Background
Alexey Dymovsky was born on 28 August 1977 in Blagoveshchensk, Soviet Union.
Alexey Dymovsky was born on 28 August 1977 in Blagoveshchensk, Soviet Union.
He was arrested on suspicion of fraud on 22 January 2010. Early life and career
In 1992, Dymovsky left the 11th Secondary School in Svobodny, and then entered the Svobodnensky Railway Technical School, received his degree in 1996. On leaving education, he did military service for a fixed period during 1996-1998 in the Russian Ground Forces, and since February 2000 began a career in the Ministry of Internal Affairs.
He worked as a precinct officer at the Department of Internal Affairs (OVD) of Svobodny until 2004, and then transferred to the Internal Affairs Directorate (UVD) of Novorossiysk, Krasnodar Krai.
In 2005 he was appointed to the post of operative agent at the operative search unit of Novorossiysk UVD. On November 2007 Dymovsky took up his post as a senior operative agent of the division on disclosing of murders, and since 2008 he held the same post at the drug traffic control division. In May 2009 Dymovsky was conferred the rank of Major in exchange for promising to jail an innocent person, but he was unable to keep the promise later.
Video appeals
Dymovsky decided to post video appeals on the Internet in part due to pressure that had started to be exerted on him at work following his unsuccessful attempt to raise his concerns during an anunual television call-in program with Vladimir Putin in 2006. During the program, Dymovsky had submitted a question to then-President Putin, asking when outrages would end in the Novorossiysk militsiya.
The question, which had been recorded, was never broadcast.
According to Dymovkiy, when his work learned of his call, heavy pressure began to be exerted on him. This pressure was so severe that when the Presidential Administration called him back with regards to his claims, he did not dare to testify. In his video appeals to Prime Minister Putin, Dymovsky claimed that corruption was endemic in the militsiya and that practices such as accusing innocent people in order to meet official crime detection targets and taking money to frame innocent people were widespread.
The first part of Dymovsky"s video appeal has been watched on YouTube more than 725,000 times.
Dymovsky was fired from the police force soon after posting the videos. His YouTube messages prompted a wave of videos from other Russian police officers describing corruption and the framing of innocent people.