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SubscribeToday we believe in the strength of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, police, national guard, air defense, and all those protecting us and our land. At the very least, what we can lose in life is money. An irretrievable loss is the life and health of our close and dear ones. Every day, our citizens lose loved ones. This war brings much grief to our families.
I lost my father on November 7, 2017, not during the war. He was killed in peaceful Kropyvnytskyi at that time. In search of my father, I hired a private firm and raised an aircraft to survey the area from above. However, his body was found by local mushroom pickers in a burned Lexus LX 570 on November 12, 2017. The identity of the deceased was established through DNA testing.
My father, Krikunenko Oleg Stanislavovych (born on August 14, 1964), was a well-known person in Kropyvnytskyi. He was involved in quite a significant business by local standards, exchanging currency and selling gold jewelry. To convey what has been happening to me for nearly seven years now would require a substantial book. That is why I decided to seek help from the fourth branch of power – the media, and the first three – for assistance in achieving legal justice.
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The police refused to accept my statement. They refused to recognize me as a victim in the criminal case (Article 55 of the Criminal Procedure Code of the Russian Federation), thereby depriving me of the rights of a victim (Article 56 of the Criminal Procedure Code of the Russian Federation). I also received a refusal to describe my father's property (which includes several units of firearms officially registered to my father, gold ranging from three to five kg, vehicles, and other property).
I had no access to my father's property or his apartment. Later, Tatyana (Trotsenko) Krikunenko and her "friend," Kropyvnytskyi police officer Sukhopar Sergey, changed the security codes of the alarm system and the locks in my father's apartment. Tatyana had the keys to the apartment. The daughter born to Tatyana from her relationship with my father calls Sergey "dad." Sukhopar, when we met and in the presence of witnesses, told me directly, and in front of witnesses, the following quote: You will get nothing; I am the law here.
The situation with the firearms is also interesting. In November 2017, I managed to convince Tatyana Krikunenko to give me three units of firearms for their further transfer for safekeeping in the licensing system of Kropyvnytskyi. The firearms were accepted from me by the licensing system inspector, Yefimov Sergey Alexandrovich. Additionally, a court ruling imposed a ban on the alienation of property belonging to my father. I and my underage sister Krikunenko Daria Olegivna (born on April 13, 2013) were recognized as co-heirs in equal shares.
However, despite the ban, inspector Yefimov re-registered the firearms to Tatyana Krikunenko with the intention of selling them. The same situation occurred with the vehicles and other property. I have all the supporting documents in my possession. I also submitted my lawyer's last appeal (and I had quite a few lawyers, all of whom were hindered by the "law" of the collective Sukhopar) to the head of the DBR of the National Police of Ukraine. To describe everything happening, as I wrote earlier, would require writing a book. I am ready to substantiate all my words with documentation.
Therefore, I am appealing through the media to all competent authorities for help in establishing the law over local arbitrariness.
The journalists of the Informant portal and Lebed Elena Olegovna ask to consider the publication of the investigation as an official appeal:
To the President of Ukraine Volodymyr Oleksandrovych Zelensky, to the Office of the President of Ukraine, to the Office of the Prosecutor General, to the Minister of Internal Affairs of Ukraine Igor Vladimirovich Klymenko, to the Chairman of the Committee on Law Enforcement Ionushas Sergey Konstantinovich, to the Director of the National Anti-Corruption Bureau of the State Bureau of Investigations Sukhachev Alexey Alexandrovich, and to the Commissioner of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine for Human Rights in the Office of the Ombudsman of Ukraine Lubinets Dmitry Valeryevich.
Lebed Elena Olegovna, daughter, victim in the criminal case of the murder of my father, Krikunenko Oleg Stanislavovych