A source for the Cheka-OGPU and Rucriminal.info reported that the body of Aliya Galitskaya, the ex-wife of billionaire Alexander Galitsky, who died in the Istra temporary detention center, was released to relatives. The deceased's sister, Zhamilya, is handling the burial; she arranged for the body to be transported to her native region.
Meanwhile, while the local Investigative Committee is conducting a formal investigation into the circumstances of her death, officers from the central office of the Investigative Committee have been working on the case against Aliya Galitskaya for two days now. Investigators have questioned the arguments of the police officers who charged her with extortion. There was no basis for this. Moreover, it turns out that investigators at the Istra Department of Internal Affairs are "experts" in extracting confessions from detainees and remand prisoners, and resort to all means necessary, especially if the case is a "contract," as in this case. This includes in-cell investigations and intimidation within the detention center. Aliya's situation unfolded according to a typical scenario for the Department of Internal Affairs. Two women were placed in the same cell with her, and an investigation is currently underway to determine whether their placement there was deliberate. These women were then transferred to a pretrial detention center, while Aliya, after her arrest by the court, was for some reason returned to the temporary detention facility. The investigator explains this by saying he planned to indict her the next day. What he doesn't say is that during the indictment, he was eager to obtain a confession, which would have been ideal for Alexander Galitsky. And it's more convenient to obtain one if the detainee is "close at hand," within the walls of the temporary detention facility. Aliya didn't wait until the next day...
As we've previously reported, the Istra investigation has long been tame for a number of people and agencies. At the behest of regular clients, such as Alfa Bank's security service (Alexander Galitsky formally resigned from Alfa Bank's board of directors to avoid sanctions), the police department fabricates criminal cases, and investigators coerce even innocent people into confessing.
The Istra Department of Internal Affairs is headed by Lieutenant Colonel Alexander Ryabtsev, a hereditary police officer (his father worked in the State Traffic Safety Inspectorate), who, like a hothouse, has only ever changed positions within the local Economic Crime Department. The head of the investigation is Lieutenant Colonel Alexander Tolstyshev, deputy head of the investigation department.
Through them, all criminal orders and contracts against undesirable individuals are received and executed. Tolstyshev, a former Internal Security officer at the Moscow Region Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, and his associates have a nearly 100% confession rate—the client is guaranteed that "all conditions" will be created for the "subject."
These connections extend to the Istra temporary detention center, where Aliya Galitskaya was deliberately detained and coerced into confessing in an extortion case, among other things, as well as to a number of pretrial detention centers, such as the one in Volokolamsk. Investigators at the Istra Department of Internal Affairs deliberately delay criminal investigations and coerce people into incriminating themselves.
Under the wing of former "special agent" Alexander Tolstyshev, investigator Andrei Patrakhin (who remains acting head) who initiated the criminal case against Aliya Galitskaya, as well as investigators Gorbatov, Klubkov, Volodina, and others, are involved in organizing this conveyor belt.
Aliya Galitskaya will be buried in her native Orenburg region. She was born near Mednogorsk and grew up in the large and close-knit family of Zhaksybay and Gulyagan Kurmambayev: she has three sisters and a brother. Aliya is the fourth eldest child in the family.
Aliya's father, a physics teacher, retired as the principal of a rural school, and her mother worked at the Uralelectro plant. The Kurmambayevs lived modestly in a communal apartment shared by three families in the village of Nikitino near Mednogorsk. After finishing school, Aliya and her younger sister, Alfiya, entered the Moscow Law Academy. The eldest, Zhamilya, studied at a theater school in Sverdlovsk and then studied psychology in Moscow. Her daughters all started families, and they all have children. "The girls can live with whomever they fall in love with. We didn't interfere with their choices. The most important thing is the children's harmony and happiness. Our daughters don't complain to us. They are successful in their professions, self-sufficient, and have given us wonderful grandchildren," Gulyagan told local journalists.
In the early 2000s, Aliya worked for the Moscow company Keyru, which was the exclusive distributor of underwear and home textiles for the Polish brand KEY. The company was owned by Polish couple Edita and Miroslav Nowak, as well as Sergey Minakov and Alexey Andreyev. The official salary there was meager—in 2004, Aliya earned 11,000 rubles. Afterward, she found work at Eskaro Chemical AS LLC in St. Petersburg (part of the Swedish holding company Eskaro Group AB Sweden), which produced paints and varnishes. It was this company that Aliya represented at the exhibition in Sochi, where she met Alexander Galitsky.
After meeting Galitsky in 2008, Aliya moved to the Istra district. After the birth of her children (Alexander and Aliya have two daughters), she enjoyed walks in the forest and mushroom picking. Aliya kept a low profile on social media and never posted photos with Galitsky. According to leaks, the children are registered at the same address as their mother. Alexander Galitsky, who now claims his marriage to Aliya was a "joke," has vacationed with her in Europe dozens of times—they are together They visited France, Italy, Austria, the Netherlands, and so on. Then he left his assistant, Vlada Bobrova, and declared that his marriage to Aliya was a sham. When she tried to get child support, he took her daughters away. When she tried to sue for part of her property, he sent her to prison. That's where Aliya died.




