One of the few benefits of modern social media is that it allows fans to get closer than ever to their idols or favourite celebrities.This means that there appears to be a deeper connection when something good or bad happens in the lives of said favourite celebrities. Most inmates still live in barracks and are marched through the cold each day to workshops where they produce cheap goods for the state. As a result, when YouTuber FPSRussia was sent to prison earlier in 2019, his fanbase was in uproar. She served part of that sentence from June 2007 to April 2016 at prison IK-14. Find out more RUSSIAN PRISONS: Marked Pure Evil Tattoos World Documentary Films. But a former inmate and a penitentiary service employee told The calculated cruelty against Mr Makarov, who was abused for swearing after guards searched his letters, recalled Stalin-era tortures described by writers such as Alexander Solzhenitsyn.
Today, Russia has been shaken again by news of torture in its prison system – this time in Yaroslavl Colony No 1. “It doesn't leave any trace, but he can't walk.
While Kyle worked with guns almost non-stop to create content for his YouTube channel, the weapons weren’t the reason why he was sentenced to two months prison …
Yelena Federova was sentenced to 12 years in prison after being convicted on a murder charge when she was 20 years old. “They beat him on soles of his feet so it wouldn't leave any bruises,” said an employee of another prison colony who spoke anonymously for fear of being fired. Myres was arrested for felony possession of a restricted substance and 50 of his weapons, used for his YouTube videos, were confiscated under federal law that prevents drug users to be in possession of firearms. “Yes, you shouldn't beat them, but how can you teach them otherwise, if they don't understand words?”He admitted, however, that Mr Makarov's beating was excessive and that investigators often “run cover for employees who do these things”. Black Dolphin Prison, Russia In a country known for having a brutally tough prison system, you know a prison is bad when it gets a reputation for being the worst prison in Russia. The prison houses approximately 700 of Russia's most serious criminals, including child molestors, murderers, terrorists, cannibals, serial killers. Under Stalin's rule, the Soviet gulag prisons became a nightmare of historic proportions. 45:00. While Kyle worked with guns almost non-stop to create content for his YouTube channel, the weapons weren’t the reason why he was sentenced to two months prison in June 2019.In August 2017, Kyle Myres’ house was raided by police after Myres allegedly received 25 grams of butane hash oil through the mail. Other teens said they had seen a guard jumping up and down on his back during a beating. Russian officials told the United Nations Committee Against Torture on Thursday that the violence against him was an isolated incident. “Let's go, move, move, move!” the commander said, and Yevgeny Makarov yelled in pain as two prison guards resumed beating his legs with batons while others held him down.The video of Mr Makarov's brutal beating, which took place in prison colony number one in Yaroslavl in June 2017, caused an international furore after footage was leaked to his lawyer and published last week.
“They torment and torture people for what they did, rather than try to help fix the problems that got them there.”We rely on advertising to help fund our award-winning journalism.We urge you to turn off your ad blocker for The Telegraph website so that you can continue to access our quality content in the future.To watch The Telegraph's latest video content please visit
“They can rape you with a mop or a stick, or put chlorine in your eyes.” Among them was from prisoner of conscience Ivan Nepomyashchikh, one of nearly three dozen imprisoned after a 2012 protest against Vladimir Putin, who has said he was beaten with fists and truncheons after refusing commands to run down a hallway.Of 64 complaints of violence by law enforcement personnel brought by the NGO Public Verdict, only three have resulted in criminal cases, it said.“The investigator has a medical report and the convict's testimony, but against that will be 20 testimonies from penitentiary service employees saying no one beat him, he beat himself, or another convict did, or they'll say that they used force in accordance with law, he attacked us,” said Dmitry Yegoshin, a former prison guard who now works for Public Verdict. Hezzie Allie.