The most expensive tombstones of crime bosses. Alley of “Heroes” at Khovanskoye Cemetery



At the Shirokorechenskoye cemetery, located on the southwestern outskirts Ekaterinburg, many found their final refuge famous personalities cities: folk artists, scientists, heroes of World War II. But in one of the sections of the cemetery you can see unusual tombstones. They depict respectable men in expensive suits and leather jackets, with gold chains and tattoos. These extravagant monuments belong to crime bosses and their entourage, who were killed during gang warfare in the dashing 90s.




After the breakup Soviet Union anarchy set in in Russia and other former republics. The rapid transition to a market economy has led to dramatic growth organized crime. The line between legal and illegal has been virtually erased.





Yekaterinburg became the center of gang wars. The organized crime group Uralmash was engaged in a showdown for control over the leading enterprises of the city with another organized crime group, which called itself “Center”. During these clashes, many people were killed.







To honor the memory of the murdered “brothers,” criminal elements began to order pretentious tombstones for their graves. On granite slabs in full height typical authorities of the nineties were depicted: in leather jackets, with thick gold chains. On some monuments you can see Mercedes or golden domes in the background. In some places you can even read not only the names of the dead, but also their “combat skills.” For example, "expert knife throwing" or "master of deadly fist combat."





Some tombstones depict women who took an equally active part in gang wars in the 90s.

The graves there are painted with all the colors of the rainbow.

The Khovanskoye cemetery is located near Moscow and adjoins the remote metropolitan district of Solntsev, which until recently was considered to be located near Moscow. The Khovanskoye Cemetery is the largest cemetery in Europe, but finding the alley where the leaders of the Orekhovskaya organized crime group are buried is not particularly difficult. It is located in a new section of the cemetery. The fact that the “godfathers” of the criminal south of Moscow are buried here, in my opinion, transparently hints at a close connection with the famous Solntsevo “brothers”, at their common criminal roots. Indeed, sometimes the relationships of individual persons are so intertwined that it is difficult to understand which of them is “Orekhovsky” and which one is “Solntsevsky”. It is curious that almost all the graves front sides Tombstones and busts are turned with their backs to the pedestrian alley, thereby emphasizing the shady, criminal lifestyle of the deceased. It remains to add that all other “Orekhovites” are buried in Vvedensky, Danilovsky, Kotlyakovsky and Shcherbinsky cemeteries.

Anticipating your appropriate sarcastic grins about the pompous monuments in the churchyard, Orthodox symbols, I want to remind you that on Red Square in his Mausoleum for many decades lies a man who, during his short term as head of state, managed to ruin and destroy, for example, hard-working peasants in the name of utopian ideals and personal ambitions. As a gift from grateful descendants, the author of the cry “Take and divide!” received a permanent residence permit at the foot of the Kremlin, and the untimely peace of his sidekicks, tightly packed in the Kremlin wall, is guarded day and night by sentries. This seems to bother almost no one: they’ve already gotten used to it. What happens dear comrades? A bandit and a murderer killed ten, but a great leader and teacher killed millions?

As a supplement, there is a video in which Valery Karyshev somehow explains who is who in the Orekhovsk mafia:

Sergei Ivanovich Timofeev (1955-1994) nicknamed Sylvester does not need any special introduction. In fact, this entire site is dedicated to his activities.

Grigory Evgenievich Gusyatinsky (1959-1995) - founder of the Medvedkovskaya organized crime group. In the early nineties, during Sylvester’s life, the group did not play a very independent role, but was a kind of North Moscow branch of the Orekhovskaya organized crime group. Gusyatinsky was involved in various kinds sensitive cases such as organizing the high-profile murder of Otari Kvantrishvili. When Sylvester was blown up in September 1994, Gusyatinsky again headed the Medvedkov group, but not for long. In January 1995, in Kyiv, Grisha was shot by his subordinate - the hired killer Alexey Sherstobitov, nicknamed Lesha Soldat, the direct executor of the order for Kvantrishvili. Apparently, Sherstobitov was afraid that he knew too much about the biography of Sylvester’s bait and therefore decided to fix the problem. Speaking about Gusyatinsky’s personality, for some reason I recall the words of the same Lesha Soldat about how Gusyatinsky ordered his subordinates to be killed for the slightest mistake. For example, he ordered one to be killed because a champagne cork got into him, and another because he refused to carry his wife’s bag. Since it is customary to say good or nothing about the dead, we will remain silent.

Stella on the graves of a prominent figure in the group, Alexander Garishin, nicknamed Sasha Ryzhiy (he did not like his other nickname - Screw), who was part of Sylvester's inner circle from the moment of his release from Tver Correctional Colony No. 1 (in the jargon "weaving"), and his younger comrade Vladimir Baklanov (1968-1996) nicknamed Cucumber.

Sergei Taraskin (1951-1992), wrestling coach sports school“Kuntsevo”, a kind of debutant in the alley of “heroes”, occupied a prominent place in the brigade of Sergei Kruglov, nicknamed Seryozha Boroda, who in turn was a personal friend of Sylvester. It is known that the latter studied karate at that sports school in the seventies, and therefore probably knew Taraskin. This is evidenced by other signs: Timofeev’s grave is adjacent to Taraskin’s grave, and those who buried Sylvester - and he was the third in the alley - for some reason placed the authority next to Taraskin, and not somewhere else.

Sergei Taraskin died in the famous massacre in Butovo on May 6, 1992, when several Moscow region and Moscow groups came together to fight: on the one hand, the Balashikha group (leader German Starostin, born in 1963, nickname Gera), on the other hand, the Podolsk group ( leader Sergei Lalakin, born in 1955, nickname Luchok), Chekhov (leader Nikolai Pavlinov, born in 1957, nickname Pavlin), as well as three Moscow groups - Anton, Petrik and Seryozha Boroda.

From operational information: “Taraskin’s funeral took place at the Khovanskoye cemetery. All members of Beard's group gathered. Participants in the gathering were armed with short-barreled machine guns. The militants on duty at the entrances radioed about the appearance of strangers. Thieves in law and authorities arrived at the cemetery. They recommended stopping the bloodshed and deciding peacefully. The participants in the gathering agreed, but the leader of the “Balashikha people” Starostin and his closest connection Sukhoi, as well as the Lyubertsy leaders Sam and Mani who supported them, were sentenced to death. Seryozha Boroda took upon himself the execution of the action.”

The name Taraskin is still well known among professional athletes. On December 12-14, 2014, an open All-Russian Greco-Roman wrestling tournament was held in the Sports Complex of the Olympic Village - 80 in Moscow, dedicated to the memory of the USSR Master of Sports Sergei Taraskin.

Sergei Vladimirovich Kotov, nicknamed Kot, was among authoritative people Orekhovskaya group, knew Sergei Ivanovich Timofeev personally. Andrei Viktorovich Mikhailov, nicknamed Fantik, was a member of the brigade from 1993 to 1996, and when the latter was killed, he began working with Kot.

On March 1, 1997, Kotov and Mikhailov went to a routine meeting, apparently with someone they knew well and, leaving their wives in the restaurant, expected to return in an hour, but disappeared. About five days later, the car they left in (an armored Mercedes 140) was found in one of the parking lots with broken bulletproof glass. The guys were found a week later in the forest, it seems, on the fortieth kilometer of the Kyiv highway...

Alexander Loginov, nicknamed Bul (1977-2001), was seen in the company of Igor Smirnov (Bear), and it seems that he was somehow involved in, since he was buried nearby. It wasn’t the bullet that killed the bullet, it was the drugs that killed it. At the beginning of the 2000s, shooting in Orekhovo-Borisovo generally subsided.

Nikolai Pavlovich Vetoshkin (1961-1998) was part of Sylvester’s inner circle, but he was involved mainly in “dirty” work. They met back in the eighties, when Vetoshkin worked as a loader in an Orekhovsk store and had the opportunity to get alcohol during Gorbachev’s anti-alcohol campaign.

After the murder of the boss, a fire broke out real war in the south of Moscow; The once cohesive group began to split into separate brigades, one of which was headed by Vetoshkin. When the district authority Dvoechnik was shot, in 1996-1998. Vetoshkin actually became the main bandit of the southern outskirts of Moscow. Since Nikolai Palych often resorted to the traditional means of resolving controversial situations, namely shooting, by the end of the decade he managed to make a lot of enemies. Extraordinary precautions and an armored Mercedes did not save him from the natural end - execution from a Kalashnikov assault rifle.

Vladislav Albertovich Gorpishchenko, nicknamed Garp (1965-1994). Nikolai Modestov: “...Near his own apartment, one of the promising fighters, Garpishchenko (nickname Garp), was found dead. The killer fired a single shot to the head from the PM...” Garp was killed while Sylvester was still alive, in August 1994, and he became second in the alley after Taraskin.

Sergei Nikolaevich Volodin (1969-1996), nicknamed Dragon, was killed under circumstances unknown to me. According to one version, the Kurgan people dealt with him for the debts of Sergei Ivanovich. It is possible that the killer was Alexander Solonik.

Sergei Dmitrievich Ananyevsky (1962-1996) nicknamed Kultik, honored coach of Russia in powerlifting (powerlifting), champion of the USSR in 1991, first president of the Powerlifting Federation in Russia and part-time... Orekhov’s authority.

Ananyevsky is more often mentioned as the mastermind of the murder of Otari Kvantrishvili. Shot during the power struggle that followed the Sylvester bombing in early March 1996 near the US Embassy on Novinsky Boulevard. According to one version, the murder was committed by “Kurgan people.”

The graves of Volodin and Ananyevsky are united, which speaks of the joint affairs of the deceased and, possibly, friendship.

The usual story for the 1990s: the parents of the “brothers” sometimes outlived their children for decades.

In addition to fat pieces of property, they were in a hurry to stake their claim on prestigious plots in city cemeteries. For all their coolness, the brothers understood that a person is mortal, and today you are the king of life, and tomorrow you are a corpse. After all, people were killed often and regularly in those days. So entire blocks of “authoritative” graves appeared in city cemeteries. Until the 90s of the last century, the funeral of a thief in law differed from ordinary ones only in the number of people who came to honor his memory. Otherwise, everything is the same as everyone else’s: a standard coffin, wreaths, grave, metal monument or, at best, marble. But when the country began to rule the roost, everything changed.

In the early 90s, it was not even thieves who set the criminal tone, but “authoritative” entrepreneurs and “athletes.” These could include the Kvantrishvili brothers - and. The eldest, Amiran, in his youth, made friends with gamblers and became a card player. The younger one was engaged in wrestling, but following the example of his older brother, he also became involved in crime. In the 80s, despite the absence of the title “”, the Kvantrishvili brothers had the same weight at gatherings as the generals of the criminal world. And in the early 90s they were already dollar millionaires, communicating on equal terms with major officials.

Vagankovskoye Cemetery - authorities

But it was precisely this force that caused their death. On August 6, 1993, Amiran Kvantrishvili, together with thief in law Fedya Besheny, was shot dead in an office on Dimitrova Street in Moscow. A year later, a killer, now well-known to everyone, cut short the life of his brother, chairman of the Lev Yashin Athletes Fund, Otari, near the Krasnopresnensky Baths. Then even Russian President Boris Yeltsin sent condolences to the family of the deceased. It is not surprising that Otari’s funeral was attended by a huge crowd of people.

People such as Joseph Kobzon, Archil Gomiashvili, Ivan Yarygin and others came to honor his memory. The brothers were buried at the prestigious and long-closed Vagankovskoe cemetery. Their grave at the main entrance has long become a landmark of the churchyard. A huge angel with a mournful face reaches out to two granite tablets on which the names of the brothers are inscribed. For the uninformed, it is worth noting that the monument is not just a hack job by an unknown master, but a work belonging to the chisel of the famous sculptor Vyacheslav Klykov. Among his works is a monument to Cyril and Methodius, Marshal Zhukov, Ivan Bunin, Dmitry Donskoy and other celebrities.

The Vagankovsky churchyard became the last refuge for the authority - the head of the most powerful organized crime group in Ryazan, Viktor Airapetov. On November 19, 1995, on Rublevskoye Highway, Airapetov’s car was stopped by fake riot police and taken away by mafiosi in an unknown direction.

His charred corpse was later identified by his wife. Although experts insist that it was a staged act, the black granite obelisk with a massive fence claims that this is where the leader of the criminal Ryazan is buried. However, there are rumors that already in the 2000s, Vitya came here in person and even laid flowers at his monument.

Khovanskoye Cemetery - authorities

Another pillar of organized crime in the 90s can be considered the founder of the Orekhovskaya organized crime group, nicknamed Sylvester. Officially, he died on September 13, 1994 as a result of the explosion of a Mercedes Benz 600SEC from a radio-controlled land mine. Sylvester was buried at the Khovanskoye cemetery in Moscow, traditional for the Orekhovskys. His black marble monument is made in the form of a huge bas-relief of the crucified Christ. Above is a photo of Timofeev and an Orthodox cross.

Grave of Timofeev Sergei - Sylvester

On back side- an image of the Virgin Mary, and below the epitaph: “Hurry up to admire man, for you will miss the joy...”. Compared to the monuments of deceased colleagues, Sylvester’s tombstone is quite modest. It is possible that the grave contains the remains of another person who was burned almost to ashes in the explosion. After all, no one carried out DNA testing in those years.

There, on Khovansky, there is the grave of the right hand of Sylvester, the founder - Grigory Gusyatinsky. Once a KGB officer, he became one of the prominent authorities in Moscow and did not disdain the bloodiest work. In January 1995, in Kyiv, Gusyatinsky was liquidated by the same Alexey Sherstobitov, better known in criminal circles under the nickname Lesha Soldier. The obelisk of Gusyatinsky is a black marble stele on which the sculptor carved the face of the deceased. It can be seen there female hand, reaching out to a face bowed in sorrow.

In addition to Timofev and Gusyatinsky, on the “alley of heroes” of the Khovanskoye cemetery lie several dozen more brothers from the “Orekhovsky” and allied groups. Their graves are easy to distinguish by their black marble, pompous inscriptions and photographs of the deceased.

In addition to the gang from the 90s, the last pillar of crime, thief in law No. 1 Aslan Usoyan, nicknamed , is also buried on Khovanskoye. He managed to build the most extensive criminal empire. But not all thieves recognized Hassan as the leader. On January 16, 2013, another attempt was made on his life, which ended in the death of the authority. Relatives wanted to bury Usoyan in Tbilisi, but the Georgian authorities refused to accept the plane with his body. As a result, the thief was buried on Khovanskoye.

A permanent monument to authority appeared on the grave only a year and a half after the funeral. It consists of two black marble steles with epitaphs and years of life, between which stands a sculpture of Usoyan. The monument was made by the talented sculptor Aram Grigoryan, who created monuments to the first cartographer of Siberia Remizov and academician Marchuk.

The monument to another iconic thief, . Ivankov missed the dashing 90s, hanging out. But when he returned to his homeland in 2005, he began to actively interfere in the course of the thieves’ processes. Speaking on the side of Aslan Usoyan, Yaponchik still remained an independent and strong figure. Therefore, it did not suit many people. As a result, on July 28, 2009, while leaving the restaurant, Ivankov was wounded by a sniper, and on October 9, 2009, he died.

The authority was buried in front of a huge crowd of people at the Vagankovskoye cemetery. Despite the fact that times were already different, Ivankov’s mother was buried in the cemetery and he had the right to be buried next to her. The monument to the deceased also did not appear at the grave immediately. Nevertheless, he makes passers-by pay attention to him. Against the background of a three-meter block with a cross, an intelligent-looking man sits and looks into the distance. Local old-timers take people to the thief’s grave for a small fee. Provincial mafiosi often come here. There are always fresh flowers in a vase on the stove, and Ivankov likes to leave a glass of vodka in his hand. Others lay under his foot banknote. They say it's for good luck.

Bandit Cemetery of Yekaterinburg

It is worth noting that the province is not inferior to the capital in the pomp of thieves’ and bandits’ obelisks. In Yekaterinburg, the capital of the Urals, many authoritative people died in the 90s. The main ones are the founders, the famous and their protege. Now these people lie in the Northern Cemetery of the city. The first to be shot in 1991 was the founder of the organized crime group Grigory Tsyganov, then in 1993 the Uralmash authority Sergei Ivannikov died. And in 2005, the leader of the group, Alexander Khabarov, was found hanged in a jail cell.

All three authorities are buried nearby, on the central alley of the churchyard. Their monuments are made in the style of busts of party leaders buried near the Kremlin wall. The people nicknamed this place “three heads,” although today’s youth no longer know who these people are.

Banykinskoe cemetery - bandits

Another famous bandit graveyard is the Banykinskoye cemetery in Togliatti. In the mid-90s, a real one unfolded in the motor city. Bandits died here by the dozens a day, and the cemetery gates were almost never closed. The lads were buried depending on their rank. Thus, the central alley of the churchyard is occupied by the graves of the leaders and foremen of numerous organized crime groups: the Bukreev brothers.

The Banykinskoe cemetery amazes not so much with the pathos of the obelisks, but with the mass of burials. By the way, among these fallen gangsters you can hardly find those who lived to see
thirty. At the moment, the Tolyatti authorities are thinking about organizing a tourist route to the Banykinskoye cemetery under the sign “Tolyatti - Russian Chicago.” However, similar burials can be found in the cemetery of any large city Russia, because the dashing 90s left unhealed wounds on the body of the entire country.

“Why are you photographing these criminals, their hands are up to their elbows in blood...” said an old woman passing by and, leaning on a stick, hobbled along the cemetery path. Even without this grandmother, the history of the criminal Urals is not a completely alien topic to me. My family faced the gangster chaos of the early nineties, and the abbreviation OPS Uralmash left a painful scar in the memory of tens of thousands of residents of Yekaterinburg and the region as a whole. Hundreds of corpses, blood, pain, violence, drugs. But this is part of the history of modern Russia and I do not think that it should be forgotten as horrible dream. On the contrary, it is important to remember so that something like this never happens again. In the two cemeteries of the city, on Shirokorechnsky and Severny, you will find entire alleys with strange pretentious monuments and tombstones, where guys in leather jackets, with Mercedes keys in their hands and the obligatory cross indicating their supposedly exceptional piety, are depicted, which are not entirely understandable in our time. They all died young, and the years of death are almost always 1993-1995. Only on three graves the ending was put down later, in 2005, and we will talk about this separately.

After the collapse of the USSR, a semblance of chaos occurred, we all remember these years. The wild transition from a planned economy to a market economy collapsed the once powerful state and led to a sharp rise in organized crime. The line between legal and illegal has been virtually erased. I remember this time, I was a schoolboy then and we watched with delight the powerful guys in the obligatory “leather”, riding in “nines” with tinted windows, from which chanson thundered. Here they are, the real masters of life and next to them are gorgeous women. It’s different for us, the children of ordinary teachers, for whom it was a joy when my mother managed to stand in line at the Food Store and buy sausage. We went to the station as schoolchildren and lost slot machines 2 rubles 15 kopecks issued by parents for school lunches.

Yekaterinburg, together with Moscow, has become the center of criminal wars. The organized crime group "Uralmash" waged a war for control of the leading enterprises of the Urals with another group calling itself "Center". They were not limited to bribing officials and politicians. They killed each other with machine guns in the city center, they tortured their opponents with irons and hot irons. They were paid for “protection protection” by all more or less functioning enterprises and even just shops in the markets. The power of these guys many times exceeded the authority and capabilities of the state.

These three graves are real story modern Russia: Khabarov and Tsyganov. These are the creators of one of the largest, most dangerous and brutal gang communities in post-Soviet history. Here they are -

Google this man's name, Khabarov. He survived them all, hanging himself in a prison cell at Pre-trial Detention Center No. 1 in Yekaterinburg in January 2005. Did he hang himself or was he hanged? No one knows this, but is it so important -

Grigory Tsyganov, the founder of the organization, was killed by a killer in 1991 and his place in the group was taken by brother, Konstantin. Later, when the era of big crime came to an end, he fled to Europe and hid there for several years. At some point, he even came out of the shadows and went into business in Bulgaria. The city newspaper Ura.ru writes that he was the custodian of the group's common fund and invested $65 million in the Costa del Croco construction project near Burgas. But then a certain corruption scandal happened on Bulgarian soil and he fell out of favor with the authorities of this European country with traditionally strong ties to Russian crime. The Ural newspapers of those years gave out a lot of contradictory information and we are unlikely to ever know the truth.

But not all criminal showdowns were carried out exclusively against opponents from other groups. Many of the contract killings were framed as acts of intimidation for their own people, so that they would fear and serve. For example, the murder of Uralmash employees Dmitry Bezginov and Mikhail Seliverstov, who, according to the media, allegedly “concealed” (stolen from their own) a lot of money. The two doomed men were lured by deception to an allegedly scheduled meeting; on the way, their car was stopped by two people in police uniforms. Seeing the machine gun pointed at them, they realized that these were not policemen, but it was too late. The bodies were thrown into the pit of the road under construction. Their graves are

Alley of "heroes", so to speak -

The well-known crime boss Mikhail Kuchin, one of the leaders of the "Center" group, was shot with machine guns right in the center of Yekaterinburg in February 1993. Kuchin, apparently relaxed, left his mansion on Volgogradskaya Street without security and began to start his own BMW car. At this time, from a passing VAZ-2109 car, the killer unloaded the entire Kalashnikov clip into the back of the authority -

Note the Mercedes key and horseshoe for good luck in his hand. He loved Mercedes, but was killed in a BMW. The horseshoe didn't help -

In the center is Oleg Vagin, the leader of the Center, shot on October 26, 1992 as revenge for the assassination attempt on Konstantin Tsyganov, the leader of Uralmash -

Flarit Valiev, another authority of the “Centers”, also killed in a gang war. Note the Muslim crescent on the monument. In 1993, during one of the gatherings of Uralmash and the center in the Golden Pegasus casino, shooting began with a bunch of corpses, one of which was Valiev. To this day, no one knows exactly whose bullet killed this gentleman.

Klementyev was killed on Samoletnaya Street in his own jeep. According to one version, he was shot from a machine gun, according to the second, he was shot from sniper rifles several people. They write that Klementyev belonged to the organized criminal community "Uralmash" and also distinguished himself in the dashing nineties. Pay attention to the year of death, 2000; by that time, the gangster groups in Yekaterinburg were largely defeated. The Last of the Mohicans.

The beloved women of authority deserve special attention. There are also plenty of similar graves. Here you will find former beauty queens and fashion models and a kind of “bohemia” of the city. Authorities loved beauty and were aesthetes. Some of these beauties fell in firefights from stray bullets, actually paying for the love of beautiful life, others ended up in prison as accomplices, others and their minority are still alive. A sad sight.

This is a real masterpiece -

A Life is going in its own way. The cemeteries have “digested” hundreds of thousands of people, they are fine, business is going well. Death made everyone the same, both poor and rich, jocks and nerds, policemen and bandits, doctors and AIDS patients -

And this is a masterpiece of its kind -

mzk1.ru

At all the prestigious cemeteries of the capital: Vagankovsky, Staroarmyansky, Danilovsky, Nikolo-Arkhangelsky - the best places are given over to gangster alleys

Granite steles, multi-pound crosses, gilded fences, angels one and a half human height... Famous sculptors worked on these monuments. Prophetic epitaphs from Dante and other classics were selected by distinguished writers. If you grieve and remember, then on a grand scale!..

There is a particularly reverent attitude towards criminal authorities even after death. At cemeteries they invariably get VIP seats: at the entrance, on the central alley. The monuments are illuminated, in winter the staff clears them of snow and ice with soft brushes in any weather, and in the summer they place fresh flowers. There are “brotherly” alleys in all the prestigious cemeteries of the capital: Vagankovsky, Staroarmyansky, Danilovsky, Nikolo-Arkhangelsky... There are even private “brotherly” cemeteries, like the one located in Rakitki near Moscow. In the early 90s, the gang bought entire plots of land in rural and urban churchyards. So that the boys can be together in the next world.

Our special correspondents went on a raid through the capital’s prestigious churchyards, to the graves of “gentlemen of fortune.”

At the entrance to the Vagankovskoe cemetery there is a skyscraper stele, above it there is a marble angel, arms outstretched over the tombstones with bronze wreaths. Engraved on two paired granite slabs: Amiran Kvantrishvili. Otari Kvantrishvili.

Brothers - composers? - the visitors are talking.

Prominent public figures! - the former cemetery worker, now a freelance tour guide, grins cynically world of the dead, Valera.

The angel on the grave is so big, no match for Listyov’s skinny seraphim (nearby is the grave of TV presenter Vladislav Listyev. - Author), - the guests of the graveyard pay tribute to the grave.

Still would! - Valera agrees. - I worked on the monument to the Kvantrishvili brothers, the first of whom was shot by sworn friends in 1993, the second - a year later famous sculptor Klykov.

The one that sculpted Zhukov on a horse? - the listeners are surprised.

Valera says that the epochal building, dedicated to the memory of the Kvantrishvili brothers, took several years to create. It obviously cost the customer a lot.

Otari Kvantrishvili was legendary personality Moscow in the late 80s - early 90s. They called him godfather the capital's mafia and at the same time a fighter for justice. Otari started out as a card player. He was a close friend of Vyacheslav Ivankov (Yaponchik). In the fall of 1993, he created the “Athletes of Russia” party and took part in the destruction of the White House. Was the head of the Foundation social security athletes named after Lev Yashin, against whom the Moscow RUOP had a grudge for a long time. Honored coach of Russia in Greco-Roman wrestling. Patron and businessman...

On April 5, 1994, Otari was shot by a killer sniper at the exit from the Krasnopresnensky baths. The killer has still not been found. The investigation put forward the most fantastic versions, none of which found official confirmation. They say that the killer was the famous Solonik - Sasha the Great.

However, Otari received the “black mark” a year before his death. On August 6, 1993, his brother Amiran was killed in the office of a small business. He arrived at the company's office together with the thief Fedya Besheny (Fedor Ishin). The mercenaries shot both of them.

We walk along Vagankovsky cemetery further. The prestigious churchyard is now considered closed and is overcrowded. Here it is possible to carry out burials only along the family line, if space allows: to “share” the deceased with the deceased grandmother, uncle, nephew. True, a hero, honorary or other particularly distinguished citizen can receive the honor of lying in a famous cemetery. But this must have special permission from the city administration.

How the grave of the head of the Ryazan criminal group, Viktor Airapetov, appeared on Vagankovo ​​is doubly a mystery.

It is not known for certain whether Airapet or anyone else was buried for him. The documents are most likely fictitious. Anyone good owner There are always a couple of unregistered graves hidden away. If you start digging, you won’t prove anything. The cemetery archive burned down back in October 1941,” Valera enlightens us.

When approaching the burial place of Viktor Airapetov, you want to close your eyes. The massive marble slab is framed by a fence with abundant gilding. Rumor has it that Viktor Airapetov himself came more than once to admire his pompous grave. Not from the underworld, but from our hectic life. Did the crime boss simply fake his own death?

In the early 90s of the last century, master of sports in freestyle wrestling Viktor Airapetov created the most powerful underground fighting organization in Ryazan - “Ayrapetovskaya”. At the international level, she was supported by Yaponchik himself. By 1993, Airapetov moved to Moscow. “Ayrapetovskie” were divided into brigades and numbered from 800 to 1,500 members. But soon they encountered a serious obstacle - the “elephant” group. They shot the elite of the “Ayrapetovskys”. The gang leader himself managed to escape only by a miracle. And a great criminal war began in Ryazan. And on November 19, 1995, at about three o’clock in the morning, the death of Viktor Airapetov was recorded. Special forces officers took part in the kidnapping of the founder and leader of the group of the same name. Masked people put the guards face down, and the authority itself was taken away in an unknown direction. Two weeks later, an anonymous call gave the number of the plaque in the general burial ground. A Rolex watch and the bandit’s famous belt with silver plates were found on the corpse dug out of the ground. The wife looked at the burnt corpse with a hole in the head and calmly said: “Yes, that’s him.” Later, she and the “authority’s” mother left for permanent residence in Europe. Shortly before his disappearance, Airapetov received Greek citizenship and changed his last name to Aravidis. A few years later, Ryazan entrepreneurs accidentally met Vitya Ryazansky in Europe. But officially Airapetov is dead.

Take a look at the ******** site, Valera advises us. - There are monuments to thieves in law, similar to the monument to Pushkin on Tverskaya or Minin and Pozharsky on Red Square.

We go through the massive gate to the indicated churchyard. On the right hand, in an antique chair, sits a bronze man with a thoughtful look. Engraved on the pedestal: Vladimir Sergeevich Oganov. On the left is the bronze Rudolf Sergeevich Oganov. The entire space near the brothers’ graves is filled with marble vases. Flowers - roses, lilies, chrysanthemums - at the premiere at the Bolshoi Theater.

The Oganov brothers (Rudik Bakinsky and Vachigos Six-fingered) were not just famous thieves. They occupied some of the highest places in the criminal hierarchy. For which they paid. At the end of the last century, a criminal war broke out between the Oganovs and Aslan Usoyan (better known as Ded Hassan), which escalated into a war of mafia clans. Three times convicted 53-year-old Rudik was killed in February 1999 in a cafe on the Moscow Ring Road, after at a thieves' meeting he accused Ded Hasan of embezzling money from the common fund. Grandfather Hassan was then “uncrowned.” And Oganov, who had just returned from the south, received more than 40 bullets from the killers. The reason was the previous execution of thieves from the Hasan clan in Essentuki. After him, the influential Moscow “criminal general” Boris Apakia (Khripaty) gathered the mafiosi supporting Usoyan, and they passed a final verdict on Oganov. After some time, the same fate befell Vladimir Oganov.

We go in search of the grave of another crime boss - Peso Kuchuloria. Experienced gravedigger Sergei Ivanovich stops us:

Don't look, you won't find. I dug Peso's grave myself. Then the gopstopniks paid us 200 rubles each. Only a week later a scandal broke out. Peso's grave turned out to be the burial site of an Afghan warrior. The latter's relatives made a fuss. The pesos were dug up and taken to the Domodedovo cemetery.

Officially, Valerian Cuculoria, nicknamed Peso, went missing in 1993. He was one of the close friends of the same Otari Kvantrishvili.

Knowing that at the 28th precinct of Vagankov lie many members of the once powerful Bauman criminal group, in the very center of the precinct we look for a monument made of black marble, under which their leader, Bobon, rests. The grave, again, is a steam room. Next to Bobon (“in the world” - Vladislav Abrekovich Vygorbin-Vanner lies his bodyguard. Bright yellow apples are laid out in a pyramid on the slab: someone close to him came here for the Apple Spas.

Bobon was one of the most erudite and powerful “authorities” of the late 80s. His Bauman group kept half of Moscow in fear. Bobon, aka Vladislav Vygorbin, was considered right hand thief Globe. Bobon was very fond of cars and drove around Moscow in a snow-white sports two-door Buick without a driver's license, since he spent one of his three terms in a psychiatric hospital, where he learned perfectly English language, but received a certificate of mental illness and therefore go through a commission to receive car license I couldn't anymore.

In 1994, a dispute broke out over a nightclub, the “roof” of which was provided by Globus and his team. Globus unexpectedly demanded to increase its share. He was shot by the Kurgan people, and Solonik took responsibility for the murder. Then the same Solonik killed Bobon. He and his bodyguard were going to practice at a shooting range on the Volokolamsk highway. The killers drilled holes in the concrete fence ahead of time. As soon as Bobona's Ford taxied into the yard, they opened fire on him. Bobon, his bodyguard, and Bobon's dog were killed. And the daughter of the “authority” managed to fall on the floor between the seats of the car.

At the Danilovskoye Cemetery, VIP burials are hidden from prying eyes. Only twice - following the worker Grishany - having overcome the holes in the fence, we find ourselves in the granite world.

“It’s all Karelian granite here, guaranteed for more than a hundred years,” says our guide. - This stone is the most expensive. A crypt with a sliding slab and a tombstone costs 10 thousand “greens”, engraving a portrait costs another 4.5 thousand. And if you sculpt a sculpture with all the bells and whistles - borders, steps - 300 thousand “greenery” must be prepared.

Wandering among the “concrete monuments”, we find the family burial of the Chograshi family. The following are engraved on the marble steles: “Nono”, “Dato”, “Kike”.

In August 2001, an armored Mercedes 600 burned down in Khimki, in which two well-known ********* thieves in law - Dato and Nono Chograshi - were traveling. A Mercedes with a driver and two passengers was heading towards the capital from Sheremetyevo airport. Suddenly, while driving, the Mercedes caught fire. The fire was caused by an explosion. The brothers died of burns in the hospital. It was assumed that the attempt was connected with the division of the thieves' common fund.

“I remember how Nodar Chograshi was buried,” continues Grisha. - There weren't many people at the ceremony. There were about twenty thieves in law and “authorities”, among them knowledgeable people identified Miho Slipy and Besik. I also remember that the grave was lined with bricks and the coffin was filled with concrete. I was then surprised: why? It turns out that in the homeland of the deceased - in Armenia - the dead are buried in the mountains, in carved out niches.

The gravedigger Grisha smells not of vodka, but of expensive perfume. He is not wearing greasy overalls, but ironed overalls. By caring for the graves, by Grisha’s own admission, he “rows” up to 50 thousand rubles a month with an official salary of 5 thousand.

When a heartbreaking funeral march sounds in the depths of the cemetery, Grisha winces:

Brass bands are in bad taste these days. “Great people,” for example, are buried with “live” music. The stars roll into the cemetery opera stage, perform pitiful arias from Italian operas. And coffins in general business card deceased. It is in the outback that reusable dominos - “shuttles” - walk around in circles. To deliver the deceased to the cemetery, a coffin decorated with ruffles and bows is rented to the poor for 200-300 rubles. With us, everything is different.

Deceased VIPs roll up to last refuge in varnish and bronze. Elite coffins are a real work of coffin art: made of mahogany, equipped with bronze, “antique” handles, illuminated, air conditioning, built-in stereo music system, decorated with a reproduction of a painting famous artist. Particularly popular are double-lidded “senator” coffins, which are also equipped with a so-called elevator that raises or lowers the body. The cost of such a house starts from 10 thousand “green” and rushes to infinity.

How the grave is covered with wreaths, they give a funeral salute - they release a rocket with black twinkling stars, - Grisha sums up.

Having telephoned the administration of several capital cemeteries, we were convinced: despite the “overcrowding,” there are no problems with organizing burial places in cemeteries. Enough to pay. The price of the issue of “resettlement” in closed cemeteries ranges from 50 to 200 thousand rubles.

St. Petersburg does not lag behind Moscow's funeral. In August, at the Northern Cemetery, on the grave of the influential shadow “authority” Konstantin Yakovlev, better known as Kostya Mogila, an incredibly pompous monument worth 600 thousand “greens” was erected. In the center is the figure of Kostya Mogila himself, hugging an Orthodox cross with his hands. At the feet of the deceased is a snake that is about to bite him. WITH different sides Two half-meter-tall angels are looking at Kostya Mogila: one folds his hands in prayer, the second pulls them towards the “authority”. The words are inscribed in gold on the black granite: “I kissed those who betrayed me on the forehead, and not the one who betrayed me on the lips.”

Inscriptions and epitaphs on the graves of “authorities” are a separate issue. In Togliatti, on the monument to the leader of the criminal community Dmitry Ruzlyaev - Dima Bolshoi - there is a laconic inscription: “Dima”. On the tombstone of a difficult man nicknamed Blue, friends wrote: “And nothing will grow from the spiritual ashes, only time will mercilessly punish for those who will not come again.” In Vladivostok, the grave of thief in law Miho is decorated with an unambiguous inscription: “Here sleep goodness and justice.” But Mukha Bely’s friends and associates outdid everyone: they decorated the stele in the shape of a cell phone with the inscription: “The subscriber has left the service area.”

Monuments depicting “brothers” playing cards, the keys to Mercedes in their hands are a thing of the past. IN last years monuments to “authorities” are created with imagination. For example, in Nizhny Novgorod stands at the Starozavodskoe cemetery unique tombstone a man known in criminal circles named Zaron. Next to the full-length statue of the deceased, a stone swan “swims”, from whose eyes... tears flow.

Majestic monuments cannot but attract the attention of non-ferrous metal collectors. All kinds of bronze details are dragged from the graves: boards, ribbons, flowers. It happens that looters break out entire busts and take them away for melting down. It’s paradoxical, but, according to the assurances of cemetery workers, there are never any thefts from the burials of thieves in law and “authorities.” Thieves are afraid of the deceased “positioners” even after their death. The power of crime extends not only to earthly life?..

The boys didn’t forget Kostya Mogila
The most expensive tombstone, worth $200,000, was installed in the Northern capital for an ordinary former gravedigger from the Southern cemetery

The famous St. Petersburg businessman Konstantin Yakovlev, better known in certain circles as Kostya Mogila, was shot dead on May 25, 2003 in Moscow. The Nissan Maxima car, in which, in addition to Yakovlev, there were his bodyguard, driver and close friend, was riddled with a machine gun by a killer passing by on a motorcycle. The men died on the spot from their wounds, and the woman, who accidentally bent over a second before the shooting, was seriously injured, but remained alive.

The tragedy occurred during the celebration of the 300th anniversary of St. Petersburg. Until the end of the celebrations, the authorities banned funerals in the city on the Neva. Therefore, the deceased waited 10 days for burial in the Moscow Lefortovo morgue. Only on June 3, Yakovlev’s body was delivered to St. Petersburg.

Many years ago, Konstantin Yakovlev worked as a gravedigger at the Southern Cemetery. For his incredible achievements in digging speed - he dug a grave in 40 minutes - he received his nickname. It was assumed that the mortal body of Konstantin Yakovlev would be given to the graveyard where he began his life. labor activity. However, they did not bury him at the Southern Cemetery; they chose the Northern Cemetery, where his relatives were buried.

They say that when the funeral procession of 50–60 foreign cars headed to the Northern Cemetery, accompanied by four traffic police cars, and on Arsenalnaya Embankment drew level with the famous “Crosses,” lingering signals from the column of cars were heard. And the prison responded with the dull echo of thousands male voices, because they knew in advance when Kostya Mogila would be transported past the pre-trial detention center.

When Yakovlev was buried, before the monument was made, a huge oak Orthodox cross was installed on a freshly grown mound. A sea of ​​flowers and wreaths lay on the grave. On one of the wreaths was mourning ribbon with the inscription: “Sleep well, Konstantin, we will never forget you! Guys."

And the monument to Konstantin Yakovlev was erected, the most magnificent in the entire Northern capital. It is rumored to be worth $200,000. In the center of the monument is the figure of the Bone of the Grave itself. The deceased embraces the Orthodox cross with his hands. But a snake crawled to his feet. She has already opened her mouth and is about to bite him. On the black granite, inscribed in gold, are the words: “I kissed those who betrayed me on the forehead, and not the one who betrayed me on the lips.” IN sculptural group Also included are two half-meter-tall angels who look at Kostya Mogila from different sides. One folds his hands in prayer, the second, on the contrary, pulls them towards authority.

* Prices for monuments to brothers start from $5-10 thousand.

* For a long time in the criminal environment, there was a fashion for depicting dead “comrades-in-arms” on black marble with the keys to a Mercedes and cell phone in hand.

* For the authority of Vasily Naumov, nicknamed Yakut, who was killed in South Korea, the Russian gang bought a coffin inlaid with gold, with an electronic refrigerator and an automatically opening lid worth $15 thousand.

* The grave of the Nizhny Novgorod criminal leader nicknamed Zaron is decorated with the figure of the deceased standing next to a crying stone swan.

* The alley of brothers at the Togliatti cemetery is opened by a monument to the leader of the criminal group Dmitry Ruzlyaev - a huge marble slab with the inscription “Dima”.