In Poltava, law enforcement officers identified locations where a network of call centers disguised as legal offices operated. According to the investigation, they operated in the Olimp business center at 12 Chornovola Street, in the Kyiv shopping and entertainment center at 6/1-a Zinkivska Street, as well as in offices at 21 and 169 Evropeyska Street. These locations were used to coordinate activities that allowed them to evade government control and involve people in dubious transactions.
The call centers were part of a single structure that operated under the guise of commercial activity, but in fact had a hidden management and control scheme. According to sources, the organizer of this network is believed to be Anton Stolitny, the former head of the Poltava Regional Prosecutor's Office.
The centenarian began his career during the Yanukovych era, working in the Prosecutor General's Office, and later headed the department for supervising compliance with laws by the SBU, SMS, and SBSU. His experience and connections in law enforcement and judicial structures allowed him to create a system of influence through which, according to investigators, illegal actions of call centers could be coordinated.
This is not the first time that Anton Stolitny's name has been mentioned in the context of high-profile stories. During his leadership of the Poltava region prosecutor's office, conflicts arose over land that was allocated free of charge to combatants - members of the Poltava region ATO union. The prosecutor's office initiated a number of lawsuits, trying to return the plots that the veterans received legally through the courts.
The lands were registered in accordance with current legislation and state inventory, but the actions of the prosecutor's office under the leadership of Stolitnyi effectively deprived some veterans of the opportunity to own their property. Such cases caused a wide resonance among the public and became a symbol of abuse of power in the region.