Name: Petrov Sergey Viktorovich
Date of Birth: November 16, 1962
Current status: accused
Articles of Criminal Code of Russian Federation: 282.2 (2)
Time spent in prison: 2 day in a temporary detention facility, 21 day in a pre-trial detention
Current restrictions: detention center
Currently held in: Detention Center № 1, Altai Territory

Petrov Sergey Viktorovich, born 1962, Detention Center № 1, Altai Territory, Pr. Kanatny, 81, Barnaul, Altai Territory, 656021

Letters of support can be sent by regular mail or through the F-pismo system. To pay for service with the card of a foreign bank use Prisonmail.

Note: discussing topics related to criminal prosecution is not allowed in letters; languages other than Russian will not pass.

Biography

Sergey Petrov has been married for more than 40 years, and he worked at the same place for 33 years. Then one day everything changed abruptly — he ended up in a pretrial detention center because of his faith.

Sergey was born in the city of Syzran in the Kuybyshev (now Samara) Region, but he spent his youth in Kazakhstan, in the small town of Taldy-Kurgan. He is the eldest of five children: he has one brother and three sisters. Their mother worked as a plasterer and painter, and their father was a mechanic at an airport.

Sergey's parents tried to instill in their children a love of hard work. From childhood, Sergey was fascinated by technology and radio electronics. He built many things and learned how to repair bicycles and motorcycles. As a young man, he graduated from vocational school with honors and later from a technical college. He continued deepening his knowledge of electrical engineering and electronics. For a while, he worked as a teacher of physics, drafting, and ran a school workshop. For the last 30 years — right up until his arrest — he worked as an electrician--mechanic at a network of gas stations, maintaining and calibrating fuel dispensers.

In December 1983, Sergey married Raisa. In the early 1990s, the young family — Sergey, Raisa, and their two children, a son and a daughter — moved to Talmenka, where they have lived ever since. The Petrovs' son trained as a vocational education instructor (a technical specialist), while their daughter became both an accountant and a hairdresser. Both now have families of their own.

Sergey enjoys growing grapes and making homemade wine. He loves fishing and grilling shashlik. Together with his family, he enjoys spending time outdoors, tending the garden, cycling, Nordic walking, and being with friends.

The first person in the family to learn about the Bible was Sergey's mother — that happened in 1970. While raising her children, she tried to instill in them a love for biblical principles. Sergey thought deeply about his mother's words and reflected on the remarkable way the world around him is designed. This convinced him that there must be a Creator. In time, Sergey decided to become one of Jehovah's Witnesses.

After Sergey's arrest, Raisa lost the support of a loving husband and the family's sole breadwinner: her pension is small, and her husband provided most of the household's income. Sergey also suffers from chronic health conditions and needs daily medication, including prescription drugs — something difficult to manage in a pretrial detention center.

For those who have known Sergey for many years — his relatives, neighbors, and acquaintances — it is hard to understand why he became the target of a criminal prosecution. They describe him as a kind, responsive, and law-abiding person.

Case History

In February 2026, a series of searches was carried out in the homes of Jehovah’s Witnesses in the city of Novoaltaysk, the settlement of Talmenka, and the village of Sannikovo (Altai Territory). Sergey Petrov was charged with participating in the activities of an extremist organization. The following day, a court placed the believer in custody. The charges were based on the testimony of a woman who pretended to be interested in the Bible and recorded her conversations with the believers.
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