As it follows from the occupiers’ August statements, within the framework of the imitation of “filling the republican budget” with its current hundred-billion-ruble hole, in addition to the Yalta port, they are also criminally selling the “Crimean Winery” located in the village of Pervomayske (Biy Tanysh) near Simferopol for next to nothing.
This illegal “enterprise”, with more than 400 workers, controlling more than 60 hectares of vineyards and producing various alcoholic products under the brand “Crimean Status”, is declared by the occupiers on the estates of the Ukrainian state enterprise “Pervomaysky Winery” seized by them in 2014.
The occupiers declare that for this plant “the nominal value of securities is 2.3 billion rubles”, but they will illegally sell it for 1.6 billion.
In order to understand the reasons for such “unheard-of generosity” it is worth paying attention to the next “factory director”, Tatyana Dudakova, who appeared in the “registers” of the occupiers in May of this year, several months after the “transfer” of the winery from a “state unitary enterprise” to a “joint-stock company”.
Previously, Dudakova was the director of the Krasnodar winemaking companies “Russian Azov” and “Nadlimannoye” of Andrei Romanov, who then merged them into “Pomestie Golubitskoye” and sold the business to Russian vodka magnate Alexander Mechetin.
After that, Dudakova “surfaced” as the general director of another Kuban winemaking structure, “Yubileynaya”, bought by the concern “Abrau-Dyurso”, controlled by the Russian businessman Pavel Titov.
Earlier we wrote that the Titov corporation had criminal plans for the occupied Crimea.
In 2014, the father of the current “president of the concern”, Boris Titov, announced a certain “road map” for “transforming” the occupied Crimea “into one of the world’s largest wine clusters.”
At the same time, the occupied Crimea was deliberately considered by the Titov clan as a raw material appendage to their Russian business empire, since the aggressor traditionally imports four fifths of its wine materials from third countries. Naturally, the Titovs decided to “milk federal programs” by declaring the “deliberate subsidization of winemaking.”
Having failed in such illegal plans, but with the same goal in 2019, the Titov clan criminally tried to “buy” the capacity of “Massandra” from Crimean collaborators, counting on the production of primary wine materials, but then it was “outdone” by marauders from the Kovalchuk clan, close to Kremlin.
So it is extremely likely that Crimean collaborators are actively preparing the winery in Pervomayske for transfer to the Titovs’ “family estates”, with the corresponding corruption “profit” for Vladimir Konstantinov’s clan.




