Суд мести

According to our sources, Gorin operated with large sums of cash. And he got himself in trouble again. This time, probably, with very definite consequences for him. He failed to pay back money that he had apparently borrowed for an oil deal. And when the problems began, he turned to Pichugin - who was, after all, godfather to his son.

This is only a scenario, but one that is taken seriously in Tambov. The Procuracy General knew of the situation with Tambovnefteprodukt, and was not above using that knowledge to drag Pichugin into the oil deal. In other words, to hang Aleksey for someone else's crime.

The revenge of the bent cop

One interesting lead is the involvement in the Gorins' murder of a policeman called Smirnov, who was later convicted of stealing oil from a pipeline. This is the same Smirnov who was due to accompany Gorin to Moscow to see Pichugin. Arriving at Gorin's home early in the morning as arranged, he happened upon the crime.

A witness in the case, called Ovsyannikov, reported that Smirnov was running a gang that robbed long-distance lorry drivers. Knowing much of the detail of Gorin's "business", he was extorting money from him to keep him safe from the police. At some point in time Gorin learnt of Smirnov's gang. Tambov is a small region, and the two men moved in the same circles. Gorin either stopped paying off Smirnov or raised the issue directly. He knew too much, so Smirnov killed him the night before their planned departure.

What can we add to this story? Smirnov arrived at Gorin's place early in the morning and found that neither his mobile nor, more importantly, his home phone were being answered. After that, according to his own testimony, he sat in the car on the roadside and waited for two hours. He gave a typical policeman's reason: there were large and fierce dogs outside Gorin's home, and he was scared. He sat scared in the car for two hours.

Eventually the nanny arrived. Smirnov was not scared to enter the house with her. Whereupon he discovered that the dogs were actually in a cage. So he had not noticed that until the nanny arrived. What did he do during those two hours before sunrise? Is it normal for an experienced policeman and future convict to sit in a car for two hours and fail to see that the dogs were not running around outside Gorin's place? It's worth adding that Smirnov brazenly used his position as a police officer to cover for his own crimes, was the champion marksman for the region, and in his own criminal case came across as a desperate character.

The children reported that late in the evening, shortly before their tragic disappearance, Mr and Mrs Gorin had briefly gone out somewhere. Judging from the voices, somebody was with them when they came back. In the morning the dogs on whom Gorin, a man with a past, relied on for security, were securely tied up in their cage. Did Gorin return with a close acquaintance, for whose sake he tied up the dogs? Could that acquaintance have been the killer? And could it have been Smirnov?

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