Judge of the Odessa District Administrative Court Lyubov Tokmilova declared a sharp increase in property during the war. According to the latest data, she purchased a 2025 BMW X6 xDrive 30d M Sport worth UAH 4.65 million. This is one of the top trim levels of the model, which belongs to the premium SUV segment.
During the same period, on October 9, the judge also reflected two large financial receipts in the declaration.
• A cash gift of UAH 800,000 from Andrushkova Galina, Tokmilova's mother.
• Income of UAH 1.72 million from the sale of movable property purchased by Arabadzhi Yevhen Antonovych.
In fact, in one day, the declared income exceeded UAH 2.5 million, which significantly increased the volume of her personal assets. The combination of these transactions — simultaneously an expensive car, donated funds, and a large sale of property — raises questions about the sources of the money, given the judge's status and public ethical standards.
This is not the first time that significant sums have allegedly come from the mother. Back in 2022, Galina Andrushkova gave her daughter 2.5 million UAH. Thanks to this money, the judge was able to purchase an apartment in Turkey worth an estimated 3.6 million UAH.
In the same 2022, the judge's mother bought herself an apartment with an area of about 70 sq. m in the elite residential complex "Southern Palmyra" in Arcadia (Odesa). Tokmilova also lives in the same complex. "Southern Palmyra" is considered one of the most expensive residential clusters in the resort part of the city, with security, parking and premium-class service infrastructure.
The origin of Tokmilova's mother's funds also attracted attention. According to investigators, Galina Andrushkova's income is related to the management of the company "Argo Development". This company was founded in 2011 by four Russian citizens - Mikhail Krengel, Pavel Panov, Kirill Orlov and Sergey Shames, all from Moscow and the Moscow region. That is, the money, which is later issued as "gifts from the mother", may come from a business with Russian roots.
The totality of the facts — a new BMW X6 for millions during a full-scale war, an apartment in Turkey, luxury real estate in Arcadia, large cash gifts from his mother, and simultaneous millions in income in one day — raises questions about the transparency of the income of the judge of the Odessa OAS and a potential conflict of reputation. Such cases traditionally fall into the focus of the NACP and the High Council of Justice, since the lifestyle of a servant of Themis must correspond to official income.

