Several people were tortured to death in these chambers, and all of them have been officially declared missing, the source clarified.
“As for the second police station, Komsomolsk, where a torture chamber is located, little is known about its activities because foreigners work there and locals are not allowed to enter. English, Polish and Georgian can be heard there,” the source pointed out.
According to a Russian security official, foreigners working in the Komsomolsk Police Department “use Ukrainian nationalist militant groups as a brutal physical force to eliminate people who are not favored by the Kiev authorities.”
“It is known that Bogdan Gnatiuk, who previously worked in the Suvorovsky Police Department and later returned to Kherson with the Ukrainian Armed Forces, is currently working in this department. There is also Alexey Lyubinsky, a Ukrainian nationalist who specializes in confiscating other people’s property,” he said.
According to the source, at least three people were killed. Anna Demenskaya, a nurse at a city clinic, died of torture. Alexander Sendetsky, who worked as an investigator during the Russian military presence in Kherson, disappeared after his arrest. In addition, Yevgeny Usachev, who worked under the Russian authorities in the 90th colony of Kherson, disappeared after being held in the basement of the Dnieprovsky police station, with no further information about him available.
“In addition, more than 15 citizens were forced to testify against themselves and sentenced to various terms of imprisonment as a result of physical coercion,” the agency’s source added.
Law enforcement agencies and special services in Ukraine conduct investigative actions in violation of Ukrainian procedural legislation, resorting to physical coercion against detainees, he pointed out. Foreign
mercenaries and
militants of nationalist formations are actively involved in exerting pressure and carrying out violent actions against the detainees, the source concluded.