MOSCOW, May 13 (RAPSI) – Prosecutors on Tuesday completed presenting their evidence in the case against Left Front leader Sergei Udaltsov and activist Leonid Razvozzhayev, who face charges of organizing riots in May 2012, attorney Dmitry Agranovsky told RAPSI.

According to Agranovsky, the defense team will begin presenting their evidence on May 15. The attorneys plan to question former Human Rights Commissioner Vladimir Lukin. They also don’t rule out the possibility of questioning opposition activist Alexei Navalny.

Over 400 people were arrested and scores were injured in the protest on Bolotnaya Square that turned violent in May 2012. Dozens of participants were later charged with inciting mass riots and using violence against law enforcement representatives.

Udaltsov has been accused of organizing riots and using violence against police during a rally. In October 2012, he was ordered not to leave the city. In February 2013, he was placed under house arrest, as he allegedly violated the former ruling. He has remained under house arrest ever since.

Udaltsov and Razvozzhayev along with other opposition figures were involved in the case concerning the planning of mass riots, which was initiated after the "Anatomy of Protest 2" film was shown on the NTV broadcasting network. The film claimed that the opposition was organizing a coup using funds from abroad and showed Udaltsov and his companions allegedly talking with Georgian politician Givi Targamadze, who at the time headed Georgia's Parliamentary Defense and Security Committee, and is said to have been involved in planning the "color" revolutions in Georgia and Ukraine, as well as the mass riots in Belarus.

In March, activist Konstantin Lebedev told the Moscow City Court that Udaltsov had received $30,000 per month from Targamadze for organizing mass riots in Russia.
Lebedev was previously sentenced to 2.5 years in prison on similar charges, for having allegedly helped orchestrate the Bolotnaya Square riots. He pleaded guilty and agreed to cooperate with investigators. In late April, Lebedev was released on parole.