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Georgy Zharkov what. Georgy Zharkov: why was the honorary member of the “What? Where? When?" (2 photos)



Zharkov, Georgy Vadimovich

Georgy Zharkov
At the IAC Congress, November 2009
Date of Birth:
Citizenship:

Since 2012, he has been the editor of the information and analytical website trend33.ru

Participation in “What? Where? When?"

The television version has been played since 1994. In the 1998 summer series he received the Crystal Owl. Also participates in tournaments for the sports version of the game. Since 1996 - Chairman of the Vladimir Intellectual Games Club. Organizer of the “Hot Winter” tournament (since 2008 it has been held in Murom under the name “Hot Winter on the Murom Path”, since 2009 - “Hot Spring on the Murom Path”). Since 2008 he has been playing for the team “Teachers of the MF MSPS”.

Violation of tournament regulations and disqualification

Rape case

November 12, 2004 Georgy Zharkov on Vladimirsky train station met a 19-year-old resident of Nizhny Novgorod, Alexander Pogodin, who suffered from mental retardation. He traveled from Nizhny Novgorod to Moscow in search of work, but at that moment he failed to get a job. Zharkov invited him to spend the night with him. Later, during the investigation, Zharkov stated that the young man was on the verge of an epileptic seizure, but Pogodin himself claimed that at that moment he felt fine. They went to the apartment that Zharkov rented for training at a local intellectual club.

Further, according to the testimony of Alexander Pogodin, Zharkov persuaded him to have oral sex. According to the testimony of neighbors, that night “noise, screams were heard from this apartment, someone was moving something, throwing something.” On November 15, when Zharkov left the apartment and locked the door, Pogodin decided to run through the window along a rope made of laundry, but fell near the fifth floor (the apartment was on the tenth) and fell on an Audi 100 parked under the window, causing serious injuries he did not receive it, and the car was badly damaged. The owner of the damaged car contacted the police. The police tracked down Pogodin, and after listening to his testimony, tracked down Zharkov. A criminal case was opened against Zharkov under articles of the Criminal Code. Another man, who wished not to give his name, testified as a witness in the case. He claimed that for 10 years (from 1993 to 2003) he suffered from sexual harassment by Georgy Zharkov.

On August 22, 2007, the court found Zharkov guilty and sentenced him to 4.5 years of suspended imprisonment. On October 30, 2009, the probationary period ended and Zharkov’s criminal record was cleared.

Opinions on the case

Georgy Zharkov himself did not admit his guilt. In an interview with Komsomolskaya Pravda, he did not rule out that the case could be ordered.

Students also reported Zharkov’s sexual harassment of male students. educational institutions, where he taught, as reported by Komsomolskaya Pravda.

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Categories:

  • Personalities in alphabetical order
  • Born on December 7
  • Born in 1966
  • Born in Vladimir
  • Players “What? Where? When?"
  • Holders of the "Crystal Owl"
  • Persons involved in sex scandals

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Georgy Vadimovich Zharkov(December 7, 1966, Vladimir - February 28, 2016, ibid.) - Russian participant in the intellectual games “What? Where? When?" (original television and sports version). Member of the Public Chamber of the Vladimir Region (since 2015). He was a participant in several high-profile scandals. In 2004, he was disqualified for 3 years for violating the regulations of the “City Cup” and “Russian Cup” tournaments in the game “What? Where? When?”, and in 2007 he was sentenced to 4.5 years of suspended imprisonment on charges of sexual assault and unlawful imprisonment.

Education, work and social activities

He graduated from the Vladimir State Pedagogical University (history department), and later began teaching psychology there. For some time he taught at the Vladimir College of Culture and Art. Candidate psychological sciences(the topic of the dissertation is “Chronotope in the personality structure of deviant adolescents”).

Participated in the creation of the democratic movement "Solidarity" in the Vladimir region.

Since 2012, he has been the editor of the information and analytical website trend33.com.

Since 2015 - member of the Public Chamber of the Vladimir Region.

He was buried at the Ulybyshevo city cemetery.

Participation in “What? Where? When?"

He has played in the television club since 1994. In the summer series of 1998 he received the Crystal Owl. He also participated in tournaments in the sports version of the game. Since 1996 - Chairman of the Vladimir Intellectual Games Club. Organizer of the “Hot Winter” tournament (since 2008 it has been held in Murom under the name “Hot Winter”, and since 2009 - “Hot Spring on the Murom Path”). Since 2008, he played for the team “Teachers of the MF MSPS”. He also played 3 games on the TV show “Own Game”.

Violation of tournament regulations and disqualification

February 1, 2004 commission International Association clubs of the ChGK found Zharkov guilty of violating the rules of holding sports tournaments of the ChGK. Thus, it was established that at the “City Cup” (April 2003) Zharkov informed the tournament organizing committee of the address Email, supposedly belonging to the host of the tournament, and he himself received questions about it. As a result, his team took third place. He tried to do the same at the Russian Cup, but the deception was exposed. The commission disqualified Georgy Zharkov for 3 years - until February 1, 2007, then on October 2, 2004 the period of disqualification was reduced to 1 year.

After a series of public statements by Georgy Zharkov in 2008, some players, including Alexander Liber, Maxim Potashev, Alexander Druz, announced their refusal to invite Zharkov to all tournaments that they organize, and their refusal to participate in any tournaments where Zharkov plays.

Rape case

On November 12, 2004, Georgy Zharkov at the Vladimir railway station met 19-year-old Nizhny Novgorod resident Alexander Pogodin, who suffered from mental retardation. He traveled from Nizhny Novgorod to Moscow in search of work, but at that moment he was unable to get a job. Zharkov invited him to spend the night with him. Later, during the investigation, Zharkov stated that the young man was on the verge of an epileptic seizure, but Pogodin himself claimed that at that moment he felt fine. They went to the apartment that Zharkov rented for training at a local intellectual club.

Further, according to the testimony of Alexander Pogodin, Zharkov persuaded him to have oral sex. According to the testimony of neighbors, that night “noise, screams were heard from this apartment, someone was moving something, throwing something.” On November 15, when Zharkov left the apartment and locked the door, Pogodin decided to run through the window along a rope made of laundry, but fell near the fifth floor (the apartment was on the tenth) and fell on an Audi 100 parked under the window, causing serious injuries he did not receive it, and the car was badly damaged. The owner of the damaged car contacted the police. The police tracked down Pogodin, and after listening to his testimony, tracked down Zharkov. A criminal case was opened against Zharkov under articles 127 (unlawful deprivation of liberty) and 132 (violent acts of a sexual nature) of the Criminal Code. Another man, who wished not to give his name, testified as a witness in the case. He claimed that for 10 years (from 1993 to 2003) he suffered from sexual harassment by Georgy Zharkov.

On August 22, 2007, the court found Zharkov guilty and sentenced him to 4.5 years of suspended imprisonment. On October 30, 2009, the probationary period ended and Zharkov’s criminal record was cleared.

Opinions on the case

Georgy Zharkov himself did not admit his guilt. In an interview with Komsomolskaya Pravda, he did not rule out that the case could be ordered.

According to Gazeta.ru, among the participants and employees of the television program “What? Where? When?" The news of Zharkov’s guilty verdict did not cause surprise. “Many suspected that he had such tendencies. Zharkov, to put it mildly, is not a person of the strictest morality,” a source told Gazeta.Ru. “In addition, he showed himself ugly several times in the game itself, for which he was once disqualified.”

Students of educational institutions where he taught also reported Zharkov’s sexual harassment of male students, as reported by Komsomolskaya Pravda.

(2016-02-28 ) (49 years old)

Georgy Vadimovich Zharkov(December 7, Vladimir - February 28, ibid.) - Russian participant in the intellectual games “What? Where? When? "(television and sports versions). Member of the Public Chamber of the Vladimir Region (since 2015). He was a participant in several high-profile scandals. In 2004, he was disqualified for 3 years for violating the regulations of the “City Cup” and “Russian Cup” tournaments in the game “What? Where? When?”, and in 2007 he was sentenced to 4.5 years of suspended imprisonment on charges of sexual assault and unlawful imprisonment.

Education, work and social activities

Since 2012, he has been the editor of the information and analytical website trend33.com.

He was buried at the Ulybyshevo city cemetery.

Participation in “What? Where? When?"

Violation of tournament regulations and disqualification

Rape case

On November 12, 2004, Georgy Zharkov at the Vladimir railway station met 19-year-old Nizhny Novgorod resident Alexander Pogodin, who suffered from mental retardation. He traveled from Nizhny Novgorod to Moscow in search of work, but at that moment he was unable to get a job. Zharkov invited him to spend the night with him. Later, during the investigation, Zharkov stated that the young man was on the verge of an epileptic seizure, but Pogodin himself claimed that at that moment he felt fine. They went to an apartment that Zharkov rented for training at a local intellectual club.

Further, according to the testimony of Alexander Pogodin, Zharkov persuaded him to have oral sex. According to the testimony of neighbors, that night “noise, screams were heard from this apartment, someone was moving something, throwing something.” On November 15, when Zharkov left the apartment and locked the door, Pogodin decided to run through the window along a rope made of laundry, but fell near the fifth floor (the apartment was on the tenth) and fell on an Audi 100 parked under the window, causing serious injuries he did not receive it, and the car was badly damaged. The owner of the damaged car contacted the police. The police tracked down Pogodin, and after listening to his testimony, tracked down Zharkov. A criminal case was opened against Zharkov under articles of the Criminal Code. Another man, who wished not to give his name, testified as a witness in the case. He claimed that for 10 years (from 1993 to 2003) he suffered from sexual harassment by Georgy Zharkov.

On August 22, 2007, the court found Zharkov guilty and sentenced him to 4.5 years of suspended imprisonment. On October 30, 2009, the probation period ended and Zharkov’s criminal record was cleared.

Opinions on the case

Georgy Zharkov himself did not admit his guilt. In an interview with Komsomolskaya Pravda, he did not rule out that the case could be ordered.

Students of educational institutions where he taught also reported Zharkov’s sexual harassment of male students, as reported by Komsomolskaya Pravda.

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Excerpt characterizing Zharkov, Georgy Vadimovich

“A dog is in trouble, a living dog is in trouble,” Denisov said after him - the highest mockery of a cavalryman at a mounted infantryman, and, approaching Rostov, he burst out laughing.
– He recaptured the infantry, recaptured the transport by force! - he said. - Well, shouldn’t people die of hunger?
The carts that approached the hussars were assigned to an infantry regiment, but, having been informed through Lavrushka that this transport was coming alone, Denisov and the hussars repulsed it by force. The soldiers were given plenty of crackers, even shared with other squadrons.
The next day, the regimental commander called Denisov to him and told him, covering his eyes with open fingers: “I look at it like this, I don’t know anything and I won’t start anything; but I advise you to go to headquarters and there, in the provisions department, settle this matter, and, if possible, sign that you received so much food; otherwise, the demand is written down on the infantry regiment: the matter will arise and may end badly.”
Denisov went directly from the regimental commander to headquarters, with a sincere desire to carry out his advice. In the evening he returned to his dugout in a position in which Rostov had never seen his friend before. Denisov could not speak and was choking. When Rostov asked him what was wrong with him, he only uttered incomprehensible curses and threats in a hoarse and weak voice...
Frightened by Denisov's situation, Rostov asked him to undress, drink water and sent for a doctor.
- Try me for crime - oh! Give me some more water - let them judge, but I will, I will always beat the scoundrels, and I will tell the sovereign. Give me some ice,” he said.
The regimental doctor who came said that it was necessary to bleed. A deep plate of black blood came out of Denisov’s shaggy hand, and only then was he able to tell everything that happened to him.
“I’m coming,” Denisov said. - “Well, where is your boss here?” Shown. Would you like to wait? “I have work, I came 30 miles away, I don’t have time to wait, report.” Okay, this chief thief comes out: he also decided to teach me: This is robbery! - “Robbery, I say, is committed not by the one who takes provisions to feed his soldiers, but by the one who takes it to put it in his pocket!” So would you like to remain silent? "Fine". Sign, he says, with the commission agent, and your case will be handed over to the command. I come to the commission agent. I enter - at the table... Who?! No, just think!...Who is starving us, - Denisov shouted, hitting the table with the fist of his sore hand, so hard that the table almost fell and the glasses jumped on it, - Telyanin! “What, are you starving us?!” Once, once in the face, deftly it was necessary... “Ah... with this and that and... began to roll. But I was amused, I can say,” Denisov shouted, baring his white teeth joyfully and angrily from under his black mustache. “I would have killed him if they hadn’t taken him away.”
“Why are you shouting, calm down,” Rostov said: “here the blood is starting again.” Wait, I need to bandage it. Denisov was bandaged and put to bed. The next day he woke up cheerful and calm. But at noon, the regimental adjutant with a serious and sad face came to the common dugout of Denisov and Rostov and with regret showed a uniform paper to Major Denisov from the regimental commander, in which inquiries were made about yesterday's incident. The adjutant reported that the matter was about to take a very bad turn, that a military court commission had been appointed, and that with the real severity regarding the looting and high-handedness of the troops, in a happy case, the matter could end in demotion.
The case was presented by those offended in such a way that, after the transport was recaptured, Major Denisov, without any summons, came to the chief of provisions in a drunken state, called him a thief, threatened him with beatings, and when he was taken out, he rushed into the office and beat up two officials and sprained one's arm.
Denisov, in response to Rostov’s new questions, laughingly said that it seemed like someone else had turned up here, but that all this was nonsense, nonsense, that he didn’t even think of being afraid of any courts, and that if these scoundrels dare to bully him, he would answer them so that they will remember.
Denisov spoke disparagingly about this whole matter; but Rostov knew him too well not to notice that in his soul (hiding it from others) he was afraid of the trial and was tormented by this matter, which, obviously, was supposed to have bad consequences. Every day, papers began to arrive, requests to the court, and on the first of May Denisov was ordered to hand over the squadron to his senior man and appear at the division headquarters for explanations in the case of rioting in the provisions commission. On the eve of this day, Platov made reconnaissance of the enemy with two Cossack regiments and two squadrons of hussars. Denisov, as always, rode ahead of the line, flaunting his courage. One of the bullets fired by the French riflemen hit him in the flesh of his upper leg. Maybe at another time Denisov would not have left the regiment with such a light wound, but now he took advantage of this opportunity, refused to report to the division and went to the hospital.

In June, the Battle of Friedland took place, in which the Pavlograd residents did not participate, and after it a truce was declared. Rostov, who deeply felt the absence of his friend, having had no news about him since his departure and worrying about the progress of his case and his wounds, took advantage of the truce and asked to go to the hospital to visit Denisov.
The hospital was located in a small Prussian town, twice devastated by Russian and French troops. Precisely because it was in the summer, when it was so nice in the field, this place, with its broken roofs and fences and its dirty streets, ragged inhabitants and drunken and sick soldiers wandering around it, presented a particularly gloomy sight.
In a stone house, in a courtyard with the remains of a dismantled fence, some broken frames and glass, there was a hospital. Several bandaged, pale and swollen soldiers walked and sat in the courtyard in the sun.
As soon as Rostov entered the door of the house, he was overwhelmed by the smell of a rotting body and a hospital. On the stairs he met a Russian military doctor with a cigar in his mouth. A Russian paramedic followed the doctor.
“I can’t burst,” said the doctor; - Come to Makar Alekseevich in the evening, I’ll be there. – The paramedic asked him something else.
- Eh! do as you please! Doesn't it matter? - The doctor saw Rostov climbing the stairs.
- Why are you here, your honor? - said the doctor. - Why are you here? Or the bullet didn’t kill you, so you want to get typhus? Here, father, is the house of lepers.
- From what? - asked Rostov.
- Typhus, father. Whoever rises will die. Only the two of us with Makeyev (he pointed to the paramedic) are chatting here. At this point, about five of our brother doctors died. “Whatever the new guy does, he’ll be ready in a week,” the doctor said with visible pleasure. “They called Prussian doctors, because our allies don’t like that.”
Rostov explained to him that he wanted to see the hussar major Denisov lying here.
- I don’t know, I don’t know, father. Just think, I have three hospitals for one person, 400 patients are too many! It’s also good, the Prussian ladies who are benefactors send us coffee and lint at two pounds a month, otherwise they would be lost. - He laughed. – 400, father; and they keep sending me new ones. After all, there are 400? A? – he turned to the paramedic.
The paramedic looked exhausted. He was apparently waiting with annoyance to see how soon the chattering doctor would leave.
“Major Denisov,” Rostov repeated; – he was wounded near Moliten.
- It seems he died. Eh, Makeev? – the doctor asked the paramedic indifferently.
The paramedic, however, did not confirm the doctor’s words.
- Why is he so long and reddish? - asked the doctor.
Rostov described Denisov's appearance.
“There was, there was one,” the doctor said as if joyfully, “this one must have died, but I can handle it, I had the lists.” Do you have it, Makeev?
“Makar Alekseich has the lists,” said the paramedic. “Come to the officers’ chambers, you’ll see for yourself there,” he added, turning to Rostov.
“Eh, it’s better not to go, father,” said the doctor, “otherwise you might end up staying here.” “But Rostov bowed to the doctor and asked the paramedic to accompany him.
“Don’t blame me too much,” the doctor shouted from under the stairs.
Rostov and the paramedic entered the corridor. The hospital smell was so strong in this dark corridor that Rostov grabbed his nose and had to stop to gather his strength and move on. A door opened to the right, and a thin, yellow man, barefoot and wearing only underwear, leaned out on crutches.
He leaned against the lintel and looked at those passing by with shining, envious eyes. Looking through the door, Rostov saw that the sick and wounded were lying there on the floor, on straw and overcoats.
-Can I come in and have a look? - asked Rostov.
- What should I watch? - said the paramedic. But precisely because the paramedic obviously did not want to let him in, Rostov entered the soldiers’ chambers. The smell he had already smelled in the corridor was even stronger here. This smell has changed somewhat here; he was sharper, and one could feel that this was where he came from.
In a long room, brightly lit by the sun through large windows, the sick and wounded lay in two rows, with their heads to the walls and leaving a passage in the middle. Most of them were in oblivion and did not pay attention to those who entered. Those who were in memory all stood up or raised their thin, yellow faces, and all with the same expression of hope for help, reproach and envy of other people's health, without taking their eyes off, looked at Rostov. Rostov went out into the middle of the room, looked into the neighboring rooms with open doors, and saw the same thing on both sides. He stopped, silently looking around him. He never expected to see this. In front of them lay almost across the middle aisle, on the bare floor, a sick man, probably a Cossack, because his hair was cut into a brace. This Cossack was lying on his back, with his huge arms and legs outstretched. His face was crimson red, his eyes were completely rolled back, so that only the whites were visible, and on his bare feet and on his hands, still red, the veins were strained like ropes. He hit the back of his head on the floor and said something hoarsely and began to repeat the word. Rostov listened to what he was saying and made out the word he was repeating. The word was: drink - drink - drink! Rostov looked around, looking for someone who could put this patient in his place and give him water.

Sensational news with a minus sign arrived today from Vladimir: as the local television and radio company reported, last Tuesday in the Leninsky District Court of the city the verdict was announced to the expert of the elite club “What? Where? When?”, owner of the “Crystal Owl”, candidate of psychological sciences Georgy Zharkov, who was accused under Part 2 of Art. 132 (“Violent acts of a sexual nature”) and Part 1 of Art. 127 (“Unlawful deprivation of liberty”) of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation. The court was adamant: Zharkov received 4.5 years in prison. True, in accordance with Art. 73 of the Criminal Code, the imposed punishment is considered suspended. The expert is given a probationary period of three years, during which he must not commit administrative offenses or change places of residence or work. Moreover, every month Zharkov is required to appear for registration at the criminal-executive inspection.

According to investigators, on November 12, 2004, Georgy Zharkov met 19-year-old Alexander Pogodin from Nizhny Novgorod at the railway station in Vladimir, who did odd jobs. The expert offered him accommodation for the night, but not in his own apartment, where he lived with his wife, but in a rented one - in a house on the street. Verkhnyaya Dubrova, on the tenth floor. “If we had a normal system of shelters in our country, then such a situation would not have arisen,” Zharkov later explained in an interview with Komsomolskaya Pravda. “There was no chance of getting somewhere overnight. The only option I saw was somehow help this person - feed him, wash his clothes and let him spend the night - just call him to you."

However, according to Pogodin’s testimony, Zharkov persuaded him to engage in sexual acts and did not let him go anywhere. In this regard, the young man decided to escape, for which he knitted sheets. But at the fifth floor level, Alexander fell and fell on an Audi car. And if Pogodin himself was practically unharmed, the foreign car required major repairs. Later the victim contacted law enforcement agencies, but they didn’t immediately believe him. When asked why the strong guy could not cope with the 40-year-old expert, Alexander answered strangely: “George hypnotized me.” Nevertheless, the detectives took up the investigation, and the Vladimir prosecutor’s office became involved in the case.

According to Zharkov, Alexander’s descent from the tenth floor is explained by the fact that the young man is mentally ill. Indeed, it is known about Pogodin that he was diagnosed with a “lag in mental development“However, a comprehensive examination showed that he is quite capable of giving meaningful testimony and “is not prone to morbid fantasies.” As a result, the court found the expert guilty and ordered him to pay moral damages to two victims - 15 thousand rubles to Pogodin and 100 thousand rubles. Vladimir Chernov (owner of Audi).

However, Zharkov does not agree with the court’s decision and denies his guilt. According to the expert, “all this is a political provocation” aimed at discrediting his reputation. “My alibi was confirmed by four people,” he said in an interview with KP. “The commission confirmed that I had no grounds for the crime. Therefore, it is a pity that the court sided with the extortionists who simply used the judicial system for blackmail. There are many questions.” I also had a local psychological examination called in. I will need to talk to a lawyer about appealing. We have ten days for this. But I think we will conduct another examination with the involvement of competent specialists. In general, I think this case is not over yet! "

Ytra dossier:

Georgy Vadimovich Zharkov was born on December 7, 1966 in Vladimir. In 1984, he graduated from local school No. 21, then entered the history department of the Vladimir Pedagogical Institute. In 1985 - 1987 worked as a builder at Baikonur. Since 1991 - the first practicing psychologist in Vladimir. Taught at high school No. 25, Vladimir College of Culture and Art, at the Department of Pedagogy and Psychology of Vladimir State Pedagogical University, in the Pokrovsky branch of the Moscow State Open Pedagogical University named after. Sholokhov.

Candidate of Psychological Sciences. Since 1994, he took part in the games of the elite club "What? Where? When?" and in the program "Brain Ring". Since 1996 - President of the Vladimir Intellectual Games Club. Winner of the Crystal Owl (1998).



Zharkov, Georgy Vadimovich

Georgy Zharkov
At the IAC Congress, November 2009
Date of Birth:
Citizenship:

Since 2012, he has been the editor of the information and analytical website trend33.ru

Participation in “What? Where? When?"

The television version has been played since 1994. In the 1998 summer series he received the Crystal Owl. Also participates in tournaments for the sports version of the game. Since 1996 - Chairman of the Vladimir Intellectual Games Club. Organizer of the “Hot Winter” tournament (since 2008 it has been held in Murom under the name “Hot Winter on the Murom Path”, since 2009 - “Hot Spring on the Murom Path”). Since 2008 he has been playing for the team “Teachers of the MF MSPS”.

Violation of tournament regulations and disqualification

Rape case

On November 12, 2004, Georgy Zharkov at the Vladimir railway station met 19-year-old Nizhny Novgorod resident Alexander Pogodin, who suffered from mental retardation. He traveled from Nizhny Novgorod to Moscow in search of work, but at that moment he was unable to get a job. Zharkov invited him to spend the night with him. Later, during the investigation, Zharkov stated that the young man was on the verge of an epileptic seizure, but Pogodin himself claimed that at that moment he felt fine. They went to the apartment that Zharkov rented for training at a local intellectual club.

Further, according to the testimony of Alexander Pogodin, Zharkov persuaded him to have oral sex. According to the testimony of neighbors, that night “noise, screams were heard from this apartment, someone was moving something, throwing something.” On November 15, when Zharkov left the apartment and locked the door, Pogodin decided to run through the window along a rope made of laundry, but fell near the fifth floor (the apartment was on the tenth) and fell on an Audi 100 parked under the window, causing serious injuries he did not receive it, and the car was badly damaged. The owner of the damaged car contacted the police. The police tracked down Pogodin, and after listening to his testimony, tracked down Zharkov. A criminal case was opened against Zharkov under articles of the Criminal Code. Another man, who wished not to give his name, testified as a witness in the case. He claimed that for 10 years (from 1993 to 2003) he suffered from sexual harassment by Georgy Zharkov.

On August 22, 2007, the court found Zharkov guilty and sentenced him to 4.5 years of suspended imprisonment. On October 30, 2009, the probationary period ended and Zharkov’s criminal record was cleared.

Opinions on the case

Georgy Zharkov himself did not admit his guilt. In an interview with Komsomolskaya Pravda, he did not rule out that the case could be ordered.

Students of educational institutions where he taught also reported Zharkov’s sexual harassment of male students, as reported by Komsomolskaya Pravda.

Notes

Links

Categories:

  • Personalities in alphabetical order
  • Born on December 7
  • Born in 1966
  • Born in Vladimir
  • Players “What? Where? When?"
  • Holders of the "Crystal Owl"
  • Persons involved in sex scandals

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

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