You're reading: Zelensky moves to liquidate Ukraine’s most scandalous court

President Volodymyr Zelensky on April 13 submitted to parliament a bill seeking to liquidate the notorious Kyiv District Administrative Court, headed by controversial judge Pavlo Vovk.

Vovk, who has been charged in a graft case, and other judges of the court are seen by civil society as the epitome of judicial corruption and impunity in Ukraine. On April 6, the National Anti-Corruption Bureau of Ukraine (NABU) also arrested Vovk’s brother as an alleged intermediary for giving a bribe to Vovk.

Vovk denies the accusations of wrongdoing. The country’s law enforcement system, including judges and prosecutors, has consistently blocked the Vovk case.

In audio recordings published by NABU, Vovk discusses numerous corrupt deals, gives illegal orders and quips that no one should doubt the court’s “political prostitution.” One of the court’s judges was recorded as saying that he supports “any lawlessness in the judiciary.”

“The Kyiv District Administrative Court has had enough time to think, look at itself in the mirror and find there simple things that society and the state are looking for – justice, objectivity and integrity,” the President’s Office said. “Instead we see new scandals with tapes, the corruption of people linked to (the court) with safes full of cash and numerous dubious rulings. The trust in the Kyiv District Administrative Court has been lost.”

“The court whose decisions may destroy any achievement of the state and any reform will be liquidated,” Zelensky said, as cited by the President’s Office. “Take this as a signal for any court that has betrayed the respect for the law.”

Zelensky’s previous actions

Until recently, Zelensky has been reluctant to comment on Vovk and his court or do something about its alleged corruption.

Several law enforcement sources told the Kyiv Post that Zelensky’s former chief of staff Andriy Bohdan is mentioned in the Vovk tapes. Specifically, one of the sources said that Vovk talked about vacationing with Bohdan in June 2019.

The sources spoke on condition of anonymity because they are not authorized to speak to the press.

Online newspaper Ukrainska Pravda reported in March, citing its sources, that in the summer of 2019 Vovk met Bohdan and Ruslan Riaboshapka, who later became prosecutor general. A law enforcement source told Ukrainska Pravda that Vovk had met Zelensky in 2019 and persuaded him that he would work as part of the president’s team.

The President’s Office and Bohdan did not respond to requests for comment on the issue.

Corruption charges 

In August 2019, the Prosecutor General’s Office charged Vovk and other judges of his court with obstruction of justice.

However, in November 2019, Kyiv’s Shevchenkivskyi Court rejected a motion to extend the obstruction of justice investigation and ordered prosecutors to either close the case or send it to trial within five days. The prosecutors did not send it to trial and the case was effectively buried.

In July 2020 Vovk and other judges of his court were also charged with organized crime, abuse of power, bribery and unlawful interference with government officials in a new corruption case.

For months, Vovk has ignored the summonses that NABU sent him. The NABU has also obtained court warrants to bring Vovk to bail hearings by force several times but the judge always hid from the bureau.

The bureau asked Prosecutor General Iryna Venediktova, a Zelensky loyalist, to authorize an arrest warrant for Vovk for months but she refused.

Responding to accusations of sabotage, Venediktova said on March 17 that she cannot take Vovk to court by force. She added that she doubted the effectiveness of the investigation and said that she did not see any “trial prospects” in the case.

Andriy Bitsyuk, a judge at the High Anti-Corruption Court, on March 17 refused to extend the corruption investigation against Vovk. According to the Criminal Procedure Code, prosecutors had to either close the investigation or send it to trial within five days.

However, the case was not sent to trial within five days and is likely to be closed.

Treasure vault

On April 6, the NABU also arrested Vovk’s brother Yury Zontov, an employee of the Foreign Intelligence Service.  He was charged with receiving a $100,000 bribe as an intermediary and was supposed to give the money to Vovk.

The NABU also searched a Kyiv apartment full of bundles of cash, antiques and documents allegedly belonging to Vovk on April 6.

The detectives confiscated around $5 million, including $3.7 million, 840,000 euros, 20,000 pounds, Hr 230,000, and 100 Israeli Shekels.