Vyacheslav Ivankov

Vyacheslav Ivankov

Vyacheslav Ivankov ( _ru. Вячеслав Иваньков) is a Russian criminal and notorious member of the Russian Mafia who was believed to have connections with Russian state intelligence organizations and their organized crime partners [http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08850600500483699 The Chekist Takeover of the Russian State] , Anderson, Julie (2006), International Journal of Intelligence and Counter-Intelligence, 19:2, 237 - 288.] He has operated in both the Soviet Union and the United States. His nickname, "Yaponchik" (Япончик) translates from Russian as "Little Japanese", due to his vaguely Asian features and slanted eyes.

Early life

Ivankov was born in 1945 in Georgia to ethnically Russian parents,(Mother, Olga Gostasvits)(Father, Bernard Royal-Ivankov) at the time part of the Soviet Union and grew up in Moscow. He was an amateur wrestler in his youth and served his first prison time for his participation in a bar fight, in which he claimed he was defending the honor of a woman. After his release he began to move up in the criminal world, selling goods on the black market.

Later Ivankov became involved in gang activity. His gang used forged police documents to enter houses and then burgle them. In 1982 authorities had finally caught up with him and he was arrested on firearms, forgery and drug-trafficking charges. Though he was sentenced to fourteen years he was released in 1991, reportedly thanks to the intervention of a powerful politician and a bribed judge of the Russian supreme court. It was during these years of imprisonment that he was initiated as a vor v zakone.

Moving to the United States

Ivankov arrived in the United States in March 1992, despite having served a prison sentence of around ten years and a reputation as one of the fiercest criminals in Russia. He had arrived on a regular business visa stating that he would be working in the film industry.His reason for arriving in America was not initially clear. The Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs advised the FBI that Ivankov had come to "manage and control ROC [Russian Organized Crime] activities in this country", advice that the FBI took on board. However Alexander Grant, editor for the paper Novoye Russkoye Slovo said in 1994 Ivankov had left Russia because it was too dangerous for him there, since there are "new criminal entrepreneurs who don't respect the likes of Yaponchik." and that he was not criminally active in the United States. [http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/hockey/etc/yap.html] These sources are wrong however, since it became apparent that Ivankov was indeed criminally active in the United States. The actual scope of his activities is open for debate however, since conflicting sources describe his gang on Brighton Beach as around 100 members strong and being the "premier Russian crime group in Brooklyn" to something on the scale Lucky Luciano's nationwide Mafia Commission many decades earlier. However there is no evidence to suggest that he systematically used violence or corruption or attempted to establish a monopoly on any criminal enterprise.

Ivankov was arrested by the FBI in June 1995, charged with the extortion of several million dollars from an investment advisory firm run by two Russian businessmen, and in June the next year was convicted along with two co-defendants. This causes further debate whether he was a big-time crime boss, since usually the criminal masterminds at the top are insulated from direct criminal activity by several layers. Furthermore, it was alleged that a murder of one of the victim's fathers in Moscow was used as part of the threat, yet in tapped phone conversations Ivankov seems to be ignorant of such an event.

During interviews in prison, Ivankov accused the FBI of inventing the myth of the Russian mafia in order to prove the usefulness of their Russian division. He also stated that Russia "is one uninterrupted criminal swamp", the main criminals being the Kremlin and the Duma and that anybody who thinks he is the leader of the so-called Russian Mafia is foolish.

Return to Russia

On July 13 2004 Ivankov was deported to Russia to face murder charges over two Turkish nationals who were shot in a Moscow restaurant following a heated argument in 1992. A third was seriously wounded in the alleged incident.The jury found him not guilty and he was acquitted the same day on July 18 2005. The witnesses, a police officer among them, claimed to have never have seen him in their lives.

Larisa Kislinskaya, a leading crime journalist with the tabloid Sovershenno Sekretno, thinks Ivankov will remain a relevant figure, if only because of his position as a thief-in-law with the criminal leaders who remain in prison. "Prison life is still run by the thieves' law," Kislinskaya said. "They may not have to respect him while they are free, but if they ever land in prison, they had better respect him. As long as there is a prison system, Ivankov will be an authority."

In popular culture

In the episode "Maranatha" of the American TV series Millennium, a vor v zakone named Yaponchik is responsible for killings linked to the Chernobyl disaster - though in the episode, Yaponchik is referred to as a Russian mythical figure as opposed to a mafia member.

Family

Vyacheslav is said to have a half brother by the name of Alan Royal who lives in the British West Indies (Grand Cayman Islands). Vyacheslav was said to have moved to the Cayman Islands in 2006 where he now helps manage his brother's business in the tax haven island. Vyacheslav's wife filed for a divorce in 2007 and has remarried to Vladamir Dravestine.

Notes

References

* [http://gangstersinc.tripod.com/Ivankov.html GANGSTERS INCORPORATED - Ivankov]
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/3893329.stm BBC News - Russian 'godfather' returns home]
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/4694155.stm BBC News - Russian gangland boss acquitted]
* [http://www.compromat.ru/main/japonchik/a.htm Vyacheslav "Yaponchik" Ivankov] ru icon


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Thief in law — (Russian: вор в законе, vor v zakone ; plural thieves in law vory v zakone ) is a skilled individual, particularly a thief, within the Russian criminal world who satisfies certain requirements of the Russian criminal traditions and are similar to …   Wikipedia

  • Solntsevskaya bratva — Infobox Criminal organization name = Solntsevskaya bratva image size = caption = founded = mid 1980s by Sergey Mikhaylov founding location = Moscow, Russia years active = 1980s present territory = Moscow, Russia, active worldwide ethnicity =… …   Wikipedia

  • Orekhovskaya gang — The Orekhovskaya gang (Russian: Oреховскaя группировкa) was a criminal organization based in Moscow active between the late 80 s and early 90 s. History The gang was founded in 1988 and was made up primarily of former young sportsmen between 18… …   Wikipedia

  • List of crime bosses — Prohibition*Joe Aiello (1928 1930), assassinated October 23, 1930. *Al Capone (Scarface)(1899 1947), syphilis and pneumonia. *Steve Ferrigno, assassinated November 5, 1930. *Antonio Lombardo, assassinated September 7, 1928 *Salvatore Maranzano,… …   Wikipedia

  • Deaths in October 2009 — Contents 1 October 2009 1.1 31 1.2 30 1.3 29 …   Wikipedia

  • Mishka Yaponchik — (en russe : Мишка Япончик), né le 30 octobre 1881 à Odessa, en Russie et décédé le 4 août 1919 à Voznessensk en République socialiste soviétique d Ukraine, était un gangster vivant à Odessa, un révolutionnaire Juif, ainsi …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Russian Mafia — (Русская мафия, Russkaya Mafiya ), Red Mob (Красная мафия, Krasnaya Mafiya ) or Bratva ( Братва ; slang for brotherhood ) or Mafya or Mafiya, is a name given to a broad group of organized crime groups from the former Soviet Union (FSU)… …   Wikipedia

  • Mafia rusa — Fundación Se fundó en Rusia, principalmente luego de la caída de la antigua Unión Soviética Ámbito Internacional, en las ex repúblicas soviéticas y gran número de operaciones en Israel y los Estados Unidos. Etnias Rusos, judíos rusos, ucranianos …   Wikipedia Español

  • Russian mafia — In Russia / Former Soviet Union Territory International, strongholds in former Soviet states and extensive operations in Israel and the United States Ethnicity Primarily Russians, minorities of Russian Jews, Ukrainians, Abkhazians, Azerbaijanis,… …   Wikipedia

  • PFC Levski Sofia — Levski Sofia Full name Професионален футболен клуб Левски София (Professional football club Levski Sofia) Nickname(s) Сините (The Blues) От …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”