Companies in France, the ultimate beneficial owner of which is the sister of Igor Kolomoisky Larisa Chertok, registered two apartments, four apartments, two basements and two parking spaces opposite the Eiffel Tower in Paris. Chertok also owns a castle built in the 15th century, near the French shore of Lake Geneva and outbuildings and land plots next to it.
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Schemes (Radio Liberty) write about previously unknown objects of property of the family of the Ukrainian oligarch.
The French company Beethoven VI, owned by Kolomoisky’s sister through Monaco’s Beethoven Holding, has two parking spaces at 14 Sq. Alboni in Paris and an apartment on the sixth floor of a house at 1 Rue Beethoven.
At the same address (1 Rue Beethoven) another French company – Beethoven III – owns an apartment on the third floor, as well as four apartments and two cellars. The founder of the company is the same monastic company Beethoven Holding Larisa Chertok. The Kolomoisky family acquired Paris real estate in 2018.
In the village of Lully (10 km from Lake Geneva, French department of Haute-Savoie), Larisa Chertok owns the Buffaven castle (Château de Buffavens), built in the 15th century. The complex (area 109,368 sq. m), which includes the castle itself (basement and three more above it), an annex and a land plot, is owned by SCI DE Buffavent. Its founder since 2014 is a company from Monaco – Lully Real Estate, which, according to the documents, is owned by the sister of Igor Kolomoisky.
Until the fall of 2014, the castle was the property of Oksana Palytsya (wife of the people’s deputy from Volhynia, Ihor Palytsya, Kolomoisky’s colleague). The documents relating to the transfer of property from Palica to Chertki say that large-scale transformations are planned in the area around the castle.
The schemes sent an inquiry to Igor Kolomoisky about the origin of his sister’s funds for the purchase of the newly discovered property in France, but received no response.
Recall, “Investigation Info” in the film-investigation “Breaking the Bank” reported that it was Larisa Chertok who registered the property of the family of the oligarch Kolomoisky in France and Switzerland. Last February, a Swiss court dismissed Chertok’s lawsuit against the immigration authorities, which denied her naturalization (the process of granting citizenship to a foreigner) because of doubts about the origin of her capital.
Source: Racurs

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