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Well, that's a grim read but on the other hand I couldn't care less about their social problems. But the prospect once those convicts get back seem horrendous af.
Many fear that those being released could now seek to settle scores at
home.In 2014, Kirill Neglin of Segezha was sentenced to 12 years in prison
on counts of drug dealing and domestic abuse. After a bout of heavy
drinking, he repeatedly hit and kicked his wife, terrorising her both
at home and then following her to their dacha, where she said she
silently endured another attack because she feared for their
children’s lives.After she testified against him, Neglin issued a threat in court. “She
won’t live long,” he said, according to a court transcript first
reported by the independent news outlet Verstka. “Whatever sentence
the court gives [me], that’s how long she has left to live.”
kboy
@starfish&coffee
Prigozhin goes a long way to promise that Wagners prison recruits who survive and return to civilian life can expect leniency if they commit more crimes.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/feb/10/wagner-convict-soldiers-return-from-ukraine-russia-mercenary-group