MOSCOW, February 28 - RAPSI.  Russia’s Federal Penitentiary Service (FSIN) said on Thursday it had uncovered fraudulent financial operations inside the organization which have cost it over 10 billion rubles (some $327 mln).

“During the course of an inspection of documents, financial violations were discovered totaling over 10.1 billion rubles,” said the FSIN’s head, Gennady Kornienko, but did not elaborate.

The announcement came just weeks after investigators probed a case in which FSIN had purchased electronic bracelets for people under house arrest, for vastly inflated sums. An investigation also revealed that the bracelets were not linked to GLONASS, Russia’s answer to the US Global Positioning System, or GPS, and were effectively useless.

Investigators said the scheme had cost the state some $32 mln and that the bracelets had been ordered by the FSIN’s former head, Alexander Reimer, and his deputy.

The probe into the case was opened after two FSIN employees were detained on suspicion of extorting $2.6 million from a businessman in connection with the purchase of the bracelets.

The revelations come to light during a much-vaunted Kremlin anti-corruption campaign, which has reached as high as ministerial level, with the resignation of the former Defense Minister last November.

Russia consistently hovers around 150th place in Berlin-based NGO Transparency International’s corruption index.