who either came on recommendation, or those who had already invested in Interline and Interline-Tula. It was explained to clients that Solovyova was still able to supply cheap cars, but the police were constantly hindering her. When the visitor was “ripe,” he was asked to pay another $1,500 in addition to the money already given, and in a month he could supposedly receive the long-awaited car. Despite the fact that Solovyova left this office, according to operatives, she almost immediately opened several new ones.

As for criminal cases, at first they were investigated successfully. More than a hundred applicants who suffered from Interline’s actions contacted the Podolsk police department; Solovyova herself was interrogated more than once by both police officers and FSNP officers. But then the “tax” case was suspended due to the “impossibility of identifying persons subject to liability,” and after the liquidation of the Federal Tax Service these materials were completely lost. The investigation into the fraud has stalled due to the need to conduct a mass of examinations. Later, this case was taken over from the Podolsk Internal Affairs Directorate by the Investigative Department of the Moscow Region Main Internal Affairs Directorate, which put Solovyova and Ivanovskaya on the wanted list. The case itself has so far been suspended under Art. 208 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of the Russian Federation, since “the accused fled from the investigation.” However, the Ministry of Internal Affairs noted that the case itself is being investigated poorly, and the Moscow region police are doing little to search for Solovyova.

In August 2005, Valentina Solovyova told the press that she was closing her company. Few people know what will happen to the money that has already been transferred to her. In any case, Solovyova promises to return everything with machines.

Back behind bars. On October 3, 2005, Valentina Solovyova was arrested for the second time on suspicion of fraud.

And this time she decided to build a pyramid according to the same pattern as before. She offered to make a contribution, promising that the person would soon become the owner of a car. For 5 thousand dollars you will get a brand new “ten”. True, on one condition: the future owner must find two more buyers like him. I found clients right on the street.

“Citizen Yolkin brought two more people. They also gave 5 thousand dollars each, that is, another 10 thousand dollars. At the moment of transferring the money, we detained Solovyov,” said an employee of the press service of the South-Eastern Internal Affairs Directorate administrative district Moscow Tatyana Koroleva.

The new case involves only a few victims. One of them claims that eight months ago, in the premises of a beauty salon on Znamenskie Sadki Street, he gave Valentina Solovyova 5 thousand dollars to purchase a VAZ-2112, but still has not received the car.

The second victim in July of this year, in a car service center on Polyany Street, gave her 7.5 thousand dollars to buy a Chevy Niva car. However, the police believe that there will be many more defrauded investors.

Ms. Solovyova herself claims that in both episodes incriminated against her, it was not she who took money from the applicants, but Lyudmila Ivanovskaya. This woman is also well known law enforcement agencies and is wanted.

But she failed to place the blame on Mrs. Ivanovskaya. The receipts given to both victims in exchange for money actually contained the surname “Ivanovskaya,” but, according to the conclusion of handwriting experts, the signatures were put by Valentina Solovyova.

The court decided to take the fraudster into custody. Now the ruler of financial pyramids is in one of the Moscow pre-trial detention centers. And at this time, the investigation is trying to find those who could still have suffered from Solovyova’s actions.

Family. In 1970, she married citizen Shkapin and gave birth to a son and daughter. In the late 80s she moved to Moscow. She got divorced and got married again – this time to a certain Leonid Solovyov.

After Solovyova’s first arrest, her husband served six months, taking upon himself the pistol found during a search of his beloved wife. And when he came out and found out that in her business plan there was a line “get divorced and go to the USA,” out of grief he started drinking and hanged himself. The son, daughter and granddaughter are still hiding somewhere, without having, according to investigators, a penny.

Founder of the Vlastelina company, which worked on the principle of a pyramid. It offered investors cars, apartments and mansions at low prices. Towards the end of her short career, she switched to deposits - she simply collected money, promising huge interest rates. She also ranked herself among the saints.

For a long time, car enthusiasts will not be able to forget the legendary Podolsk company, whose cars, if you believe the rumors that spread in 1994, drove at best half of Moscow! From which they took brand new Volgas and Zhigulis to their homeland in other regions of Russia - dozens, hundreds of happy customers.

But in fact there was an automobile company from Podolsk, which for some time supplied the first investors with cars.

The example of “Vlastelina,” as the Podolsk office was called, was immediately followed by other businessmen who also decided to make big money. Fortunately, the client was in full swing, wanting to get a brand new car almost for free.

It must be said that the representatives of “Vlastelina” very competently thought through the entire scam from beginning to end. They immediately spared no expense on a powerful advertising campaign. Newspapers and television invited clients to the “Vlastelina” apartments every day. And literally the next day, the first people who wanted to buy a new car for half or even a third of its real cost were already crowding around the doors of the company. And when the first car enthusiasts, having paid 2,000 dollars for an Oka and 4,000 for a Zhiguli in one month, received their iron horses, Podolsk suddenly became the New Vasyuki of car sales. There were already kilometer-long queues on the streets. For those who missed the advertisements in newspapers, neighbors and acquaintances told about miracles.

Immediately believing in the fairy tale about the magic carpet, not only ordinary peasants and workers, who had been saving for Moskvich or Zaporozhets for years, rushed to Podolsk, but also businessmen, pop stars, employees of the Ministry of Internal Affairs and even the Federal Grid Company. The company's daily turnover has reached an unprecedented figure - about 100 billion rubles!

I didn’t have to wait long for sobering up. Already at the end of 1994, the supply of cars to customers ended. This is understandable, because criminal organization acted like a pyramid. And, of course, ordinary investors were left behind.

On October 7, 1994, a criminal case was opened against the head of the company, Valentina Solovyova, on two counts - concealment of tax income and fraud. On October 20, Solovyova and her family disappeared. And she was arrested only in June 1995. Speaking about her debts to investors, Solovyova admitted the amount of 4 trillion (!) rubles. In order to release the madam from behind bars, her lawyers proposed to the investigation that the accused be released on bail of 1 trillion rubles. Naturally, the collateral is the same money from investors. But investigators suggested that she transfer these funds to the account of the depositors' association. But what kind of fool would part with that kind of money, even if he faces quite a decent sentence? Moreover, the case acquired more and more new details. And it turned out that the owner of “Vlastelina” regularly paid sums amounting to up to 10 percent of the funds she received into the common fund of Moscow criminal groups. And further. The investigation found that the car business also involved public services. Among them, according to the defendant, are not only people from the presidential administration and the government of the Russian Federation, but also the FSK service, the Ministry of Internal Affairs, the prosecutor's office, and the court. There is no doubt that the “Lords” case will still excite the public long years, as well as the scams of similar companies.

After the arrest of the owner of “Vlastelina,” Alla Pugacheva’s passport was found in her safe.
There, the detectives found either a receipt or a certificate stating that the “living legend” of the stage had handed over to the “Vlastelina” company a very a large amount money. Why she put them there is not stated. And so it is clear to everyone. “Vlastelina”, or rather its owner - Mrs. Solovyova - not only in Russia, but also in our country, played the role of that very beautiful “bedside table”, in which if you once put it, then for a very long time you can take money without an account.

The police, they say, returned Alla Borisovna’s passport quickly, but not the money. Valentina Ivanovna Solovyova, although she now considers herself a saint, has always been a simple woman. She stored billions of rubles and many thousands of dollars in rough gunny bags, then in cardboard packaging boxes for cigarettes and televisions.

And she lived, already a billionaire, in a modest, small two-room apartment. As for hairstyles, I preferred the most common six-month perm. Despite her considerable size, she loved pies, Lurex sweaters and soulful songs performed by famous artists. She especially respected Nadezhda Babkina, to whom, they say, she once became emotional and gave a Mercedes 600.

"I am the rich woman Russia, but I am pure before God and people,” Valentina Solovyova assured the court. She came to the trial as if to a theatrical performance - wearing expensive fur coats and diamonds. Some people in the audience laughed from her: “I respect myself so much that I call myself “You” and by my first name and patronymic - Valentina Ivanovna!”

Were the psychiatrists right when they diagnosed her with delusions of grandeur? Doesn’t a woman have the right to be considered the greatest fraudster of the century, from whose activities 16.5 thousand citizens suffered, and the damage exceeded 530 million rubles and 2.5 million dollars?

At the trial, Valentina told fables: that she graduated from the Music and Pedagogical School, the Samara Pedagogical Institute, American courses for financiers, legal courses of the RSFSR Prosecutor's Office, higher courses of the Gypsy theater "Romen". Although it is reliably known that she completed eight classes and one course at a teacher training college, from where she was expelled for poor academic performance.
Having rewinded her sentence, today Valentina Solovyova is again “walking” in freedom, causing the close attention of those whom the “Vlastelina”, to put it bluntly, “shod.” Time will tell how the owner of the pyramid will return the loot. In the meantime, government agencies admit that when protecting their money, citizens will have to rely only on their economic knowledge, instinct of self-preservation and basic common sense.



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