A Russian minister has become thefirst known high-ranking official to flee Russia and seek asylum in the United Statessince the Ukraine war began over four years ago, amid a fraud probe.
Denis Butsayev, a senior Russian official recently dismissed from the Natural Resources and Environment Ministry,fled to the US to avoid criminal prosecution, regional media reports say.
He was officially removed from his post as deputy minister on April 22 by an order of Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin. Soon after, and pending possible arrest, Butsayev left the country by traveling through neighboring Belarus.
"Butsayev's departure is the first known case of a sitting official of this rank fleeing the country,"independent journalist Farida Rustamovawrote. Butsayev is"lucky to have friends who were able to warn him on time,"one source told the journalist.
Prior to his appointment to the Natural Resources and Environment Ministry in 2025, Butsayev served as CEO of the Russian Ecological Operator (or, Environmental Operator), a state-backed entity withcharge of the country's national waste management reforms.
Butsayev has not been formally charged, but he's a person of interest amid an ongoing probe of other senior officials for corruption. According to more details inMeduza:
In late April, several anonymous Telegram channels reported that a criminal case had been opened against Yury Valdayev, the administrative director of Russian Ecological Operator (REO) — the operator company of the garbage reform — on fraud charges. Butsayevworkedat REO from April to November 2019, was subsequently appointed first deputy governor of Belgorod Region, and returned as CEO of REO in November 2020, a post he held until moving to the Natural Resources Ministry in 2025.
Criminal cases have also been opened against two other senior REO managers, Yekaterina Stepkina and Maxim Shcherbakov, Vedomosti’s sources say, and Butsayev is mentioned in the case materials as well. In what capacity he appears there, and what the cases concern, is unclear.
According to more on Butsayev, "Hedoes not appear on U.S., Canadian, British, or EU sanctions lists, and his current whereabouts are unknown, Faridaily reported."
While nothing is currently known or confirmed as to his guilt or innocence in alleged fraud, regional opposition and anti-Moscow media tend to hail any such officials as heroes valiantly fleeing a Kremlin crackdown. However, this could also just be another standard corruption case in a region which has a long history of it.
Source: ZeroHedge News