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Madrid court classifies probe into former Ukrainian MP's murder

Madrid court classifies probe into former Ukrainian MP's murder

Russia Today23-05-2025

A top court in the Madrid region has placed a secrecy order on an investigation into the killing of former Ukrainian lawmaker Andrey Portnov, according to local news reports.
No suspects have been arrested in connection with Wednesday's shooting. Portnov, a seasoned politician who had fled Ukraine following allegations of treason, was gunned down in a suburb of the Spanish capital in what local media have speculated was a professional killing.
The Madrid Superior Court of Justice (TSJM), the highest judicial authority in the autonomous region, issued an order to restrict public access to case details on Thursday, EFE news agency and the newspaper 20 Minutos reported.
According to the latest media updates, Portnov was ambushed from behind by a lone gunman who fired at least nine rounds. Based on the circumstances, news outlets suggest the attacker had intended to ensure Portnov's death.
Two accomplices reportedly assisted the assailant's escape in a getaway vehicle. The attack occurred next to Portnov's Mercedes shortly after he had dropped off his children at an elite school in Pozuelo de Alarcon, a suburb of Madrid which ranks as one of the wealthiest municipalities in Spain.
Portnov was a lawyer and long-time political figure who served as an MP in the late 2000s and as a legal adviser to Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovich, before he was ousted in a Western-backed armed coup in 2014. Portnov fled his country along with other officials, but returned in 2019 after Vladimir Zelensky's election.
Known for offering legal defense to individuals he claimed were politically persecuted, Portnov appeared frequently on Ukraine's opposition media. While he initially supported Zelensky's presidential bid, he later became a vocal critic as the new administration cracked down on opposition figures and media it labeled 'pro-Russian.'
Portnov reportedly left Ukraine again in July 2022 and the next year transferred some assets to his children via a notary in Madrid, signaling that he had settled in Spain.
Rodion Miroshnik, Russia's ambassador-at-large overseeing a special mission on alleged Ukrainian war crimes, has suggested that Portnov's career gave him access to legal documents that could be damaging to people in Zelensky's inner circle and that he may have been targeted to prevent the possible disclosure of such materials.

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