Following SSU’s investigation, 3 enemy agents, who guided russian strikes on Lyman and Dnipropetrovsk region, sentenced to prison terms
Bases on the SSU’s evidence, another three russian informants, who adjusted russian air attacks on Donetsk and Dnipropetrovsk regions, received real prison terms.
All of them were detained as a result of the SSU’s special operations.
One of the agents was sentenced to 14 years in prison, another - to 12 years, and the third offender will spend 9 years behind bars.
In Donetsk region:
a local resident has been sentenced to prison for passing locations of the Defence Forces’ bases and movements in the liberated Lyman to the occupiers.
The enemy was primarily interested in the geolocation of the AFU Command and SSU units.
The SSU detained the aggressor’s informant on an attempt to transmit the data to the military intelligence of russia’s Southern military district via Odnoklassniki social network.
Another individual convicted is a 24-year-old resident of Novohrodivka, Pokrovsk district, recruited by russian intelligence services before the start of the full-scale invasion.
At that time, the woman travelled to the temporarily occupied Donetsk, where had sabotage training in the field camps of the terrorist organisation ‘DNR’.
After that, she was put on standby and sent home, and after 24 February 2022, was activated to carry out reconnaissance and sabotage against Ukraine.
On the aggressor’s instructions, the agent put marks near possible bases of Ukrainian servicemen and law enforcement in the frontline area.
The offender took photos of the ‘marks’ and sent them to the invaders with coordinates to prepare air attacks on our defenders.
In Dnipropetrovsk region:
The court convicted a former criminal, a resident of Kamianske, who worked for the FSB and was preparing russia’s missile strike on a local plant.
To do this, he photographed the ‘perimeter’ and the interior of the industrial facility, and then sent georeferenced images to the aggressor.
The investigations were carried out under the procedural supervision of the Prosecutor’s Office.