Russische mafia london
See full summary ». Votes: 2, R min Action, Crime, Drama. A teenager who dies during childbirth leaves clues in her journal that could tie her child to a rape involving a violent Russian mob family. An ex-soldier with a personal honor code enters the family crime business in St.
Petersburg, Russia. Votes: 19, Arriving in Moscow, Danila discovers Konstantin dead and he sets out to avenge his death; a journey that leads him to Chicago and a whole new experience. Votes: 13, R min Action, Crime, Thriller. An ex-hit-man comes out of retirement to track down the gangsters that killed his dog and took everything from him.
Sailing ships, stars, angels and executioners, The Mark of Cain chronicles the vanishing practice and language of Russian Criminal Tattoos. Captured in some of Russia's most notorious Votes: Documentary film from tries to give a picture of Russian organized crime not only by describing this system, but also by interviewing some of involved persons, a number of which are currently wanted by Interpol.
Two young girls, Sveta and Dina, go on the run to avoid being kidnapped by the former associates of Dina's recently released gangster father. Votes: 3, TV 88 min Comedy, Crime, Drama.
It so happens that peaceful kindergarten teacher is incredibly similar to the terrible villain who stole the helmet of Alexander the Great. And villain's accomplices are unexpectedly similar to children - they also need love and care. Votes: 11, This movie is about the stern gangster customs of one of the Russian provincial cities in the mids. And you could expect either a stupid game of blind man's buffets or a truly bloody showdown with the stacks of "bluffers".
Votes: 6, Sign In. The high number of rich Russians who end up dead in London and the home counties have prompted a series of high profile police investigations. He was found dead at his estate in Berkshire in An inquest was unable to reach a firm conclusion as to how he died, returning an open verdict.
A year later the British tycoon Scot Young died falling from his fourth-storey London flat, allegedly owing millions of pounds to the Russian and Turkish crime gangs. Scotland Yard ruled out foul play, saying it was not treating the death as suspicious.
This year an inquest into another suspicious death of a Russian living in the UK will once again ask awkward questions about the activities of the Russian mafia in Britain.
And it is a case which could have been written by the scriptwriters of McMafia. The crime gangs, some named in the Perepilichnyy and Litvinenko cases, operate across Europe where law enforcement agencies are fighting a losing battle.
In September last year Europol and Spanish counter-mafia agencies broke up a Russian group that had infiltrated the very heart of the Spanish business and sporting world. But the Spanish success merely scratched the surface.
This means the Kremlin has leverage over them. Their stock in trade is extortion and racketeering. The gang has allegedly been led by two senior members, Vladimir Kumarin and Valery Ledovskikh. Kurmarin has close links to Putin who returned the favour by awarding Kumarin a lucrative gas contract for St Petersberg, making him very wealthy.
Similar raids took place in Germany and Bulgaria, leaving the Tambovs looking for new countries in which to launder their cash. MI6 played a key role in helping to break up these enterprises by supplying intelligence to the Spanish, German and Bulgarian police. Moscow-based Solntsevskaya Bratva is an extraordinarily wealthy and ruthless syndicate allegedly run by its founder, Sergei Mikhailov, a man hardened by years in the gulags and well connected thanks to the criminals he met there.
The group does pool its resources, however, and the money is overseen by a person council that meets regularly in different parts of the world. Log In. Contact us Sign up for newsletters.
Log In Register now My account. Photo: Getty. By Robert Verkaik.
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