Maxim Martsinkevich

Maxim Sergeyevich Martsinkevich (Russian: Макси́м Серге́евич Марцинке́вич, 8 May 1984 – 16 September 2020), better known as Tesak (Russian for Cleaver, Hatchet, Hand Axe, Machete),[1] was a Russian neo-Nazi activist, media personality, vlogger, and the leader and co-founder of the Restruct movement which manifested in post-Soviet countries.

Maxim "Tesak" Martsinkevich
Максим "Тесак" Марцинкевич
Maxim during an interview in 2012
Born(1984-05-08)8 May 1984
Died16 September 2020(2020-09-16) (aged 36)
NationalityRussian
Other namesTesak
CitizenshipRussian
Alma materRussian State Social University (Unfinished)
Known forLeader of Russian neo-Nazi and anti-gay organizations
Criminal charge(s)Incitement of racial or ethnic hatred; robbery, property destruction and hooliganism
Criminal penaltyMultiple terms, including 10 years in a strict regimen labor colony
Criminal statusDeceased
Signature

Tesak first gained public attention as a white power skinhead and the leader of the far-right youth group Format 18, which has been described as the "armed wing" of the National Socialist Society. There are numerous branches within Martsinkevich's Restruct movement, the most prominent of which is Occupy Pedophilia, stating that its goals are fighting pedophiles and spreading neo-Nazi views among youth. Tesak's racism, violent approach and targeting of gay males have been criticized. On one occasion his actions have led to the imprisonment of a highly ranked official within the Russian judicial system.

Martsinkevich received three prison sentences for inciting racial or ethnic hatred. Tesak was first indicted in 2007, after disrupting political debates by performing the Nazi salute and yelling "Sieg Heil!" at a book club in Moscow.[2] In 2009, he was sentenced to three years for making a video with racist content. Martsinkevich's memories from this time in prison are expressed through his book Restruct. Following his release from prison, Tesak was unemployed, posted vlogs, and made a living by charging others for joining his "hunts for pedophiles" and for attending his lectures on life in prison, ways of shoplifting, as well as other subjects.[3] In the autumn of 2013, Tesak was indicted again for releasing new videos featuring racist remarks. As a result, on 15 August 2014, he was sentenced to five years in prison. On 11 November 2014, the court reduced the sentence to two years and 10 months.

On 27 June 2017, the Babushkinsky district court of Moscow sentenced Martsinkevich to ten years in a strict regimen corrective labor colony for his involvement in attacks targeting synthetic cannabinoids dealers.[4] During his fourth prison term, in 2020, an investigation was started about his involvement in hate killings. Martsinkevich confessed to murders and cooperated with investigating authorities, but soon he was found dead in his prison cell.

Personal life

During his lifetime Martsinkevich indicated he was of Russian, Polish, Lithuanian, and Belarusian ancestry. His parents are Sergey Yevgenyevich Martsinkevich and Viktoriya Leonidovna Martsinkevich. As expressed in Tesak's first autobiographical audio book Destruct, his mother did not share her son's extremist views while his father was supportive. In a September 2012 interview, Martsinkevich said he was not married and he did not have children.[5] According to a report in Meduza, a suicide note was discovered after Martsinkevich was found dead in his prison cell. The note was reported to have contained a request for officials give a private diary and a book on communism to Martsinkevich's wife in Yekaterinburg.[6]

Martsinkevich was conscripted into the Russian Army, although he claimed that he was released after a few days, following a mental health evaluation caused by him having beaten up a fellow soldier of Azerbaijani ancestry. Tesak's nickname was related to his interest in knives. He graduated from a secondary vocational school for architecture and was expelled from the Russian State Social University.[7] Martsinkevich said he had been employed as an engineer for three and a half years.[8] He sold his videos and tried to sell music through his website.[9] Later on he used to sell his book, Restruct, in the same way.[10] He also sold ads in his videos and tried to organize a financial pyramid called Tesak Money.[11]

Format 18

Tesak was a member of the white power skinhead group "Russian Purpose" led by Semyon Tokmakov. Martsinkevich was also in the People's National Party until 2003. In 2005 he created the skinhead organization "Format 18". The number 18 is a code or euphemism for "Adolf Hitler", as the letter A is the first in the Latin alphabet and H is the eighth. Members of Format 18 have beaten Asian migrant workers and homeless people, filming the attacks, and releasing the videos through the Internet. Martsinkevich made fictional videos promoting hatred towards black people and antifascists. The Russian Reporter magazine published a story about one of the videos, in which "Martsinkevich shocks the public with his video of the execution of a "...Tajik drug dealer"...."hanged and dismembered by people dressed as members of the Ku-Klux-Klan"... "soon revealed as having been staged, and the flesh of the dismembered captive turned out to be beef".[12] Martsinkevich and other members of Format 18 also appeared on the British television show Ross Kemp on Gangs: Russian neo-Nazis, as well as on Current TV's From Russia with Hate.

The organization maintained a website which was banned in 2007 after a complaint from one of the writers of for an antifascist website. A number of followers of Format 18 have also uploaded their own videos of humiliations and physical violence. The most recognized video of that kind has been described as the "execution of a Tajik and a Dagestanian", released in August 2007, at a time when Martsinkevich was already incarcerated. The Investigative Committee of Russia made a statement indicating that the executions shown in the videos have been verified as real.[13]

Format 18 was banned for extremism by a Russian court order in September 2010.

Russia 88 film

Actions of the neo-Nazi organization Format 18 inspired Russian director Pavel Bardin to create the drama Russia 88 (2009). The movie is about a gang of skinheads who are entertained by filming their beatings of people of non-Slavic appearance, to be released on the Internet. One of the publicly available Format 18 videos called "Dacha History X" features an old woman (played by one of the skinheads) who hates black people and her grandson who buries them in the garden. A similar event takes place in the movie Russia 88. Among other similarities, the main character of the film is nicknamed Shtyk (Bayonet), and like Tesak, he takes a camera and films Russians when asking for their opinion on immigrants from the Caucasus and Asia.

First conviction

On 28 January 2007, Martsinkevich and his friends visited the Bilingua book club in Moscow. At the time, it was used as a platform for the political debates involving journalists Yulia Latynina and Maxim Kononenko. Tesak asked if they agreed that in order for Russia to improve, every democrat needed to be killed, then shouted "Sieg!" and put his hand up in the Nazi salute, followed by his friends yelling "Heil!". The shouting continued for a few more minutes, with a number of the female attendees yelling "fascism will not pass!" in response. Kononenko suggested that they call the police, as performing Nazi salutes in public places was prohibited in Russia. The police were not called. Eventually, the host of the debates Alexey Navalny submitted a letter to the Russian public prosecutors' office.[14]

On 2 July 2007, about 10 members of a Russian anti-extremist special forces unit arrested Martsinkevich at a gym he had used for training. On 18 February 2008, Tesak was sentenced to three years in prison for inciting ethnic or racial hatred (article 282 in Russia).[15] The Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta published an opinion piece stating that investigators ignored the worst cases of this neo-Nazi's criminal activity, thus leading to the mild punishment.

Second conviction

In 2006, 20 people dressed as members of the Ku Klux Klan staged the execution of a Tajik drug dealer, filming and releasing it on the Internet. The organizers of the performance were Martsinkevich and Artyom Zuev. Zuev also provided the voice-over for the video.

For these acts, on 16 January 2009, Tesak was charged with inciting ethnic hatred and received a sentence of three years in prison. The court has given credit to the prisoner's good conduct and adjusted the sentence to three and a half years in prison starting from the first conviction. Artyom Zuev received a suspended sentence of three years.

Martsinkevich was released on 31 December 2010. Half a year later he attempted to join the Russian Opposition Coordination Council and was registered as a candidate for the elections but was subsequently disqualified for his neo-Nazi views and lack of opposition to the Russian government, with the latter partly related to his application fee having been paid by a member of the pro-government youth movement Nashi.

Occupy Pedophilia

After getting out of prison Martsinkevich started the Occupy Pedophilia (Russian: Оккупай-педофиляй, romanized: Okkupay-pedofilyay) movement focused on beating up and humiliating males regarded as pedophiles. Members of the movement found victims through the Internet, posed as male minors, and went on a date. Then a group of people met the alleged pedophile and humiliated him, sometimes pouring urine over his head, while filming it for release online.[1]

In September 2013, the media began to report on one of Tesak's videos recorded in an apartment in Moscow, resulting in the arrest of Andrey Kaminov,[16] ex-deputy chief of the Federal Bailiffs' Service of the Moscow region.

Activists of the movement and Tesak in particular were criticized by the media for vigilantism, violence, and connections to another branch of Martsinkevich's Restruct movement called Occupy Gerontophilia (Russian: Оккупай-геронтофиляй), which targeted young males allegedly interested in dates with older same-sex partners. Actions of members of both of the branches have also been described as campaigns against LGBT people, with one Occupy Pedophilia local group leader saying that "practically all gay men [are] pedophiles".[17]

Third conviction

A new criminal charge against Tesak was filed in the autumn of 2013. Fleeing from prosecution, Martsinkevich traveled to Cuba through Belarus, planning to make new videos.

In December 2013, he was convicted In absentia for extremism based on a court decision in Moscow. The reason was the publication of three YouTube videos featuring Tesak. Two of the videos were his reviews of the Russian movies Stalingrad and Okolofutbola (Kicking Off), with racist remarks, while the third video criticized all the candidates of the Moscow mayoral elections and suggested removing immigrants as a means of improving the city.[18] Videos related to the "Occupy pedophilia" movement have also been investigated. Martsinkevich said that the indictment was ordered by the "pedo lobby" seeking revenge, mentioning the official Andrey Kaminov he caught during a date with a minor organized by Maxim.

Tesak was arrested in Cuba on 17 January 2014. On 27 January 2014, he was handcuffed and deported from Havana to Moscow for overstaying, then arrested by Russian authorities. On 29 January, Martsinkevich was indicted in person.

A Moscow court began hearing the case on 30 July 2014. Martsinkevich was charged with inciting ethnic hatred with the threat of violence (part 2 of the article 282 of the criminal code in Russia). The prosecution argued that the defendant has shown three videos with extremist content and psychological threats made by Martsinkevich on his personal page on the social network Vkontakte. The court agreed and, on 15 August 2014, sentenced Martsinkevich to five years in a penal colony with a strict regimen. On 11 November 2014, the prisoner's lawyers appealed the decision and the court reduced the sentence to two years and ten months.[1]

Fourth conviction

On 18 March 2015, it was reported that Martsinkevich had been charged with robbery and hooliganism. His lawyer said that the charges were related to Tesak's activities against smoking blends dealers. The case was heard at the Babushkinsky District Court in November 2016, with Marsinkevich pleading not guilty.[19] The prosecutor asked for 11 years and 6 months of confinement in a strict regimen corrective labor colony. Tesak was found guilty of the attacks - one having resulted in death, and on 27 June 2017, judge Alexander Glukhov sentenced Martsinkevich to 10 years in a strict regimen labor colony, beginning on 27 January 2014. One other attacker received 10 years, while the others have received 3 to 5.

On 21 May 2018, it was reported that the Moscow City Court has overturned the 27 June 2017 conviction and requested another hearing, while leaving Martsinkevich incarcerated. In December 2018, the Babushkinsky District Court again sentenced Martsinkevich to 10 years in a strict regimen labor colony. Martsinkevich filed an appeal. He was serving out the sentence in Matrosskaya Tishina.[20]

In February 2013, Tesak was in Minsk, Belarus to get a laser vision correction. During the visit, he entered into a fight with a group of anti-fascist football fans of FC Partizan. His fellow neo-nazi Sergey Korotkikh (nicknamed Malyuta) stabbed one of them with a knife, which resulted in Martsinkevich getting arrested by the police on the suspicion of hooliganism.[21] He was soon released with no charges pressed.

One of Martsinkevich's lawyers made a public statement in October 2014, saying that his client was recently charged with hooliganism for cutting off a man's hair.[22]

In November 2014, Tesak was charged with inciting ethnic hatred for writing and publishing his book Restruct, which has been classified as extremist.[22]

Allegations of murders

The investigation of the above-mentioned murder of a Tajik and a Dagestanian gradually led to Maxim Martsinkevich, who was at that time (2020) serving his fourth prison sentence. Partners in crime pointed at him, he was interrogated and probably tortured. He confessed of participating in a series of murders motivated by racist ideology. According to the investigation, the victims were several men of non-Slavic appearance (mostly Central Asian migrant workers) and a Russian prostitute. Martsinkevich testified against other participants of the murders and led the investigators to some of the victims' bodies.[23] Eventually, despite all the confessions made by Martsinkevich and others, the investigation against him was closed in the beginning of 2023 at his father's request, due to the death of the suspect.[24]

Death

On 16 September 2020, Martsinkevich was found dead with signs of torture in a pre-trial detention centre in the Chelyabinsk region, reportedly from taking his own life.[25] Investigators launched a preliminary inquiry into his death, in light of the security cameras near his cell having been inoperative on the night of his death. He had been due to travel to Moscow for questioning regarding a criminal case originating from 1999.[26][27] He was 36. Martsinkevich’s funeral at Kuntsevo Cemetery in Moscow was attended by estimated two to 4.5 thousand people.[28][29] The official explanation of his death as a suicide was contested by his attorney Matvey Dzen[30][31][32] and by multiple commentators both friendly and hostile to the departed.[33][34][35][36][37]

References

  1. Wong, Curtis (13 November 2014). "Maxim Martsinkevich, Russian Neo-Nazi Known For Torturing Gays, Has Labor Camp Sentence Reduced On Appeal". Huffington Post. Retrieved 15 December 2014.
  2. Schwirtz, Michael (19 February 2008). "Moscow's Immigrants Face Wave of Skinhead Violence". The New York Times. Retrieved 11 December 2014.
  3. Yudina, Natalia; Alperovich, Vera (12 August 2013). "The State Duma Directed Right Radicals Toward New Goals: Xenophobia, Radical Nationalism and Efforts to Counteract It in Russia during the First Half of 2013". www.sova-center.ru. SOVA Center. Retrieved 7 March 2016.
  4. Sokolova, Yevgeniya (27 June 2017). "Russian nationalist Martsinkevich found guilty of inciting hatred and enmity". www.rapsinews.com. RAPSI. Retrieved 27 June 2017.
  5. "Я в тюрьму не хочу опять". Lenta.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 11 October 2020.
  6. Russian nationalist ‘Tesak’ found dead in prison cell after apparent suicide Meduza
  7. "Максим Сергеевич Марцинкевич (Тесак)". www.gazeta.ru (in Russian). Gazeta.ru. Retrieved 3 February 2016.
  8. Кривец, Наталия (28 February 2013). "Тесак рассказал "Комсомолке" о своих приключениях в Минске". kp.by (in Russian). Retrieved 11 October 2020.
  9. "Триумф безволия". expert.ru. Retrieved 24 April 2023.
  10. "К книге Тесака подобрали статью". www.kommersant.ru (in Russian). 28 November 2016. Retrieved 24 April 2023.
  11. "«Суицида с моей стороны не может быть». Жизнь и смерть Тесака — самого известного российского ультраправого". Медиазона (in Russian). Retrieved 24 April 2023.
  12. Bidder, Benjamin (14 November 2013). "Viral Vigilantism: Russian Neo-Nazis Take Gay Bashing Online". Spiegel Online. Retrieved 11 December 2014.
  13. "Следственный комитет признал подлинность видеозаписи "казни" таджика и дагестанца". Lenta.RU (in Russian). Retrieved 24 April 2023.
  14. Vail, Julia (6 July 2007). "Extremist Held After Debate". St. Petersburg Times.
  15. "Russian Nazi Arrested for Debate Incident". Archived from the original on 4 November 2013.
  16. "Дело Каминова: борцы с педофилами создали судебный прецедент". vesti.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 24 April 2023.
  17. Sieczkowski, Cavan (26 July 2013). "Russian Neo-Nazis Allegedly Lure, Torture Gay Teens With Online Dating Scam". Huffington Post. Retrieved 16 December 2014.
  18. "Criminal cases against Tesak". www.sova-center.ru. SOVA Center. Retrieved 11 December 2014.
  19. "Russian nationalist Martsinkevich pleads not guilty to assaulting drug dealers". rapsinews.com. RAPSI. 25 November 2016. Retrieved 29 November 2016.
  20. ""Настолько опасен, что с ним никого не сажают". Как Тесак отбывает наказание" (in Russian). 30 January 2019. Retrieved 1 February 2020.
  21. "В Беларуси задержаны Тесак и Малюта / СОВА". www.sova-center.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 24 April 2023.
  22. Yudina, Natalia; Alperovich, Vera (21 April 2015). "Calm Before the Storm? Xenophobia and Radical Nationalism in Russia, and Efforts to Counteract Them in 2014". www.sova-center.ru. SOVA Center. Retrieved 10 May 2015.
  23. "Серийный убийца и главный шоумен русского неонацизма". Серийный убийца и главный шоумен русского неонацизма. Retrieved 24 April 2023.
  24. "Дело Тесака умерло вместе с ним". Коммерсантъ (in Russian). 21 February 2023. Retrieved 24 April 2023.
  25. "Notorious Antigay Russian Ultranationalist Found Dead In Jail Cell". Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. 16 September 2020. Retrieved 9 October 2020.
  26. "Infamous Russian nationalist found dead in isolation unit". rapsinews.com. RASPI. 16 September 2020. Retrieved 16 September 2020.
  27. Jailed Russian Neo-Nazi Found Dead in Apparent Suicide The Moscow Times
  28. "С Тесаком простились на Кунцевском кладбище - Газета.Ru | Новости".
  29. "В Москве прошли похороны бывшего лидера неонацисткого движения Максима Марцинкевича, известного как Тесак".
  30. "Адвокат рассказал о результатах независимой экспертизы тела Марцинкевича".
  31. "Адвокат назвал видео осмотра тела Тесака доказательством пыток". 25 September 2020.
  32. "Matthew Tszen on Facebook". Facebook. Archived from the original on 30 April 2022.
  33. "Леонид Каганов: Про смерть Тесака и карманное приложение юного палача".
  34. "- YouTube". YouTube.
  35. "Тайна Тесака (Марцинкевича). Правда о Красноярском СИЗО. - YouTube". YouTube.
  36. "- YouTube". YouTube.
  37. "Полковник Квачков об убийстве Тесака. - YouTube". YouTube.

Further reading

In the end, it doesn’t matter’ obituary on Meduza.io

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