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April 18
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Geoffrey S. Berman, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, announced that Razhden Shulaya, a “thief-in-law,” was sentenced today to 45 years in prison by United States District Judge Loretta A. Preska.  The sentence followed the June 2018 trial conviction of Shulaya and Avtandil Khurtsidze, a boxing world champion and Shulaya’s violent enforcer, on racketeering and related charges in connection with a sprawling and violent criminal enterprise operating in New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Nevada, and abroad.  Khurtsidze was sentenced on September 7, 2018, to 10 years in prison by U.S. District Judge Katherine B. Forrest.           

Manhattan U.S. Attorney Geoffrey S. Berman said:  “Razhden Shulaya led a vast and violent criminal enterprise engaged in an array of criminal schemes that included extortion, theft, trafficking in stolen goods, and fraud.  Shulaya, a ‘thief-in-law,’ is a convicted thief under U.S. law, and has deservedly been sentenced to a lengthy prison term.”

As established by the evidence at trial:

The Shulaya Enterprise was an organized criminal group operating under the direction and protection of  Razhden Shulaya a/k/a “Brother,” a/k/a “Roma,” a “vor v zakone” or “vor,” which are Russian phrases translated roughly as “Thief-in-Law” or “Thief,” and which refer to an order of elite criminals from the former Soviet Union who receive tribute from other criminals, offer protection, and use their recognized status as vor to adjudicate disputes among lower-level criminals.  As a vor, Shulaya had substantial influence in the criminal underworld and offered assistance to and protection of the members and associates of the Shulaya Enterprise.  Those members and associates, and Shulaya himself, engaged in widespread criminal activities, including acts of violence, extortion, the operation of illegal gambling businesses, fraud on various casinos, identity theft, credit card frauds, trafficking in large quantities of stolen goods, money laundering through a fraudulently established vodka import-export company, payment of bribes to local law enforcement officers, and the operation of a Brooklyn-based brothel.

The Shulaya Enterprise operated through groups of individuals, often with overlapping members and/or associates, dedicated to particular criminal tasks.  While many of these crews were based in New York City, the Shulaya Enterprise had operations in various locations throughout the United States (including in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Florida, and Nevada) and abroad.  Most members and associates of the Shulaya Enterprise were born in the former Soviet Union and many maintained substantial ties to Georgia, Ukraine, and the Russian Federation, including regular travel to those countries, communication with associates in those countries, and the transfer of criminal proceeds to individuals in those countries.

Shulaya  oversaw and personally committed multiple acts of brutal violence in his role as a vor.  Evidence at trial included testimony regarding Shulaya’s pistol-whipping of his own family member; testimony regarding Shulaya's public beating of a supposedly disrespectful underling; and photographs of the badly disfigured face of Shulaya ’s former lieutenant, co-defendant Mamuka Chaganava.  Shulaya , protected by Khurtsidze, acted with impunity in the brutal assault of Chagaanva, a man whom he previously had held in high regard, and Shulaya  took pride in the brutality of that assault:  Shulaya  photographed Chaganava’s battered face in order to share his “handiwork” with another vor. In later explaining that he was unafraid of any retribution or reports to law enforcement by Chaganava, Shulaya  explained the perceived power of his position:  “For him, I am a god.”

   

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