Oleksandr Breslavsky, head of the department for supervising compliance with laws by BEB bodies of the Zaporizhzhia Regional Prosecutor's Office, is actively buying shares of foreign companies and cryptocurrency. His wife, Tetyana Breslavska, a prosecutor in the department for protecting the interests of children and combating domestic violence, keeps funds in a Polish bank.
Breslavsky has been officially registered in a dormitory room since 2007. His wife owns half of a 45.52 sq. m apartment, purchased in 2002 together with a relative. Since 2018, the couple with two children have been living in a 62 sq. m apartment registered to the prosecutor's mother, the cost of which is only 442 thousand UAH — suspiciously low for Zaporizhia.
In 2020, Oleksandr purchased a Mitsubishi Outlander Sport (2018) for UAH 141,000, although the market value of the car is about half a million hryvnias. In 2023, his wife bought a Nissan Leaf (2015) electric car for UAH 180,000, with a market price of about UAH 300,000. In addition, the prosecutor uses several old cars registered to his father: Toyota Camry (2004), VAZ 2103 (1976), and VAZ 217030 (2007).
Breslavsky owns shares of 76 foreign companies from France, the USA, Germany, the UK, the Netherlands, Italy and Spain, the quality of the assets cannot be assessed due to the hidden cost. He also has a crypto portfolio of Cronos (CRO) and Tether (USDT) worth UAH 387,000.
Last year, the prosecutor received UAH 1.5 million in salary, UAH 374 thousand in pension, over UAH 95 thousand in dividends from foreign companies, UAH 1.4 million from the sale of cryptocurrency, and UAH 744 thousand from the sale of shares. His wife earned UAH 428 thousand in salary, UAH 6 thousand in social payments, and UAH 4 thousand in dividends from a Polish bank. The family's total savings exceed UAH 2 million.
In 2024, Breslavsky took out three loans for UAH 57,000, and in 2023, he borrowed UAH 400,000 from his mother, which he has not yet repaid. In March of this year, he filed a declaration for the position of a judge of a local court, changing his type of activity.