Naklonnij Parallelepiped Razvertka
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Contents • • • • • • • • • • • • Early life [ ] Poklonskaya was born 18 March 1980 in the village of Mikhailovka, Voroshilovgrad Oblast, Ukrainian SSR (today, Ukraine); later in 1990, her family moved to in Crimea. She graduated from the University of Internal Affairs in Yevpatoria in 2002.
Her parents are both retired, living in Crimea, and both her grandfathers died during the, with only her grandmother surviving the German occupation. On 1 May 2018, Poklonskaya stated in an interview to the news agency Sputnik that her grandmother is of Serbian ethnicity, from Serbian settlers who settled in territory of Imperial Russia between 1753–64, in military frontier of Imperial Russia, located in the territory of present-day Luhansk Oblast and Donetsk Oblast of Ukraine. Career [ ] Ukrainian service [ ] After her graduation, Poklonskaya worked in the Ukrainian Prosecutor's Office, initially serving as an assistant prosecutor to the Acting Prosecutor of the Republic of Crimea. She was the assistant attorney of Krasnogvardeisky district in Crimea from 2002 to 2006, and the assistant attorney of Yevpatoria from 2006 to 2010. Between 2010 and 2011, she was the deputy chief of a surveillance law enforcement unit of the Prosecutor's Office of Crimea which was responsible for dealing with organized crime.
In 2011 in, she acted as the state prosecutor in the high-profile trial of Ruvim Aronov, a former deputy of the and a former manager of the Saki soccer club. Aronov was prosecuted for his leadership role in the Bashmaki gang, an organized crime group that emerged in Crimea, Zaporizhia, Kharkiv, and Kiev after the 1990 dissolution of the USSR. The gang had been 'known for its cruelty' and had been implicated in racketeering, robberies, eight abductions, and 50 murders. In December of the same year, Poklonskaya was assaulted in the stairwell of her home in. As a result, she suffered partial facial paralysis. The attack is widely believed to have been a revenge of the Bashmaki gang.
In the same year, she was appointed the inter-district environmental prosecutor of Simferopol. Following that, she was transferred to the Ukrainian Prosecutor General's Office in, where she served as a senior prosecutor. From October to December 2012, Poklonskaya worked as head of the prosecutors with the proceedings of the Court of Appeal of Crimea. Later, from December 2012 up until March 2014, she was a senior attorney of the 2nd division of the General Directorate of Internal Affairs involved in pre-trial investigation and public prosecution management supervision with oversight of law enforcement in criminal proceedings. On 25 February 2014, Poklonskaya handed in her resignation, in which she stated that she was 'ashamed to live in the country where freely walk about the streets' (a reference to radical activists). The resignation was not accepted. Instead, she was given a vacation and left Kiev for Crimea where her parents lived.
In Simferopol, Poklonskaya offered her help to the Crimean government. Prosecutor of Crimea [ ].
Poklonskaya in uniform as Prosecutor General, March 2015 While the sought independence from Ukraine, on 11 March, Poklonskaya was appointed Prosecutor of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea. Poklonskaya was appointed to the position by after the position had been reportedly rejected by four others, including the former Vice-Prosecutor of Crimea, Vyacheslav Pavlov.
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Her previous criticism of the, and the 'anti-constitutional coup' led the Ukrainian government to launch a criminal case against her and strip her of the civil service rank of Counsellor of Justice. For her part, Poklonskaya refers to the change of power in Ukraine as an 'unconstitutional coup and armed seizure of power', and called Ukraine's new parliamentarians 'devils from the ashes.' Immediately following her appointment as Prosecutor, she was involved in an investigation into the violent attacks committed against Crimean members.