this is a stupid pandering kind of comment i'm sure you don't mean to make russian's give sense to but it is very anti productive because being a victim of the government is f'n senseless already. pointless to make someone feel as if they were strong for letting this be a truth for us all to fix. he was forced and not because he was tough.
@mcrusty2507Ай бұрын
It's what makes Russians, Russian.
@mikeshvedov6981Ай бұрын
@Joe-ym6bw they R different. This one is exceptionally calm. My guess would be that one you survive 11 y there are pretty calm
@joelledbetter29264 ай бұрын
No one will understand that feeling of getting out....there's nothing like it in the world litterally like lifting a 500lb weight off your back and then the fear and anxiety kicks in
@nalini71864 ай бұрын
I understand it bud there’s a lot more like me too so I wouldn’t say no one
@Sawdust-f4p4 ай бұрын
We’re was you in prison? Don’t tell me the uk 🇬🇧
@arthurias76934 ай бұрын
@@Sawdust-f4p prison is prison, no matter where it is. lack of freedom is lack of freedom; being confined to a jail cell is just the same wherever you are in the world. some are worse but none are a walk in the park.
@shadowprince44824 ай бұрын
Larry Lawton talked about how when he got out he couldn't even order a sandwich. It was sensory overload because of all the choices. Then the halfway house was a horrible joke and he opted to go to prison/jail and use it as a halfway house instead.
@JoeRogansForehead4 ай бұрын
Hundreds of thousand of people , probably millions understand actually lol that’s kind of the problem
@cconnon19123 ай бұрын
6 men share one shower head once a week for 15 minutes to wash themselves and wash clothes. Damn.
@humanOilslick3 ай бұрын
Luck it’s cold there so they don’t have to really worry 😂
@hurmane.85933 ай бұрын
@@humanOilslick cold when? in the winter? of course it is. in the summer? it's hot. or do you think russia is engulfed in snow all year round?
@humanOilslick3 ай бұрын
@@hurmane.8593 most year 😂
@hurmane.85933 ай бұрын
@@humanOilslick tell me you've never been/lived in russia without telling me
@julianscaeva43342 ай бұрын
@@humanOilslickignorant
@DerrickHarvey-c1f3 ай бұрын
we never realize how good we have it untill u hear about mother russia
@SofaKingShit3 ай бұрын
Thank God the America prison system is a much better example for everyone else to follow.
@lucawolf13 ай бұрын
America ain’t no paradise either
@hornantuutti51573 ай бұрын
True but atleast they wont randomly send innocents to jail. Like russia. Having wrong opinion means you eighter die or be locked up. You cant really defend russia with whataboutism.
@Codewars-Solutions3 ай бұрын
why should criminals have it good? Apart from that, the West is far more degenerate, where perversions are celebrated as the norm
@TzunSu3 ай бұрын
@@lucawolf1 Whilst that's true, that's like saying "It's no picnic having a cold!" to someone who's dying of cancer. Neither is nice, but they're not comparable.
@sassygunslingerАй бұрын
i met a political prison from russia in a nursing home in the UK in 1999. he had no fingernails or toe nails and his testicules had been electricuted . they were large and badly burned. he has very bad scaring all over him.he struggled when the door was closed to his room. he had a bottle of vodka a night to knock him out to stop him waking and screaming out. when we first had him he attacked us screaming about being in a cell and being beaten..after that his door was left open and he got up when he was ready. evenutally he talked and we all just cried to hear what happened to him..he could speak five languages.. he came to stay at the nursing home to recouperated after his release. ive never in my life seen such pain in a mans voice as his. he smiled every morning and thanked us for his care. .A once in a life time chance to meet a very brave man. evenually he felt he could finally have a home of his own and with support left. i will never forget him to this day.
@Jenny-uv4dlАй бұрын
I met a similar man who had survived 4yrs in bergan- belsen I was in a drs waiting room when his sleeve rode up his arm exposing a tattooed # I began to cry ( I was a history nut and had read alot about WW2 I grew up in a religious cult and was told we would be put in camps like the jews / gypsies had of WW2 (I. Had basically began prepping myself for it mentally tht we were to be put in camps because of cults beliefs) I was embarrassed i started to cry then i explained my childhood simply and me and the gentleman and I began talking he was very surprised someone of my generation knew so much but i reminded him of cults statement about camps he had nerve damage in hands & feet from standing in the cold in Poland in basically thin rags and shoes with holes in the bottom he had been forced to march I forget how far in the cold by the Kapo's / nazis to prevent prisoners being seized by the Americans/ British or Russians but he said by far the worst was the mental physically you can heal but mentally thoughts just bounce around like a rubber ball yrs before I had cared for as a CNAXa former high level Klan leader who was starting to have dementia like issues he absolutely refused to allow us to turn off the lights in his room or close his door I asked why he informed me ( in nasty language) tht in the dark he could feel and see afro Americans coming for him and they were part of the reason his mind was going and when it was dark they formed a circle around his bed and told him "they was waiting on him" this nursing home was near were Mississippi burning happened it still had a klan presence even the early 90's the souls of the ppl you torture will come for you
@deadbread844618 күн бұрын
What is his name? About the burnt balls, it looks very much like the truth. To do this, they use a field phone called tapik (ta - 57). It is actively used in Russian police departments, this torture is called "calling Putin"
@45johngalt16 күн бұрын
what does hudge mean?
@sassygunslinger16 күн бұрын
@@45johngalt thats all you have to say really. writen on a phone and it must have changed the spelling. changed just for you dear lol
@lupine.spirit4 ай бұрын
Meanwhile Anders Breivik: *sues norway for inhumane treatment and asks for a playstation*
@antoniousai19894 ай бұрын
That speaks volumes on Norway as a country.
@DomnulSarb4 ай бұрын
You're missing the point though
@lupine.spirit4 ай бұрын
@@DomnulSarb i have no point
@Salted_Fysh3 ай бұрын
a) He's being kept in solitary confinement for the maximum amount of years possible by Norwegian law. Solitary confinement has officially been recognized as a form of torture (his isn't for a variety of reasons). By Norwegian standards, his sentence is very harsh. b) Norway is a country that sets higher standards for itself than a russian penal colony. c) Norway has, on a worldwide scale, an extremely low recidivism rate (rate at which criminals end up back in prison after release). They also save tons of money and bureaucracy on not running a prison system that is designed to suck. Clearly their system is working.
@teekay98863 ай бұрын
That's because the Norwegian jail system has a purpose of rehabilitating prisoners and either make them into functional members of society, or keep them locked in for a long period of time. It's what prison should be by a definition. Russian system however, is designed to keep the ruling class in tighter control, and the prisoner is not to be considered a person.... So, yeah.... It's damn near impossible to even consider humanity as an approach. I always find it tragicomical when the leaders of the countries, corrupted to the point of absolute debauchery, talk about democracy... Democracy can only be achieved by a truly moral human being. In a corrupted society, it's a paradox and a mockery by itself.
@VikingTeddy4 ай бұрын
Nothing new unfortunately. Us old farts have seen and read the same interviews from Soviet prisoners, many many times. Going all the way back to the revolution. It's important to keep bringing it up, so the younger generations learn too.
@DanielOnFire1014 ай бұрын
Most of those were debunked btw. Solzhenitsyn’s wife later admitted it was mostly fabricated. The Soviet Union instituted the greatest increase in living standards and industrial power the world has ever seen.
@Unknown_Genius4 ай бұрын
Bringing it up doesn't help either. At the end of the day they had been allowed to continue terrorize half of europe after WW2 despite the fact that they were the same as the third reich and would have given a lot to work together up to the point they arrived in berlin. And who can blame a system that never changes if it always worked out.
@malikialgeriankabyleswag42004 ай бұрын
"Learn".. Reading your ((newspapers)) is not learning.
@VikingTeddy4 ай бұрын
Seems the russkibots are as effective and competent as their army 😅
@malikialgeriankabyleswag42004 ай бұрын
@@VikingTeddy Go worship your rabbis American
@AeSyrNation3 ай бұрын
This is just one of the semi-high-profile political revenge cases. I once got jailed overnight for walking near a half-empty beer bottle. The cops have arrest quotas, and the end of the month was coming up, so they just grabbed me and said, "That beer must be yours." They held me overnight in the most rank cell I've ever seen. There literally was a piece of dry faeces on the floor, in a cell 4x4 feet. I tried to stand and not touch anything for as long as I could, but eventually, tiredness got the better of me, so I had to sit down on the concrete bench. I left there with scabies. In the morning, they told me to sign for a fine for public intoxication, and I'd be able to walk out. Otherwise, I'd be held in that cell for 15 days until a court date.
@klettersteig5993 ай бұрын
That’s crazy and sorry you had that happen to you. It’s hard to imagine people so callous that they have no problem arresting an innocent stranger. Why is it allowed that you have to wait for 10 days to get arraigned? Was this in the US? What state?
@AeSyrNation3 ай бұрын
@@klettersteig599 it was in Russia🤷♂️ they can legally hold you for up to 15 days in jail before seeing a judge
@mikitz2 ай бұрын
In a true kleptocracy, thieves run the show while you go to jail for not stealing anything.
@RogueBoyScout2 ай бұрын
Did you understand Cyrillic to know what it was you are signing? So many stories of Westerners in other countries asked to sign benign "confessions" or even just "legal paperwork", only to find out they literally signed their confession to crimes they never even did.
@AeSyrNation2 ай бұрын
@@RogueBoyScout I'm from there
@threethrushes3 ай бұрын
Mr. Pereverzin was no mere mid-manager employee of Yukos. He was instrumental in the acquisition of Yukos by the bank Menatep, which Khodorkovsky was Chairman of. He personally acted for Menatep on 8 December 1995 in the controversial purchase of Yukos. I'm not saying he is guilty as charged, however it is somewhat disingenuous for him to make out that he was a mere pawn.
@TheRevolutionReport19173 ай бұрын
Exactly. And to be honest, there was nothing honest about Russian business practices on that level in the 1990s
@coajdka3 ай бұрын
Exactly lol this is propaganda
@alexandredevert49353 ай бұрын
My experience of a similar country is that the mentality is : everybody is guilty of something to a degree, which is a useful, justice can never be wrong
@oleksandrdanyliuk76283 ай бұрын
+15 rubles
@TheEndorus3 ай бұрын
There is love in Russia with creation of documents, because even if facts are against documents, documents will survive and maybe someone will treat them as facts. So we will never know.
@LawtonDigital4 ай бұрын
See also: "Alexander Dolgun's story: An American in the Gulag" 70 years later, and so little has changed in the Russian prison system
@DomnulSarb4 ай бұрын
Russia will never change. It's basically an enormous self-regulating and self-perpetuating dysgenics experiment.
@boris29973 ай бұрын
Didn't they made a movie about it
@LindaYariger3 ай бұрын
Omg, there is a whole elaborate prison culture. Not just tattoos, but giving party before you leave, burning prison clothes afterwards, etc.
@TymexComputing3 ай бұрын
Well Pereverzin said many times he is innocent, but he could easily share if he knew Khodorkovsky, if Khodorkovsky was also innocent and why does he think so - what was he doing in that company and how did people work there - he is now in free country so he should say how does the communism arise - its now in france, canada and biden's mind.
@honved13 ай бұрын
@@boris2997Yes, I think it was a TV movie from the early 80’s
@joshs39163 ай бұрын
I’m glad this man is able to move on and still have an upbeat personality. It’s such a crime this keeps happening and sadly, I don’t see this ever stopping anytime soon.
@sethbucy2 ай бұрын
The reel noises between each cut really take away from the intensity of the interview.
@TheqDwatertower2 ай бұрын
На самом деле грустно осознавать, что именно это происходит в нашей стране. И они никогда это не исправят, это все равно, что стоять 7 лет в аду, радуясь тому, что он может жить, не страдая даже больше, чем ему пришлось пережить, потому что российская полиция никогда не будет добра к тебе, когда ты попадешь туда, они примут тебя как животное, а не как это. Все, что может превратить твою жвою жизнь в дерьмо. 😬😬😬
@deadbread844618 күн бұрын
Наша полиция даже если ты ничего не сделал по определению относится к обычному человеку с нескрываемой неприязнью.
@OGGOAT234 ай бұрын
Russian prisons no joke
@harvey26093 ай бұрын
Reminds me of that scene in "The Wire". "This is not prison. This is nothing" -- Sergei
@amaannanji31132 ай бұрын
I don’t need you. I don’t need f***ing canteen
@ehawolczecki8759Ай бұрын
Watch Gulag story ….
@davehughes533 ай бұрын
Interesting and simple. They needed a fall guy. To officially acquire the oil.
@TheGeenat3 ай бұрын
It’s never that simple
@CzechboundАй бұрын
I travelled across Russia on my own during the winter. I was in Vladimir. I was in the bus station. I never met more hospitable people than ordinary Russians, who would do everything they could to help you on your travels. Love Russian people. Remember that the regime and the jailers are a criminal gang, stealing from ordinary Russians and exploiting them. Imagine the terror of being an innocent person suddnely caught up into that system. And to _know_ that your jailors ( that is, these sociopaths and psychopaths that are recruited as jailors ) also know that you are innocent, but will mistreat you anyway because they don't have the brain circuitry for empathy. And that at any moment, even if you haven't done anything wrong, if they are having a bad day they might take it out on you, and there is nothing you can do about it.
@Anton43218Ай бұрын
That is the same situation in Romania except the people are mostly brown and the average national iq is 82, the lowest in europe like albania much unlike the russians.
@Anton43218Ай бұрын
That is the same situation in Romania except the people are mostly mud skinned and the average national iq is 82, the lowest in europe like albania much unlike the russians.
@Anton43218Ай бұрын
That is the same situation in Romania except the people are mostly dark skinned and the average national iq is 82, the lowest in europe like albania much unlike the russians.
@samshepperrd4 ай бұрын
I'm always impressed when i hear someone who lives outside the English speaking world gain a perfectly working mastery of my country's language. I could never do that. Retaining their native langua accent makesxit all the more enjoyable to hear.
@burningMalarkey3 ай бұрын
Shame on you guys for not linking his book. I would read this book. I’m glad he mentioned he wrote one.
@galactictomato14342 ай бұрын
His book is linked in the video description...
@burningMalarkey2 ай бұрын
@@galactictomato1434now it is.
@seidenstickerjАй бұрын
It's both linked and mentioned in the video, right at the end, they even show the cover and he recommends it to all viewers.
@burningMalarkeyАй бұрын
@@seidenstickerj I know it’s mentioned. That’s why I’m asking for a link. I finally got one.
@barbiethingz4 ай бұрын
I feel so sorry for this man...terrible to be serving time for a crime he didn't commit. Unfortunetly in Russia not much has changed since the USSR days, maybe except fashion and technology...
@BridgesDontFly4 ай бұрын
Didn't commit ehh?
@pepevonkek78034 ай бұрын
200 billion stolen from Russia and laundered via european danske banks. Nothing to see here... Everyone is innocent and who knew too much are murdered by Western countries.
@Leith_Crowther4 ай бұрын
The communism went away, and the authoritarianism didn’t.
@brody31664 ай бұрын
@@BridgesDontFly The prosecution literally didn't even present any evidence against him except a labor book saying he worked for Yukos previously. No records of his sales, no proof that any embezzlement occurred. Nothing. He had never met the CEO of the company or even the other manager they accused of being his co-conspirator. The crime itself was literally impossible for him to have done because he didn't ever have access to 13 billion dollars worth of sales of crude oil in the time he worked there. The case was a sham, it certainly wouldn't meet the standards for proof in the U.S. How would you feel if my only evidence for accusing YOU of a crime was that you worked at the same company as a murderer?
@BridgesDontFly4 ай бұрын
@@brody3166 This happens often in the US.
@misanthropicphilanthropy3 ай бұрын
He's telling ALL OF US, to BE THANKFUL FOR ALL THE THINGS YOU HAVE NOW. life, health, food, warm shelter, comfort, love, Etc... ❤ thanks ❤
@kamikazekhan28323 ай бұрын
😭😭😭 nah convicted for stealing ALL the oil is crazy
@linzzzanityАй бұрын
Imagine being a scapegoat for an oligarch. Meanwhile for 7 years they were on their $100 million yacht and 20 hot playthings.
@hulamei311720 күн бұрын
Pariahs
@harvey26093 ай бұрын
Remember that scene in "The Wire"? "This is not prison. This is nothing." --- Sergie
@переверзинвладимир3 ай бұрын
Hahaha! How long could you stay in "not a prizon"? one or three minutes?
@harvey26093 ай бұрын
@@переверзинвладимир It's a line from a TV show. A Russian guy is saying this about American prison. Never mind 🤫
@PumpedAntics3 ай бұрын
@@переверзинвладимирreading comprehension non existent
@misstekhead2 ай бұрын
I was thinking of that exact scene as I watched this.
@matvei1510 күн бұрын
"Did he have hands? Did he have a face? Yes? Then it wasn't us."
@Heysaveva4 ай бұрын
PLEASE Make an episode of rehabilitation camps
@danst3517 күн бұрын
I did eight years here in Australia back in the 90s and 6 of those years was Max security. After watching this, I have nothing to complain about!!!!
@Tomee66666Ай бұрын
Great story, sad, eye opening. ThankYou from Australia ❤
@OfficialSamuelC4 ай бұрын
Just ordered his book. What a story!
@gayprepperz6862Ай бұрын
Some Oligarch framed him to take the fall for his own crime. People who whine about how bad the US is should watch this. Bethany Griner was humbled (at first).
@maddogsstar3 күн бұрын
If it’s any consolation the oligarch ended up in jail for 10 years.
@gayprepperz68623 күн бұрын
@@maddogsstar Yes it is! Thank you.
@Leith_Crowther4 ай бұрын
Overpaid Russian adds flooding the comments.
@balkanhistrian28833 ай бұрын
Yes, and payment is good
@westnilesnipes3 ай бұрын
The troll farms are out in full force 😂
@annalehman939413 ай бұрын
But all of your comments here is about Russia. Who's the bot?
@gilmour67543 ай бұрын
Given how criminal Yukos was, as well as any major Russian company in the privatization era, I doubt this guy was 100% innocent. Yukos was caught commiting major fraud to avoid taxes. I bet he's right that he was basically a politically motivated scapegoat for Oligarchs, but it's impossible to overstate how crooked these companies are and without knowing exactly what he did there it's not hard to believe a mere manager could be involved in the crime and end up offered up as the mastermind to save the real top dog. Not saying this dude is lying 100%, but this doesn't pass the sniff test when you read up on the post-privatization era of Russia and how corrupt the new private companies were.
@переверзинвладимир3 ай бұрын
not true, this dude has nothing to do with oligarchs and workin now as a track driver in Germany...
@переверзинвладимир3 ай бұрын
How criminal Yukos was? Could you explain? Rosneft under management Putin's friends paid less taxes as Yukos paid, when oil prices were at least twice lower! You know why?
@misstekhead2 ай бұрын
He wasn’t completely innocent, and he did associate with criminals. However, he became the fall guy in comparison to those that really should have been in prison.
@behindthen0thingАй бұрын
@@переверзинвладимир what's a track driver
@victormusembi19654 ай бұрын
Torturing prisoners is not good. Especially when a prisoner who is innocent.
@Fckterrorism-vr2kq3 ай бұрын
*Laughs in american prison*
@JohnDoe-lx5rm3 ай бұрын
Its normal in russia, always has been
@zivkovicable3 ай бұрын
@@JohnDoe-lx5rm While not quite on the same level, the USA has some terrible prisons too by first world standards..
@JohnDoe-lx5rm3 ай бұрын
@@zivkovicable it does. Somewhere deep in south too, of course. But overthere is everywhere like that. And whether you are guilty or not if you are put in prison they will literally beat the confession out of you, that us if some powerful people or just people with food connections want you gona for whatever reason, that is a common practice there. Just the same way rhis guy was out there because someone else wanned rhst business or wanned to steal that money and they jist made him a scapegoat. Everything is for sale and i mean Everything. You have 0 rights and you are not human there, you are just meat. In most of the places its like exactly like this. I mean you know what they did to the guy who was trying to replace putin right? Put in prison and ended up killing him, poisoning. russia is not a good place to be in prison or live there. I hope the send more of my tax money to help Ukraine to withstand their invasion and their regime. Russia basically is like north korea but with little more freedom.
@annalehman939413 ай бұрын
Innocent? 😂 He was working on the one of the worst and bloodiest oligarch - Khodorkovsky
@tyrese21kendrick494 ай бұрын
I love this Channel, pls make a Video about a Chinese Jail
@oregonsdank4 ай бұрын
No one ever gets out or they would.
@tyrese21kendrick494 ай бұрын
@@oregonsdank thats scary af i think its look like a SquidGame 💀
@Fckterrorism-vr2kq3 ай бұрын
I need more videos on western jails to balance out that propaganda.
@frozencrow87352 ай бұрын
@@tyrese21kendrick49I mean have you ever heard about Chinese prison? Nobody talking about them.
@jackiezhang55854 ай бұрын
他英文真好,基本都能听清楚,口音并不影响理解
@mcgraw80984 ай бұрын
It's certainly better than yours😅
@mcgraw80984 ай бұрын
@@axeavier that went right over your head didn't it.
@alexr1673 ай бұрын
你好同志
@jackiezhang5585Ай бұрын
阴阳怪气挺没意思的,一个颗没有赞美只有挑剔的心很可悲
@paulfrank90473 ай бұрын
Sorry, I don't feel bad for him at all, considering he along with his boss Mikhail Khodorkovsky engaged in severe corruption and the theft and sale of Russia's state assets for pennies on the dollar, during country's the transition from communism to capitalism. During that time, the life expectancy of Russian men dropped to 57 and many families could barely afford to eat. The state currency became so worthless teachers would get paid in bottles of vodka instead of money. Khodorkovsky became the richest man in Russia and an oligarch by using mafia type tactics to pillage the state's economy for the benefit of himself and cronies like Pereverzin. The oligarchs are what allowed Yeltsin to stay in power, despite him being an unpopular corrupt alcoholic who destroyed Russia's economy; the oligarchs bankrolled his reelection. Then Yeltsin chose Putin as his successor on condition he would not go after Yeltsin or his family. Putin allowed all the Yeltsin era oligarchs to keep their stolen assets as long as they pledged fealty to him. Khodorkovsky refused since he thought as Russia's richest man, he could dictate terms to Putin. However, Putin charged him for corruption (which he was most certainly guilty of) along with Pereverzin and the rest of the cronies at Yukos. These men inadvertently got Putin to succeed to the presidency, thinking they could control him like they did with Yeltsin. How poetic their corrupt and evil scheme backfired on them and landed them in prison. Pereverzin is no persecuted dissident and martyr for human rights. Putting lipstick on a pig won't make it attractive.
@переверзинвладимир3 ай бұрын
If you read his book "The Prisoner. Behind bars in Putin's Russia" you would write such a strange comment. Pereverzin has been sent to prizon under completely false charges. Khodorkovsky has never ever been charged for corruption and you did not evern mention formal charges in Khodorkovsky case.
@переверзинвладимир3 ай бұрын
I feel sorry for you, that you managed to write such a long comment with has nothing to do with this guy... Maybe it wouid worth to read his book ?
@dannydanny278926 күн бұрын
@@переверзинвладимирall of the oligarchs along with their friends pillaged our country in the 90s. Khodor and Pereverzin are sleazy thieves, but there are some thieves just like them left within the government because they're loyal to Putin. These guys weren't, and lost it all. As a reminder to all the powerful people in Russia what would happen if they cross the government somehow. No person working in such an establishment was innocent, except for the cleaning lady if she didn't have to clean blood from the carpets, lol.
@dannydanny278926 күн бұрын
@@переверзинвладимирpeople were cut into pieces and buried for owning a single vodka plant, do you really think these high rollers are not complicit in assassinations, bribery and corruption?
@johnmiller99538 күн бұрын
paid for comment
@κωνσταντινοςφυτικας4 ай бұрын
yes,this one is called documentary .bravo .
@Runnifier3 ай бұрын
This reminds me so much of what it was like to be a student at Pilgrim’s Rest Boarding School in Kentucky. Children can be tortured but can’t get lawyers.
@Joe-ym6bw3 ай бұрын
I feel bad for this man Russian prisons are tough he seems like a decent guy
@docall183 күн бұрын
All the Russian oligarchs acquired the state oil companies through corruption, after the fall of the USSR. He was one of the main deal-makers for Yukos.
@amehwican4 ай бұрын
For a second there I thought the thumbnail said “schizo guard”
@sandydancer1873 ай бұрын
Cheeky clickbait. They knew what they were doing lol.
@TheHumbleThinker3 ай бұрын
Eipstein would have been glad to hear your story.
@ShermanT.Potter4 ай бұрын
I wonder why the colonies were so nervous about the complaints, couldn't they censor the mail?
@CtOlaf3 ай бұрын
Prisoners give them to their lawyers, or directly to the court.
@ShermanT.Potter3 ай бұрын
@@CtOlaf I'm surprised they're allowed to do that. At least in that aspect, it seems like a fair justice system.
@Asger213 ай бұрын
@@ShermanT.PotterFair???😂😂😂 So Navalny was treated kind of fairly?
@ShermanT.Potter3 ай бұрын
@@Asger21 "At least in that aspect", meaning specifically regarding complaints. Proper grammar is supposed to lessen contextual issues such as this, but the reader has to pick up on them. :)
@doorzhik3 ай бұрын
Well, the issue is that you have competitors: Prosecutor's Office, may be the Investigative Committee and so on. Ideally they would be glad to compromise another law enforcement agency in the race of power. But practically, especially in the poor regions, local law enforcement agencies can be intertwined by the corruption, so these complaints would not be a big problem. But there's another issue: it's still a bureaucracy. And you have to deal with this paper, and even if you could just throw it off, it still annoys you
@iCover4803 ай бұрын
The oil company broke the cardinal sin of not cutting Putin in on the deals.
@austinhowell34634 ай бұрын
Undisputed movies gave me all the info I need to know about russian prisons
@Nick_B_Bad4 ай бұрын
😂 I never seen past the first one with Wesley Snipes and Ving Rhames.
@austinhowell34634 ай бұрын
@@Nick_B_Bad te second one is pretty solid as well
@dimitargeorgiev175411 сағат бұрын
Undisputed the first movie was shot in Bulgarian prison. Petrich prison to be exact
@deadbread844618 күн бұрын
I know a man who works in a Russian prison and he told stories like, for example, a man who escaped was tied to a car and rolled along the roads after which his kidneys were completely beaten off. There are many stories of how people were simply not treated and left to die.
@None-ss1zi3 ай бұрын
Every prisoner ever: I'm innocent, bro.
@переверзинвладимир3 ай бұрын
Where did you heard such a boolsheet? Have you been in prison?
@manmeetworld3 ай бұрын
Great narration
@Golgi-Gyges4 ай бұрын
My name is Vladimir, but everyone calls me Georgio
@onthefive56152 ай бұрын
I'm happy you made it out!
@mokster54 ай бұрын
I can't believe I hadn't heard about Navalny's death until now. I knew he'd come close several times but I never heard he actually died this year. How sad.
@переверзинвладимир4 ай бұрын
Navalny was murdered by prisoners...
@TheNethIafin4 ай бұрын
have you seen his ads from like 15 years ago?
@theworldofwoo83204 ай бұрын
Navalny the MI6 agent? That guy?
@shaiaheyes2c413 ай бұрын
How could you not have heard of Alexei Navalny's death until now?
@suprotyv75343 ай бұрын
@@переверзинвладимир he was murdered by Putin
@zulubeatz1Ай бұрын
Really enjoyed listening to this clever and composed man.
@JahStyles3 ай бұрын
seems very vanilla. as he said at the end this story is nothing compared to some of the tortures and rapes used in russian colonies on systematic basis.
@paddington16703 ай бұрын
excellent video
@leanbanclog3 ай бұрын
This guy was more than just a middle manager, a lot more
@trippplecup15633 ай бұрын
Getting out of county jail after 10 months in America is still the best feeling in the world that I've felt.
@JohnDoe-bt9qp3 ай бұрын
Mogs me, I didn't leave my house once in 2024.
@misstekhead2 ай бұрын
Same. I did time for a year. Unfortunately I violated probation, but thankfully I only spent a week in jail. I was assigned to a better public defender and a new judge had been voted in for my court, so I was lucky to have probation dismissed and get out the next day. “Free at last! Free at last! Thank God almighty! Free at last!” 😊
@Crown424 ай бұрын
This is why i respect the Voryz V Zakone. They started their organization because of the hardships that they endured in prison.
@Mrbyzantine99Ай бұрын
They been around WAy before that they were involved with the russian revolution and even before that the first crowned vor was in 1912
@Crown42Ай бұрын
@@Mrbyzantine99 Wow, I didn't know that. I know a lot of Russians especially the ones that I work with in tech.
@CentipedeM21 күн бұрын
most members of that culture are the worst people on earth. cruel, sadistic and hateful, many of them serial abusers, which is normalized and ironically never punished. yes, the prison transformed them from somewhat normal to that, but when im getting pressed by a guy outside a store at night idgaf what his tragic backstory is. stop idealizing them, they would do the same if they were the jailers
@paula.97529 күн бұрын
Remember that, currently, prison inmates in Russia have 2 options: those hellish living conditions, or being on the frontlines of the most vicious war that has been fought in Europe since WW2.
@alexr1673 ай бұрын
I worked in China near the Chinese-Russian-North Korea border for some time and we always played this game of "which would be the worst prison to be sent to". Everyone was united on this: Russia
@igorbednarski80483 ай бұрын
having read the accounts of the people that managed to escape North Korean death camps (calling them "prisons" is an insult to prisons, even as terrible as the Russian ones), I'm really not sure why they would say that.
@PumpedAntics3 ай бұрын
@@igorbednarski8048nk has gotta be worse
@MrJuulia01Ай бұрын
I think north korea is worse, they barely get any food
@BruceLee-rc2dr3 ай бұрын
Yukos was shady as any other company in Russia at that time. If you where a business man in those times, it meant you had direct ties to organized crime.
@переверзинвладимир3 ай бұрын
Not true! The more shady oil company in Russia were Rosneft and Surgutnentegaz. Yukos was the first company to be published the ownershiship structure and audit by PWC.
@AeSyrNation3 ай бұрын
Also, Khodorkovsky at least built kindergartens, sport fields, and roads. That was one of the reasons he was targeted: he was becoming quite popular among the populace, and as one of the most wealthy people in the country, could potentially fund his own successful political campaign.
@bydloshkolnik2 ай бұрын
@@AeSyrNation He killed a city mayor which tried to force him to pay the workers who were starving without any payment for 6 months at that time. the mayor also went on the hunger strike with the workers. >Petukhov went on a hunger strike with demands: to initiate a criminal case in connection with the failure of Yukos to pay taxes in large amounts in 1996-1998, to remove the chief of the tax inspectorate of Nefteyugansk and the head of the tax inspection of the Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug, to pay back the accumulated arrears in the amount of 1.2 trillion non-denominated rubles, stop interfering in the activities of local authorities of Nefteyugansk by Yukos >A few days after the end of the hunger strike, on the morning of June 26, 1998, on his way to work, Petukhov was shot near the city administration building. His guard was also wounded in the shooting. The murder occurred on the birthday of Mikhail Khodorkovsky, which many observers saw as a gift for the Russian businessman's birthday
@flippy663 ай бұрын
The Russian bots and UIs love these videos 🤣
@переверзинвладимир3 ай бұрын
it makes them crazy!
@Mrbyzantine99Ай бұрын
No such thing as russian bots that's an American propaganda n lies made up by Cia to discredit anything russian lmao
@LaurenOrion16 күн бұрын
I spent a decent amount of my childhood in Russia, and love the Russian people. They're kind, genuine and very welcoming! But you constantly live with the thought in the back of your head that something like this can happen, as the Russian government doesn't report to anyone, they don't owe their citizens an explanation.
@Gettenhart3 ай бұрын
The balls on this man to get jumped on purpose by 5 people just to get transfered. Hope he is having a good life now
@masterofreality5528Ай бұрын
Russians are so calm and talk quietly
@LesegoMakhanya-w2o4 ай бұрын
Now may you let us know how Guantanamo works?
@austind96752 ай бұрын
I enjoy these programs but kind of wish the format was a bit different…the constant switching to the VHS style chapter breaks is distracting (for future reference)
@jona65813 ай бұрын
great project. especially for those who liked A Million Little Pieces...🤣
@переверзинвладимир3 ай бұрын
He discribe all details in his book, where every single word is true...
@jona65813 ай бұрын
@@переверзинвладимир innocence project is waiting for his application 😅
@nna1u393 ай бұрын
watched it through the whole way, what a wonderful story honestly
@Zaratustra.Ай бұрын
Just some unbiased, wikipedia information here: He was a manager for one of the Russian oligarchs oil companies Yukos, where the head of that company had political ambitions. Yukos, like any other oil company, was extremely corrupt, responsible for killing and executing their rivals. Maybe you've heard of owner - Mikhail xodorkovskiy. Long story short, this isn't your "typical" prisoner story. Do your own research people
@переверзинвладимирАй бұрын
who was responsible for killing?! Hey, bot, everybody knows, who support killers!
@dannydanny278926 күн бұрын
@@переверзинвладимирpeople in Russia were dismembered and buried for owning a single vodka plant. Do you really think people from yukos aren't complicit in such trivial crimes if there are billions of dollars at stake? Lol.
@ColleenC-n5v19 күн бұрын
How sorry I am that you had to suffer so horribly as an innocent and good man. God bless you.
@razumskiy3 ай бұрын
Funny how after release he has enough money to move to US 🤔
@переверзинвладимир3 ай бұрын
Are you sure that this guy lives in the US?
@threethrushes3 ай бұрын
He resides in Israel, according to a statement he gave to the Hague in 2022.
@переверзинвладимир3 ай бұрын
Not true, he lives in Germany and works as a driver ..
@hexbeat9832Ай бұрын
What a fantastic human being.
@dr.woozie75003 ай бұрын
This guy's prison experience seems like daycare compared to the "Polar Wolf" penal colony in the Arctic that Navalny was tortured and killed in.
@am3m3r3 ай бұрын
Wasn’t there a movie based on the downfall of yukos oil company and this guy?
@minenotyours2124 ай бұрын
If it makes you feel better there are people in America doing 10-25 years for having a little bit of weed
@John-mf6ky3 ай бұрын
You think they just let people go for weed possession in Russia?;😂
@minenotyours2123 ай бұрын
@@John-mf6ky ya if you’re an oligarch
@revenone10773 ай бұрын
@@John-mf6ky Usually its a fine, it depends how much you have.
@Fckterrorism-vr2kq3 ай бұрын
@@revenone1077 NoOoOo VlAdImIr Its MucH wOrSE ThaN wHaT yOu sAyInG bOt mY MuRiCa Is tHe bEsT RuzZiA bAd WAaAaAa (RAaAaAH)
@Salted_Fysh3 ай бұрын
If it makes you feel better, the US prison system is increasingly privatized and treated as a for-profit organization using slave labour. 🦆👍🦆
@cousinivoryciv13093 ай бұрын
the VHS timer/PLAY effect is kinda silly, at least change the time when u edit the cuts ...
@nickacelvn3 ай бұрын
sounds a lot like most jails to me truth be known. The comment about America being a free society comparatively. Yes, much to the dismay of the owners.
@Faceplay23 ай бұрын
I completely disagree with you. I used to be a correctional officer. None of that stuff would be legal federally, or in the state that I worked at you would be arrested and fired right away for beating up inmates for no reason also in the United States, you have a trial Before you’re sent to prison. All the things he’s talking about or not legally allowed in the United States.
@shaiaheyes2c413 ай бұрын
Russian jails are certainly not like most jails, not in the civilized world anyway, but then again, we all know Russians aren't civilized.
@Anton43218Ай бұрын
@@Faceplay2romania has laws against this too, however they aren't followed.
@epampoefmkfkefpeao42913 ай бұрын
of course you found a person that was sentenced for crime they “didn’t commit”
@ivandemko33603 ай бұрын
This man was accused of stealing 13 billion. Being a Russian. It was probably only a couple billion 😂
@Fckterrorism-vr2kq3 ай бұрын
"This man was accused of stealing 13 billion. Being a Russian. It was probably only a couple billion " Ah yes... "Every 60 seconds in Africa, a minute passes"
@joshs39163 ай бұрын
Scary stuff
@dfui.4 ай бұрын
How does Biden's Prisons Work?
@Fckterrorism-vr2kq3 ай бұрын
OoahHhHh bOt My AmErIcAN PriSoNs A rE fAr BeTtER yOu BoT YoU OrC YoU rUzZian vLad.
@TesterAnimal13 ай бұрын
How are they Biden’s? He’s elected head of state for eight years then he retires. I smell a hysterical snowflake.
@bartsted83693 ай бұрын
he should be lucky he wasn't put into jail later ..as Putin still had a conscience then and was not as powerful as he is now. imagine now what they have to endure ...frontline or gulag which is better?
@66rowrow4 ай бұрын
Excellent work 👏 Next do Guantanamo bay 👍
@fieryweasel4 ай бұрын
Well, it was nice knowing this guy.
@Fckterrorism-vr2kq3 ай бұрын
If he's in an american channel he's probably very safe.
@Jonpo9525 күн бұрын
Hope this guy is with his family somewhere free and safe.
@blake75873 ай бұрын
America needs more prisons like this.
@переверзинвладимир3 ай бұрын
you want people to be forced to confess crimes they did not commit? I wonder how long a strong and brave person like you can withstand torture? One minute - you be a hero! 5 seconds .... That is how crime works
@shaiaheyes2c413 ай бұрын
America doesn't have prisons like this, and that's a good thing.
@ishrendon64353 ай бұрын
They do have some just secret prisons
@CommonContentArchive26 күн бұрын
@@переверзинвладимир They all think the'd be the ones on top under a totalitarian regime, when in reality they'd be the victims
@zarif1580Ай бұрын
I was in gulags several times. Harsh place. Inhumane
@fishermanfriends7273 ай бұрын
I think England prison should be a bit more like Russia ??
@CommonContentArchive26 күн бұрын
Don't be stupid
@hansolowe19Ай бұрын
Very interesting.
@RyogaEchizen3 ай бұрын
America needs this, too much FILTH here.
@CommonContentArchive26 күн бұрын
Look in the mirror
@RyogaEchizen26 күн бұрын
@@CommonContentArchive lol
@steveeuphrates-river73423 ай бұрын
Very interesting story!
@djtomoy4 ай бұрын
I expect they work like normal prisons, bad guys go in…good guys come out
@vanderlinde4you3 ай бұрын
I assume he's living far away from russia as we speak.
@mikeljackson91922 ай бұрын
Deutschland
@djp12344 ай бұрын
The MAGA hats need to see this, since they love Russia so much.
@BridgesDontFly4 ай бұрын
Putin never called me N a Z. I. Good luck in WW3😂
@djp12344 ай бұрын
@@BridgesDontFly Putin calls democratic countries "nazis" every day.
@clicheguevara52824 ай бұрын
You say that as if the American left didn't fully support Russia for _decades_ during the most brutal and totalitarian period of its history. Lmao Grow up.
@pepevonkek78034 ай бұрын
Lol. You really believe this video. Lol. Western people are so gullible.
@Leith_Crowther4 ай бұрын
What, are you kidding? Do you think Trumpists will be upset about the idea that a justice system is political and inhumane? Keep dreaming.
@michaelherron4306Ай бұрын
Imagine what the POWs have to endure. If they return they look like the skeletal survivors or WW2 concentration camps. Ruski Mir, sure thing…
@benjaminciotti34623 ай бұрын
This may be totally true... or it may be propaganda
@shaiaheyes2c413 ай бұрын
It's true. Accept it.
@isaacmili52223 күн бұрын
granted im only 3 seconds into the video, but if he was in jail for crime he didn't commit hows he gonna tell me how crime works?
@suprotyv75343 ай бұрын
His story is nothing compared to what kidnapped Ukrainian civilians and soldiers face in Russian prisons.
@Mrbyzantine99Ай бұрын
American lies and propaganda none of that happens its the other way around same way America started the war with acia coup in 2014 dnt speak your an American
@ArturVerdievАй бұрын
This comment needs more upvotes
@deadbread844618 күн бұрын
Let me remind you that American journalist Gonzalo Lira died in a Ukrainian prison about a year ago
@suprotyv753418 күн бұрын
@@deadbread8446 Why do you care about Americans? Are you a foreign agent?
@ArturVerdiev17 күн бұрын
@@deadbread8446 Do you happen to know which Ukrainian laws Gonzalo Lira broke? Also, do you know cause of death?
@arye52Ай бұрын
Excellent and sad story
@2258kid3 ай бұрын
In Russia, you reform jail.
@Bela6669928 күн бұрын
There are thousands of innocent people in Russian prisons. Its a tragedy
@dannydanny278926 күн бұрын
Not this guy tho
@paveilmikhail355022 күн бұрын
Meanwhile the UK is arresting people for their tweets 🤣
@ByddinRhyddidCymru3 ай бұрын
We need prisons like this in the uk, criminals have nothing to fear with the current system