Far-right leader Aleksandr Muzychko is facing up to five years in prison for assaulting a prosecutor in western Ukraine. However, he’s still at large because authorities fear the radical nationalist, who usually carries an AK-47 with him.
The criminal case against Muzychko has been launched in
accordance with the article of “intentional infliction of battery
to a law enforcement official,” the Ukrainian General
Prosecutor’s office said in a statement.
A source at the Rovno (Rivne) Oblast prosecutor’s office has
confirmed “there’s a case. It’s under investigation.”
“Don’t write that I said this to you. Sasha Bely (Muzychko’s
nickname) will come after me. He promised to come after
everyone,” an unnamed clerk told Komsomolskaya Pravda
newspaper.
Muzychko and his associates arrived at the Rovno Oblast
prosecutor’s office on Thursday after hearing claims that a
criminal investigation into the murder of a local woman had been
delayed.
With the regional prosecutor absent, the high ranked member of
the Right Sector radical movement turned his rage to the
procedural solicitor.
Muzychko nearly strangled the clerk with his tie, punching and
verbally abusing the official. The leader said he is aware that
he may be arrested – but he doesn't seem too worried about that
possibility.
“Yes, they want to detain me. But I won’t give up. I mean it.
They’d better go to Crimea and do their job,” he stressed.
The far-right activist, who fought in the Chechen conflict
against Russian troops, is making headlines in Ukraine.
He recently brandished his Kalashnikov in front of regional
authorities in Rivno and openly made a series anti-Semitic
statements.