MOSCOW, June 22 (RAPSI, Nikolay Merkulov) – The Moscow City Court on Friday upheld the sentence given to Temirlan Eskerkhanov, a convicted defendant in the case on killing Russian opposition politician Boris Nemtsov, for insulting an investigator, RAPSI reports from the courtroom.

In February, Eskerkhanov was found guilty of contempt of court expressed in insulting an investigator. As part of this new case, the court added a month to a 14-year prison term the defendant had received for Nemtsov’s murder.

The case was initiated because of Eskerkhanov’s words heard by jurors. One of the words insulted the investigator; however, an expert evaluation has found no insult in the convict’s speech, his lawyer Anna Byurchiyeva told RAPSI earlier.

The defendant pleaded not guilty to insulting investigator Alexander Kamashev. Eskerkhanov insisted that he was being tried unjustly.

In October 2017, sentence passed on murderers of Nemtsov took effect. The Moscow District Military Court gave the defendants prison terms varying from 11 to 20 years on July 13 of that year. The court ruled in accordance with the will of the jury panel founding all defendants guilty. Zaur Dadayev, Nemtsov’s first-hand killer was sentenced to 20 years. Anzor Gubashev was sentenced to 19 years, Shadid Gubashev to 16 years, Temirlan Eskerkhanov to 14 years and Khamzat Bakhayev to 11 years. All defendants will serve their time in a high-security penal colony. The court fined defendants 100,000 rubles (about $1,700). Shadid and Anzor Gubashev, Eskerkhanov and Bakhayev were also subjected to additional restriction of freedom for two years.

In late June 2017, jurors found all the defendants guilty of involvement in the politician’s murder and illegal trafficking in firearms and ammunition. According to the verdict, they did not deserve leniency.

The jury panel stated that one of defendants, Dadayev, conspired with others, was stalking and collecting data on Nemtsov, prepared murder and killed the politician himself, shooting his victim at least six times from an unidentified gun.
Boris Nemtsov, 55, a prominent opposition politician, who held a number of high-ranking posts in the Russian government in the 1990s and in the 2000s joined the opposition, was shot down in the center of Moscow as he walked across a bridge near the Kremlin on the night of February 28, 2015.

Investigators believe that the conspirators had thoroughly prepared to commit this crime and spied on the victim.

Ruslan Mukhudinov, a former officer in Chechen Interior Ministry, is believed to be a mastermind of the murder. He was placed on the international wanted list in November 2015. Beslan Shavanov, who allegedly was also implicated in the crime, reportedly killed himself when police tried to arrest him.

Criminal prosecution of Shavanov was dismissed because of his death. Investigation into Mukhudinov is underway.