A video of the liquidation of the blogger Tatarsky appeared on the network.
The video shows how a girl later detained by the Russian security forces sits next to a Ukrainophobe-traitor. A moment before the explosion, she raises her hands to her face.
The girl whom Tatarsky calls Nastya is Daria Trepova, who brought him a bust with explosives.
Kremlin shorty Vladimir Putin awarded the blown up Tatar with the Order of Courage. Vladlen Tatarsky died as a result of an explosion that occurred in a cafe in St. Petersburg on April 2.
The number of victims of the explosion in a cafe in St. Petersburg has increased to 33 people. The criminal case on the explosion was reclassified as a terrorist act.
Trepovaya, suspected of murder, is transferred from St. Petersburg to Moscow. The measure of restraint will be chosen by the Basmanny Court for her.
What is known about Tatarsky and its liquidation in St. Petersburg
Tatarsky is a Russian propagandist who was blown up in St. Petersburg. Once he robbed a bank, received a huge prison term, fought in the Donbass against Ukraine.
Not much is known about the early years of the future propagandist. According to most open sources, Maxim Fomin was born in 1982 in Makeevka, Donbass. In his autobiographical book, The Run, published a few years ago, he describes himself as a miner whose dynasty began in 1955, when his grandfather first descended into the mine. He speaks of his father as a participant in the famous miners’ strikes in 1989, which he himself calls “the first Maidan.”
Having received an education (judging by the memoirs, the man graduated from a mining technical school), Fomin began working “at the best mine in the city” MARCOM (a mining worker). Perhaps, at the beginning of the 2000s, he got married, and in 2004 the son of Daniel was born to the future propagandist (the data of his wife and son are indicated on Fomin’s page on the Peacemaker website).
In the middle of the 2000s (the man himself claimed that in 2006) from the miners, Maxim Fomin retrained as a businessman, starting to sell furniture. Five years later, in December 2011, he will go to jail for bank robbery.
Some sources noted that he went to the crime in order to obtain funds for the return of loans taken for the development of the furniture business. The term turned out to be huge – 12 years in prison. Ukrainian journalist Yuriy Butusov, commenting on the death of Fomin, noted that if he had remained a prisoner, then this year he would have been released and would have been alive.
However, in his memoirs, Fomin recalls that back in the summer of 2011 he was engaged in “dangerous business, and this is from 7 to 15 years in prison,” for which “you have to run very well.” Therefore, there is a possibility that the robbery was being prepared for several months, or it was not his first crime (or the information on his autobiography was invented).
Fomin met the events of the Ukrainian Revolution of Dignity in colony No. 57 in Gorlovka, where, by his own admission, he supported the protesters when they threw “Molotov cocktails” at the security forces. Under then-president Viktor Yanukovych, he called Ukraine a country without law (and Yanukovych himself was called the “son of a policeman”; such a version does exist).
However, after the annexation of Crimea, the future propagandist instantly changed sides, becoming pro-Russian, because, as he himself writes, “Putin is a handsome man.”
Fomin-Tatarsky was in prison until about the end of the summer of 2014, after which he was somehow released. It is often said that he escaped, but he has already become a blogger and recalled that some Ruslan Koreets, who was released from the same colony in the spring, was involved in this. Under his control, 18 or 22 people were allegedly fired. The reason, apparently, was about the same as with the current recruitment of prisoners in the PIK “Wagner”: freedom in exchange for military service (in this case, in the detachments of the then-formed separatists).
Fomin agreed to serve and came under the command of Igor Bezler.
Little is known about the participation of Vladlen Tatarsky in the hostilities in the Donbass. In an interview, he claimed that, having started fighting in the Bezler detachment (i.e., on the territory of the fake DPR), he soon moved to units that already belonged to the LPR.
In 2022, after the start of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Tatarsky went to the front, and not as a military commander, but as a combatant (“he flew on copters and made calculations for UAVs”). What exactly he did in the war is unknown – only the statement about FPV drones, which he mistakenly called VPN drones, became famous, the phrase turned into a meme.
Some of Tatarsky’s odious quotes are known – he, in particular, stated that “Ukraine must be destroyed”, and commenting on the first Russian missile strikes on February 24, he said that “if 10 thousand Ukrainian soldiers were buried in the barracks of Ukraine on the first day, then they would be more accommodating in negotiations.”
However, Tatarsky’s most famous saying was, of course, a short interview given in September 2022 in the hall of the Kremlin Palace, where Putin signed papers on the annexation of the occupied territories of Ukraine to Russia.
We will defeat everyone, kill everyone, we will plunder everyone we need, everything will be as we like, ”the propagandist said then.
Source: Racurs

I am David Wyatt, a professional writer and journalist for Buna Times. I specialize in the world section of news coverage, where I bring to light stories and issues that affect us globally. As a graduate of Journalism, I have always had the passion to spread knowledge through writing.