Name: Maksimovich Andrey Nikolayevich
Date of Birth: January 5, 1995
Current status: charges withdrawn
Articles of Criminal Code of Russian Federation: 282.2 (1), 282.2 (1.1)

Biography

On March 13, 2019, in Severodvinsk (Arkhangelsk Region), searches and detentions of civilians on the basis of religion took place. One of the defendants in the criminal case was 24-year-old Andrei Maksimovich. What do we know about him?

Andrey was born in 1995 in the village of Belorechensky, Irkutsk Region. The youngest of four children in the family. As a child, he was fond of computers, was engaged in ballroom dancing, loved to play chess with his father.

After graduating from a medical college, Andrey received the specialty of a paramedic. Even then, he had Christian convictions. "I was interested in many religions and movements, but there were no clear beliefs, everything was mixed," he says. "When I began to study the Bible, I saw exactly what I had always been looking for, because all the Bible teachings turned out to be logical and real." Because of Andrey's peace-loving convictions, he was granted the right to perform alternative civilian service instead of military service. It was held in the post office of Severodvinsk.

In 2014, Andrey married Valentina, whom he met while studying at a technical school. The couple are raising a three-year-old son. Andrey's parents are concerned about the persecution on charges of extremism of a man who has already proved his peace-loving character to the state.

Case History

In March 2019, in Severodvinsk, FSB officers conducted searches in the homes of Sergey Potylitsyn and Vladimir Teterin. Andrey Maksimovich was taken for interrogation from his workplace, then brought home and searched in the presence of his wife and 3-year-old child. Conscript sailors were involved as witnesses. The investigator took a recognizance agreement from Potylitsyn. A criminal case was opened against the believers for organizing the activities of an extremist organization. Law enforcement officers said that their goal was to stop the activities of Jehovah’s Witnesses. Sergey Potylitsyn’s two vehicles were arrested, and the bank accounts of three believers were blocked. In May 2022, the Investigative Committee of the Russian Federation ruled to terminate the criminal case due to the lack of corpus delicti.
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