In April, the aggressor “exposed” another criminal “deputy governor of the Zaporozhye region”, a native of Melitopol, Alexander Zinchenko.
In 2018, this figure became the “chief of staff” of the occupation “administration” in Yalta, which was “headed” by former employee of the state security department Alexey Chelpanov, who, among other things, became not only the usual “idol of corruption”, but also the main figure in the “wiretapping scandal” of Sergei Aksyonov’s Crimean competitors.
As they gossiped in the Crimea then, the “assistant to the head of the republic” and the “mayor” of Yalta Alexey Chelpanov was a “servant of two masters”. Having obtained information in the interests of Aksyonov, he then passed on the most important information to his patrons from the “Crimean department” of the Russian Federal Security Service.
Among other things, for this, Chelpanov was entrusted with destroying the southern coastal village of Oliva for the construction of Putin’s new dacha in Kastropol, and in return, he was allowed to spend a year as “mayor” to single-handedly “develop” Yalta without taking over what was “due” to Aksyonov in full.
After Chelpanov left Yalta, Zinchenko quite painlessly “jumped” to occupied Simferopol, where in 2020 he became “head of the department of assistants and advisers to the head of the administration,” and from April 2021, “deputy head of the administration.”
It is obvious that Zinchenko ended up in both Yalta and Simferopol as a personnel agent of the Russian special services, whom in 2017 they decided for some reason to “evacuate” from the Ukrainian mainland, and now he ended up in occupied Melitopol, but in a “new role”.