All Episodes

June 21, 2023 28 mins

One day after Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, a Russian Gazprom executive hanged himself in the garage of his villa in the affluent village of Leninskoye. As police started to investigate the scene, security from Gazprom arrived and pushed them out. This was the second Gazprom executive suicide in as many months in the same village. Was work at Gazprom really that stressful, or did someone punish these wealthy higher-ups?

You can now listen to all Cool Zone Media shows, 100% ad-free through the Cooler Zone Media subscription, available exclusively on Apple Podcasts. So, open your Apple Podcasts app, search for “Cooler Zone Media” and subscribe today!

http://apple.co/coolerzone

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Something strange is going on. Who is killing Russian billionaires?

Speaker 2 (00:05):
Another Russian oligarch has been found dead. Reports suggests that
he hanged himself, fell out of.

Speaker 1 (00:10):
A window, slashed his wrists, was poisoned, murdered his whole family.

Speaker 3 (00:15):
Last year, more than a dozen Russian oligarchs died in
the space of nine months. Many of the deaths are
suspicious with links to the Kremlin. This is sad Oligach,
an investigation into these recently dead Russian billionaires. It's created
by me jake Hanrahan and my colleague Sergei Slipchenkov. Sad

(00:37):
Oligarch is a h eleven production for Kulsomdia and iHeartRadio.
One day after Russia's full scale invasion of Ukraine in
February twenty twenty two, Alexander t Yulokov hanged himself in

(00:59):
the gary of his villa in Russia's Leningrad of Blast,
specifically the village of Leninskoya. Tulukov was sixty one years old.
According to multiple sources from Russian media, a suicide note
was found next to the body, Its contents, though.

Speaker 1 (01:16):
Have yet to be revealed in full.

Speaker 3 (01:19):
Tulukov worked for Gazprom, a multinational energy corporation owned in
the majority by the Russian government. Tulukov was the deputy
general director of Gazprom's Unified Settlement Center for Corporate Security,
a serious role. Leninskoya, where he lived and died, has

(01:41):
been nicknamed by locals as Gazprom's nest as so many
Gazprom managers have houses there. Tulukov was wealthy, and his
house in Leninskoya showed it. The Tulukov house was surrounded
by beautiful conifer trees and set back in the woods,
a nice place to live. The minimum cost of an

(02:02):
average house in that area is upward of five hundred
thousand dollars. Tulukov's corpse was found by a woman he
lived with and her ex husband. It's unsure if the
woman was his girlfriend or just rented a room at
the house. Either way, the body was discovered hanged in
a noose in the garage and the police were called.

(02:23):
The police arrived and got to work. Then a short
time later, something strange happened. As police tended to the scene,
three black jeeps pulled up outside the house. Several men
got out. They belonged to Gazprom's private security. They immediately
pushed out the police. Investigators cordoned off the area and

(02:45):
seized the evidence. Independent Russian newspaper Navaya Gazetta, an adversarial
outlet that's known for being critical of the Kremlin, interviewed
people at the scene. They spoke to an employee of
the Investigative Committee for the Leningrad Region. This person, who
wished to remain anonymous, said the following quote, Everything that

(03:09):
concerns the village of Leninskoya is immediately reported to us. Personally,
I saw a man in a noose with some piece
of paper lying on the floor of the garage. Forensic
specialists were already working when stronglooking guys arrived in three jeeps.
They declared they were Gazprom's security service. They calledon off
the territory and we and most of the policemen were

(03:32):
simply sent away outside of the cordon of the house
ends quote Who were these people? How is it that
Gazprom security was able to outrank the police. To get
an idea of how security worked at Gazprom, we looked
at local job postings in Russia for security services in
the Gazprom companies.

Speaker 2 (03:54):
Sergei explains, I couldn't find a specific company or like
a specific I guess I don't know, like section of
Gasprom that specifically has security, like when they're when you're like,
here's a job offering for a security guard, uh, and
it basically just says you're working for gas Prom, which

(04:15):
just means like the main security head of gas Prom.

Speaker 3 (04:20):
You know.

Speaker 2 (04:20):
There's no like separate entity or anything. It seems to
be just like internal gas from security guards. And from
my understanding that's basically who came kicked the police out.
I don't know for sure, but going based off other
uh kind of other situations and from what Anderson how
Russia operates, my guess would be the cops kind of

(04:41):
understand that once gas Prom is there, it's kind of
above their pay grade. I think they know that, like
if gas from security is there, you know, very connected
to put into the Russian higher ups. I think they
know kind of it's time to pack up and step
out of the way. So anything related to curreny they
always look for military service.

Speaker 3 (05:03):
Currently, a company called Radu is doing the recruiting for
Gazprom security. That's who's hiring from the job of a
surgery was reading. Radu is a Russian private military contractor
and security firm. It's even formed its own mercenary units
sent out to fight against Ukraine through REDU. Gazprom itself

(05:26):
also has a private military contractor unit taking part in
the Russian invasion of Ukraine right now. Recently, this unit
released a video condemning another Russian private military contractor unit
who they clash within an occupied area of Ukraine. So

(05:48):
one Russian PMC is fighting with another Russian PMC whilst
both are sent on the same mission by private Russian
government linked firms to invade a foreign country. It's extremely messy,
but as you can see, Gazprom is not just an
energy company. Essentially, gaz Prom holds a lot more power

(06:11):
across Russia. Much more is at stake for its executives.
To understand Gazprom's power and how Alexander T. Yolokov might
have gotten on the wrong side of that, we need
to look at where Gazprom came from. Gazprom's origins date
back to the nineteen forties, when Russia was ruled by

(06:32):
Stalin's Soviet Union the USSR. In nineteen forty three, in
the midst of World War two, the USSR formed its
first domestic gas industry, was later centralized as the Ministry
of Gas, which discovered large natural gas reserves in the
nineteen seventies and eighties. This helped the USSR become a

(06:54):
major player in the gas industry. By nineteen eighty three,
the USSR was the world's leading producer of natural gas.
They exported the gas to many countries across Western Europe,
something the USSI became dependent on to keep the country going,
ironic considering that now its Western European countries that are

(07:15):
the most dependent on Russia's gas exports. By nineteen eighty nine,
the Ministry of Gas was renamed as the State Gas
Concern Gazprom. The name Gazprom is a mix of two
words in Russian that simply means gas industry. The renamed
department was Gazprom in its infancy, as it became the

(07:39):
ussa's first state run corporation. When the USSR collapsed in
nineteen ninety one, most of Gazprom was transferred to state
owned companies and the assets remained in Russia. Everyone involved
formed a total gas sector monopoly. Gasprom grew rapidly, extending

(07:59):
its branches into many other industries, such as banking, media, security,
and oil. This monopolized, major state owned energy company exporting
internationally gave the Russian government big leverage. By two thousand
and seven, the number of Gazprom's personnel was more than

(08:20):
four hundred thousand people. It became the world's largest supplier
of natural gas, with an estimated annual net profit of
over nine billion dollars. By twenty twenty, Germany, Italy and
the Netherlands were Gazprom's biggest customers outside of regions within
the former Soviet Union.

Speaker 1 (08:40):
By twenty twenty.

Speaker 3 (08:41):
Two, Gazprom was sporadically shutting off gas to Western Europe
as a threat to countries helping Ukraine resist Putin's invasion.
Putin allegedly owns four point five percent of Gazprom himself,
adding to his hidden fortune which is speculated to be
around round two hundred billion dollars. In twenty twenty twelve,

(09:06):
the independent Russian news outlet, The Moscow Times compared Gazprom
to an organized crime syndicate. They said, quote, Gazprom in
many ways is more important in advancing the Kremlin's foreign
policy than the Defense Ministry or the Foreign Ministry. In short,
the way Gazprom is run is an accurate model for

(09:28):
how Putin rules Russia. Since two thousand and one, Gazprom's
management has been dominated.

Speaker 1 (09:34):
By three groups.

Speaker 3 (09:36):
The CEO's young Saint Petersburg economists, a group of Saint
Petersburg KGB officers both closely linked to Putin, and the
third group of old Gazprom officials. Putin himself has arbitrated
between these three factions, preventing any one of them from
gaining the upper hand, using a classic divide and rule strategy.

(09:59):
Putin thus re obtains the ultimate responsibility for the company
end quote. The KGB that's mentioned in that quote was,
of course, the Soviet Union's notoriously brutal security and intelligence agency.
The spiritual successor to that is the FSB, the current
Russian security and intelligence agency. Many interchangeably refer to the

(10:24):
current day FSB as the KGB. Clearly, it's no secret
that Gazprom has a sizeable FSB Putin loyalist presence within
the inner circles, specifically in Saint Petersburg. But was Alexander
to Yolokov part of that It's possible turns out he
actually used to work for the FSB through the early nineties.

(10:47):
Then in nineteen ninety nine he began working for Gazprom
in where Saint Petersburg. A decade after that, in two
thousand and nine, he became Gazprom's deputy general director and
then deputy for Corporate Protection and personnel Management. I think
it's safe to say it's not unlikely that to your

(11:08):
Lokov at least had some proximity to this FSB circle
within Gazprom. It's worth noting that largely the FSB is
alleged to carry out any dirty work for the Kremlin,
including extra judicial violence. But what has all this got
to do with to your Lokov hanging himself in his garage.

Speaker 1 (11:30):
There's more to this story.

Speaker 3 (11:51):
Reports in the media from an unnamed witness at the
scene say that to your Locov returned home bruised and
beaten the day before he was found dead. He looked
as if someone had beaten him up. As we mentioned earlier,
to yu Lookov was the deputy general director of Gazprom's
Unified Settlement Center for Corporate security. Unified Settlement Center acts

(12:16):
as the Gazprom Treasury. According to journalist Matthew Cooper. There
were rumors in Russia that there were problems there. It's
alleged that a hole was found in a twenty twenty
one internal corporate audit, Cooper writes, quote, according to people
in the know, most likely to Ulokov's structure failed to

(12:36):
avoid sanctions losses which divided the life of a top
manager into before and after end quote. Still these are
just rumors. What isn't rumor, though, is the removal of
Alexander to Yulokov's photos from Gazprom files. When reporters from

(12:57):
Neveya Gazetta requested images of ta your Lokov from Gazprom
so that they could use it in their article, they'd
all been removed. Russian journalist Maxim Leonov wrote about this, saying, quote,
the central office of Gazprom said that they did not
have any information about an investigation into the death of

(13:20):
Alexander to your Lookov. At the same time, we were
not even able to obtain photographs of the deceased. One
of the employees of the press service of Gazprom admitted
that the photos of to your Lokov were removed from
their sites in order to prevent the spread of rumors
and to spare the nerves of the relatives and friends

(13:42):
of the victims end quote.

Speaker 1 (13:45):
This is odd.

Speaker 3 (13:47):
Why remove the photos and so quickly. Gazprom's reasoning is
that it could cause pain for the family if the
photos are left in the Gazprom files. I'd argue that
it's a lot more pain for the family if a
company erases their loved ones from the records immediately after
their suicide. This is what Gazprom did to Alexander to

(14:10):
your Lookov, after he'd worked there in a very prestigious
position for more than twenty years. They wiped him off
the face of the planet as far as Gazprom is concerned.
And not to mention the fact that Gazprom's security took
over the scene and pushed out the police, and yet
they said that they were unaware of any investigation into

(14:32):
Alexander to your Lokov's suicide. All of this, to me
seems even more unusual when you consider that Alexander to
your Lookov was not the first Gazprom suicide at the
so called Gazprom nest last year. On January twenty ninth,
twenty twenty two, Gazprom executive Leonid Shilman was found dead

(14:57):
at his home with both wrists slashed. A suicide note
was found next to his body. This occurred just twenty
seven days before Alexander to Yulokov was found dead in
the same area just down the road, also with a
suicide note next to his body. Reports are conflicting on
who found him. Some say it was his ex wife

(15:18):
and children, some say his girlfriend, and some say the
police were first to turn up. Leonid Shilman was the
head of transport services at the investment subsidiary of Gazprom. Shilman,
who was sixty years old when he died, lived in
an affluent gated community in the same area as to
your Lookov. Both were residents at Gazprom's nest. Shilman was

(15:42):
found dead in his bathroom with his wrist ouoken. According
to reports, utility knife was found by his side, as
well as the suicide notes. We looked at the police
photos from the scene. The bathroom has an all marble finish,
with the bath to the right.

Speaker 1 (15:58):
Of the room.

Speaker 3 (15:59):
The bathtub is filled around half way with blood and water.
Shulman's corpse is lying face down on the floor beside
the bath. Blood is smeared on the marble near his feet.
Shulman has a metal Ilizarov apparatus around the lower half
of the right leg. This is an external fixator which
stabilizes and holds broken bones into their correct position to

(16:22):
help them heal. Shulman had a complicated bone fracture after
a recent accident. The fixator on his leg appears to
be broken, with loose parts on the floor next to
Shulman's feet. Crutches are laid out on the floor across
the room, next to where Shulman's head is positioned. Shulman's
body appears to be laid out on top of towels

(16:43):
or a blanket. What's not visible in the photo is
the suicide note or the utility knife the Russian authorities
say Shulman killed himself with. We do, though, have other
police photos of the suicide note removed from the scene.
It was written in a notebook. Whether the photos of
the bathroom scene were taken after the note was removed,

(17:07):
or if it was out of shot, or if it
wasn't even there, we don't know. The following is from
Shulman's suicide notes, which was published in Russian media. Quote,
I'm tired of having to deal with constant medical treatment.
I don't want to become an invalid or a burden.
Remember me as happy and cheerful. Yours, Lenya, Dad, thank

(17:29):
you Sunshine for everything.

Speaker 1 (17:30):
PS.

Speaker 3 (17:31):
I love you all ends quote. Lenya is short for Leonide.
There's more to the suicide note, but the rest has
been blurred out, presumably by the Russian authorities before it
was released publicly. According to this suicide note and Russian
state media reports, Shilman killed himself due to the complications

(17:52):
with his fractured right leg. Whilst we don't know if
there were further unknown medical problems with it, the fractured
leg alone seems an unusual reason to kill yourself as
a wealthy sixty year old. The elizard of apparatus he
had installed is painful, sure, but this can be somewhat
alleviated with medication. Shulman had money, he had access to

(18:15):
premium health care. He would have, of course, had access
to strong painkillers. Nevertheless, apparently he killed himself in the
bath by slitting both his wrists with a utility knife
also known as a Stanley knife or a box cutter.
Shulman then, perhaps in a bid to try and save himself,
climbed out of the bath before falling flat and dying

(18:38):
on the tiles. That's what the official story and the
police crime scene photos suggest. Anyway, as is with many
of these oligarch deaths, we've discovered that there's more to it.
Multiple Russian state backed media sources mentioned that there was
an internal investigation into the finances of vehicles in the

(19:00):
department that Shulman headed at Gazprom.

Speaker 2 (19:04):
It seems like there was an investigation to why the
company was bleeding money. There was like a reshuffling in
I think twenty twenty or so, and it was kind
of promised, as you know, we will change the structure,
will change the higher ups, and the company is going
to get more profits. But instead it kept on dropping.
Perhaps one of those reasons that was identified was corruption. Right,

(19:24):
people are stealing money off, you know, the typical order
or some kind of repair order parts and half of
those parts aren't actually purchased, half of the money is pocketed.
It seems like Shuliman he was somewhere higher up in
the transport unit. He would have been the one responsible
for ordering any kind of repairs, approving deliveries, orders.

Speaker 3 (19:44):
Surgery looked into an open source database online documenting these
orders in Shulman's department.

Speaker 2 (19:52):
This one specifically is called jos Zakupac. Like gas prompts
purchasing portal, I guess, they show which purchases are made,
it shows when it was ordered, if it was repeated,
and then it shows the total price.

Speaker 3 (20:06):
This is where evidence of corruption in Schulman's department is
set out in black and white.

Speaker 2 (20:12):
On the order forms, two identical purchases were made for
repairs two months from each other for one point two
million rouble. So that's about fifteen thousand or sixteen thousand
US dollars kind of a lot for only two months
in between. Like, how many cars are you fixing? How
many cars are actually like needing this maintenance? Right, Schulman
would probably be the one that would like authorize this.

(20:35):
Perhaps he can make the order himself. This kind of
activity is pretty normal. You know, order something, skim half
of it, and just report that the entire order was
made and came but it doesn't exist.

Speaker 3 (20:48):
So he potentially took about fifteen grand back com out
of that from doing absolutely nothing but faking some documents.

Speaker 2 (20:56):
Yeah, you know, just file a couple of extra reports,
file a couple electus I don't know, maintenance ledgers, you know,
say you fixed x many cars, say you get it
a couple more tires or whatever, you know, make it
look clean. It never actually happened, but I mean, who's
gonna really prove at that point? Is probably what they thought.

(21:17):
I don't think they expected to have that investigation started.
From what I understand, the investigation was coming to a close.
They never it was in like a private internal investigation,
so not much details came out about it, but it
seems like around the time they died, the investigation was
coming to a close. Schulmann specifically was kind of aware

(21:37):
that he would be identified as the guy stealing money,
and maybe he offed himself. It's very possible that he
might have been made an example, you know, if you
steal from us is what happens. Mostly speculation, but the
factor remains that it's pretty weird circumstances, same village. I
don't know if they actually knew each other, but clearly

(21:59):
they worked in the same structure, like same company structure,
you know they I'm sure they knew of each other,
especially when they lives on nearby.

Speaker 3 (22:25):
A pro Kremlin media outlet called the Moscow Post had
a reporter on the ground in the region where Shulman died.
They also speculate that he was stealing money from Gazprom
through the fake orders. They back this up with some
pretty convincing evidence, which if it's pro Kremlin media as
this is, it can be sort of considered almost as

(22:48):
a reworked press release from the state. This evidence shows
purchase orders from Shulman's department for parts for cars that
were purposely over christ Who did the extra money go to,
as Surgery just explained, probably Shulman. The Moscow Post also
shows that vehicles in Shulman's department were on paper excessively serviced.

(23:15):
Services were also overpriced. Seeing as Shulman was in charge
of all of this, he was quite likely the one
that skimming off the top. This I think leads to
three possible realities. One Shulman actually did kill himself due
to the pain in his leg. Two, Shulman killed himself

(23:36):
because he knew he might be going to prison after
stealing from Gazprom. And three, Shulman was murdered due to
his theft from Gazprom. Me and Surgery were speaking about
this specifically with regards to Putin's close proximity to Gazprom
and how he feels people engaged in corruption stealing right

(23:58):
out of his pocket.

Speaker 2 (24:00):
Remember Putin talking about kind of selling Russia, and that's
what he described Ukraine as, right in twenty fourteen. He
says that like the politicians that did the whole revolution, well,
according to him, it was like all orchestrated, right, he's saying,
he calls that like selling out to the West, along
the lines of if you're stealing from Russia, you're a trader,
you're you're as bad as like those in the West,

(24:21):
et cetera, et cetera.

Speaker 1 (24:22):
So I think that would be a view he holds.

Speaker 2 (24:26):
You know, although I don't think he sees it as
stealing from Russia. I think he sees as stealing it
from himself or kind of from his group.

Speaker 1 (24:34):
You know.

Speaker 2 (24:35):
It's like if you're going against the grain in his group,
you're wrong. Like, he doesn't care if he's stealing from
the Russian people, if he's taking money from you know,
Gasprom whatever other state company, like. I don't think that
phases him at all. It's when you do something that's
kind of like I guess you think you did. You

(24:56):
had one over Putin himself, and I think that extends
just kind of culture, like it's embarrassing to him. And
if you embarrass him, that's like that's more than enough.

Speaker 3 (25:06):
This is a very relevant theory. Remember, Putin allegedly owns
four point five percent of Gazprom himself. Gazprom is massive.
It holds around fifteen percent of all global gas reserves,
has branched off into banking, media, and oil, and now
even has its own paramilitary forces on the ground invading Ukraine.

(25:30):
Earlier this year, Putin lauded Gazprom in a video address
to the CEO. He said, quote, the whole of Russia
is proud of Gazprom. Over the previous thirty years, global
gas consumption has almost doubled, and in the next twenty years,
according to expert estimates, it will add at least another
twenty percent. Despite unfair competition direct attempts from the outside

(25:55):
to hinder and restrain its development, Gazprom is moving forward,
launching new projects end quote. It's clear Gazprom holds a
special place in Putin's heart. If someone steals from Gazprom,
they're quite literally stealing from part of his empire. Anyone
working relatively high up at Gazprom will know this. Leonid

(26:18):
Schumann would have known this. He took a risk and
was likely found out.

Speaker 2 (26:23):
It's very possible that Leonid Schulmann just understood what it
meant if he was found out and he was kind
of like, you know what, fuck it, I'll do it myself.
Very possible. You know, he got into this knowing what
he's doing, who he's dealing with, and you know, there's
so many other cases of falling out of windows even
before all this. I think he knew what was coming. Probably,

(26:47):
I think it's like an open secret that the way
Russia's run. I think a lot of people in Russia
understand that as well. But I think they still don't
want to air their dirty laundry completely.

Speaker 3 (26:59):
You know.

Speaker 2 (26:59):
I'm look at tu lack of February twenty fifth, right,
twenty twenty two, literally the day I think it was
the morning of the invasion. It's pretty convenient timing. Maybe
Tu Lacos just kind of off himself, knowing the pressure
and what was coming. But February twenty fifth, he's found
beat up or at least very bruised. The previous day,

(27:23):
you know, and then all of a sudden he takes
his life. You know, maybe maybe he just kind of
knew it was coming and decided to do it, or
they used the very big, you know, huge news that
was taking all over all the news media for the
next month or so, the Ukraine War. It's a great
thing to kind of squeeze in the death there. Nobody

(27:45):
would probably even notice notice.

Speaker 3 (27:48):
Said Oligach is a H eleven production for Couzone Media
and IHA Radio. Hosted, produced, researched and edited by me
Jake Hanrahan and Sergey Slipchenko. Co produced by Sophie Lichtman.
Music by Sam Black, artwork by Adam Doyle, soundmix by

(28:09):
Splicing Block. Go to Jacanrahan dot com for more information.

Popular Podcasts

Stuff You Should Know
Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

True Crime Tonight

True Crime Tonight

If you eat, sleep, and breathe true crime, TRUE CRIME TONIGHT is serving up your nightly fix. Five nights a week, KT STUDIOS & iHEART RADIO invite listeners to pull up a seat for an unfiltered look at the biggest cases making headlines, celebrity scandals, and the trials everyone is watching. With a mix of expert analysis, hot takes, and listener call-ins, TRUE CRIME TONIGHT goes beyond the headlines to uncover the twists, turns, and unanswered questions that keep us all obsessed—because, at TRUE CRIME TONIGHT, there’s a seat for everyone. Whether breaking down crime scene forensics, scrutinizing serial killers, or debating the most binge-worthy true crime docs, True Crime Tonight is the fresh, fast-paced, and slightly addictive home for true crime lovers.

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.

  • Help
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
OSZAR »