Broken_Erika
Play with me.
Was the car supposed to catch fire and incinerate them? Or explode?Seriously, in which country can two people just be crushed to death by a car?
Was the car supposed to catch fire and incinerate them? Or explode?Seriously, in which country can two people just be crushed to death by a car?
Nothing special today. Fatal car accident in Moscow region.
Seriously, in which country can two people just be crushed to death by a car?
Sounds more serious to me, than the lawsuit against mother for leaving her child in danger.I was thinking more about serious news. (See OP.)
Now you've made me want to know about the discount system.I apologize for badly constructed sentence. I meant "before he reminds me of derailing the thread" And he did, just above.
Problem?Mustakrakish said:...and what is your problem with Finns anyway?
Related: why do so many Russians appear to have dashboard cameras?Nothing special today. Fatal car accident in Moscow region.
Seriously, in which country can two people just be crushed to death by a car?
Mainly, to have evidence in case something like road accident happens. Also, to record falling meteorites and stuff like that.Related: why do so many Russians appear to have dashboard cameras?
I heard this name somewhere, but don't know what's special about him.Also: how well known is a certain elderly millionaire called Chavchadze?
There were news about it, most of people don't care. I didn't read about this beyond headlines too. Don't think it will develop into something serious.Aaalso, what news are there in Russia about the protests against Lukashenko?
I forgot about that thread!This would be more suitable for Ask a Russian thread, tbh.
Sorrryyyy! I forgot to include the link.red_elk said:I heard this name somewhere, but don't know what's special about him.
Well, we'll see -and I'll post news when I find some.red_elk said:There were news about it, most of people don't care. I didn't read about this beyond headlines too. Don't think it will develop into something serious.
Sounds more serious to me, than the lawsuit against mother for leaving her child in danger.
Sorrryyyy! I forgot to include the link.
He's financed by Konstantin Malofeyev to try and teach people about monarchism, bringing back the Romanov family or (a bit improbably I'd say) crowning Vladimir Putin as czar of Russia.
Monarchists are generally considered loonies. These guys would be lucky to get even 0.1% approval rating.Sorrryyyy! I forgot to include the link.
He's financed by Konstantin Malofeyev to try and teach people about monarchism, bringing back the Romanov family or (a bit improbably I'd say) crowning Vladimir Putin as czar of Russia.
Good to hear.Monarchists are generally considered loonies. These guys would be lucky to get even 0.1% approval rating.
Monarchists are generally considered loonies. These guys would be lucky to get even 0.1% approval rating.
More interesting things happening today - we are celebrating 3 years anniversary!
It's not an occupation, but thank you for congratulations anyway.Anywho, congrats to 3 years of Crimea occupation!
They don't, unless you consider an annual 4000$ check as an actual payment for a military base. Check which Cuban government doesn't take, btw.Even Americans are still paying Castro the lease for Guantanamo.
Key witness in Preet Bharara’s Russian probe just fell from fourth floor of building
A critical witness in a Russian mob-operated money laundering scheme may have just been forcibly thrown from a fourth floor window.
Nikolai Gorokhov, who is the attorney representing the family of anti-Putin lawyer Sergei Magnitsky, is still alive but in intensive care with severe head injuries, according to the Daily Beast. The Beast also reports that Gorokhov was a witness in recently fired U.S. attorney Preet Bharara’s investigation of a Russian money laundering ring operating out of New York City. BBC reporter Daniel Sandford tweeted that Gorokhov was due in court this week to testify before a grand jury on what he knew, citing British financier Bill Browder of Hermitage Capital:
In his own investigation, Magnitsky learned that officials working within Russia’s Interior Ministry and its tax bureau were members of the Klyuev Group. In a 2012 letter to President Obama, Senator John McCain (R-Arizona) described the group as a “dangerous transnational criminal organization”
However, President Trump suddenly removed him from his post after he refused Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ order to resign. In addition to the alleged attempt on Gorokhov’s life, Axios noted that seven other prominent Russian officials critical of Vladimir Putin’s regime have all mysteriously died since November of 2016.
http://resistancereport.com/world/man-thrown-fourth-floor/