MOSCOW, January 9 (RAPSI) - Dmitry Kostygin, a co-owner of Russian Internet retailer Ulmart, charged with credit fraud, has filed a bankruptcy petition against the company’s shareholder Mikhail Vasinkevich, according to records of the Commercial Court of St. Petersburg and Leningrad Region.
The hearing date has not been scheduled yet.
In December, the Smolninsky District Court of St. Petersburg extended the house arrest of Kostygin until February 14.
According to case papers, Kostygin acting as the Board Chairman of Ulmart provided false information on the company’s financial position to Sberbank for signing a loan agreement. In April, Sberbank transferred 1 billion rubles ($17.3 million at the current exchange rate) to the company’s account. The accused allegedly managed the money in his discretion.
The defendant pleaded not guilty, his lawyer Konstantin Dobrynin told RAPSI earlier.
Previously, the Smolninsky District Court granted an application by Sberbank seeking to invalidate the contract concluded between Kostygin and businessman Oleg Morozov, on the basis of which a bankruptcy petition was filed against Ulmart.
In February 2015, Ulmart received a 250-million–ruble credit from Kostygin for a year. In early 2016, Kostygin assigned his right to claim a debt to Morozov. The businessman in turn filed a bankruptcy petition against Ulmart with a commercial court because the company did not pay the debt.
Moreover, the Dzerzhinsky District Court of St. Petersburg collected 653 million rubles ($11.3 million) in debt from Kostygin in favor of VTB bank.
Ulmart group of companies is the largest Russian private Internet holding focusing on e-commerce segment. The company’s distribution network consists of over 400 sales outlets across more than 240 Russian cities and towns.