• maorofl@lemy.lol
    ·
    8 months ago

    Both bailiffs present in the hall look attentively at the artist. She speaks more and more from herself and reads less: “I am filled with a feeling of compassion. I feel sorry for any soldiers, any civilians in any cities.”

    Skochilenko calls the “price tags” printed for the store an art object and does not agree with the prosecutor’s position regarding the eight years of imprisonment: “I categorically disagree with this request. My former neighbor in the pre-trial detention center was asked to serve 8 years for 300 grams of drugs.” Prosecutor Gladyshev also looks at Skochilenko, but then looks away.

    Her business, according to the artist, is “as simple as three kopecks.” Skochilenko quotes an employee of Pre-trial Detention Center No. 5, who in a personal conversation once said: “What can we consider there?”

    As a result, it took almost 30 meetings to consider the case. The verdict is scheduled to be announced on November 16.

    Reference

    Artist Sasha Skochilenko was detained in April 2022. She was accused of replacing price tags in a store on Vasilyevsky Island with stickers about events in Ukraine. A pensioner noticed the substitution: she filed a complaint with the store employees, and then with the police. Skochilenko’s actions were assessed as “public dissemination of deliberately false information about the use of the RF Armed Forces based on political hatred” (Article 207.3 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation). The article provides for a fine of 3 to 5 million rubles, forced labor or imprisonment for a term of 5 to 10 years.