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Crime Boss Murder Won't Mean Comeback For Russian Mafia

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  • Crime Boss Murder Won't Mean Comeback For Russian Mafia

    CRIME BOSS MURDER WON'T MEAN COMEBACK FOR RUSSIAN MAFIA
    Vitaliy Belousov

    RIA Novosti

    Mafia Boss Gunned Down in Moscow

    MOSCOW, January 18 (Alexey Eremenko, Alexandra Odynova, RIA Novosti)
    - Aslan "Gramps Khasan" Usoyan was leaving his favorite restaurant
    in central Moscow when a bullet from a silenced assault rifle hit
    him in the neck.

    The portly 75-year-old's private guards pushed him back inside, but
    more bullets sailed through the closed door, piercing the backside
    of a woman nearby, costing her 4½ liters of blood. Usoyan's consorts
    sped him to the hospital in a Mercedes jeep, where doctors proclaimed
    him dead on arrival.

    Wednesday's assassination robbed the Russian underworld of one of
    its last legendary greats, and stirred up memories of the bloody turf
    wars that grabbed headlines in the country's "turbulent 1990s."

    But experts do not foresee a revival of the all-mighty "Russkaya
    mafiya" of that time, with its glorified image and omnipresence in
    pop culture. On the contrary, they believe Russian organized crime has
    settled into a pattern similar to many other countries', focusing on
    a few lucrative, mostly illegal domains, but outgunned and outmanned
    by government bodies, who have regained the upper hand over the past
    decade or so.

    "Organized crime has been marginalized in Russia in recent years,
    returning to the niche it is supposed to occupy," said sociology
    professor Vadim Volkov, an expert on Russian mafia at the European
    University at St. Petersburg.

    Life After Gramps In press reports, Usoyan had long been labeled
    Russia's most influential "thief-in-law" - a title denoting a don of
    the underworld both in Soviet and post-Soviet criminal culture. His
    spheres of activity have been rumored to include drugs, guns and
    construction materials, including some lucrative deals involving next
    year's Olympics in the southern Russian city of Sochi.

    After his death, Russian media swelled with speculation, blaming the
    hit on Usoyan's numerous rivals, who supposedly opted not to wait
    until his planned retirement later this year and the ascent of a
    nephew he had carefully groomed as successor.

    The Investigative Committee, roughly comparable to Russia's FBI,
    also said it was looking into a possible dispute among crime bosses
    as the cause of Usoyan's shooting.

    Logically, predictions of impending gang warfare followed.

    But similar forecasts abounded after the 2009 assassination -
    possibly by the same killer, according to one tabloid - of thief-in-law
    Vyacheslav Ivankov, known as Yaponchik or "Little Japanese." And those
    forecasts failed to materialize, at least in any high-profile way.

    The Russian mafia has reached an era of stability, settling all its
    major disputes and dividing up territory, said Alexander Gurov, a
    former head of the State Duma Security Committee who made his name
    in the Soviet Interior Ministry fighting organized crime in the 1980s.

    "It took the Sicilian mafia about two centuries, a few decades for
    the United States. It took the Russian mafia two decades," Gurov said.

    Racketeering Regulators One obituary called Usoyan, before his death,
    "the last surviving mammoth" of a bygone age. Indeed, Gramps Khasan
    emerged from a criminal subculture believed to have started taking
    shape around the time of his birth, in the 1930s.

    Soviet-era thieves-in-law, who earned their stripes in prison, had
    intricate codes of etiquette and behavior enforced with no less
    zeal than the Criminal Code. They eschewed the state and derived
    sustenance from a classic mix of robbery and fraud, but gradually
    also from a shadow economy that started taking root in the Soviet
    Union in the 1960s, despite - or, perhaps, because of - bans on
    private entrepreneurship.

    And it was this very connection to business that came to play the
    pivotal role in the rise of Russian mafia in the 1990s, experts told
    RIA Novosti.

    The Soviet Union's demise wreaked chaos in established state
    institutions in Russia and other post-Soviet countries, leaving them
    crippled and unequipped to deal with a new capitalist reality, said
    Andrei Soldatov, editor-in-chief of Agentura.ru, a non-profit online
    think-tank studying Russian law enforcement services.

    Old bastions of law enforcement like police and courts were incapable
    of helping newly emerging businessmen settle disputes or providing
    them with protection, Soldatov said.

    And so the mafia stepped in to fill the void.

    Protection became a service offered by ubiquitous and highly
    territorial racketeer gangs that settled conflicts through organized
    showdowns involving dozens of people and, as often as not, a lot
    of rapid machine gun fire. The country's most prominent newspapers,
    like Kommersant and the now defunct Segodnya, devoted daily spreads
    to casualty reports and stories about thieves'-in-law activity.

    The State Duma said in a report in 1998 that up to 40 percent of
    private companies and 85 percent of banks nationwide were controlled
    by organized crime.

    A rare poll from 1998-1999, cited in a textbook by the Russian
    Criminological Association, showed that 30 percent of businessmen in
    Moscow were somehow involved with organized crime groups.

    At the same time, the old-school Soviet criminal culture collided
    with a new crop of gangsters, unencumbered by such elaborate rules
    and balking at nothing to carve themselves a piece of someone else's
    juicy turf.

    These SUV-driving, gun-toting, crimson-jacket-wearing thugs, who
    constructed mammoth marble tombstones to their fallen brethren,
    permeated the nation's life and sensibility.

    Kitschy, sappy and primitive tunes about the mafia's struggles, known
    as "chanson," became a staple of Russia's musical diet in the 1990s,
    even among those who'd never been near a gun or jail, and the first
    domestic films and television shows to rival Hollywood productions
    were gangster tales.

    This was also when the Russian mafia became a global phenomenon,
    taking advantage of the newly opened opportunities for travel and
    tapping immigrant communities abroad to join global networks of
    drug, arms and human trafficking - and to popularize the notions of
    onion-dome tattoos, perpetual scowls and ridiculous accents that can
    now be found anywhere from a Grand Theft Auto video game to David
    Cronenberg's filmography.

    The Silovikis' Revenge The tide changed at the turn of the third
    millennium, when the Russian state started to restore its functions
    as arbiter and its coercive power.

    Disputes could now be solved in arbitrage courts and protection
    obtained from private security companies, said Volkov of St.

    Petersburg's European University.

    Lower taxes in the early 2000s also delivered a blow to the shadow
    economy, he said.

    Most crucially, the security and law enforcement services, or
    "siloviki," resurgent under the presidency of ex-KGB officer Vladimir
    Putin, could now provide high-level protection to entrepreneurs,
    who were quick to capitalize on it.

    "When the law enforcement services got their strength back, the
    businessmen flocked to them," said Soldatov of Agentura.ru.

    The new system was very corruption-prone, with law enforcement
    officials charging money for protection and abusing the law when it
    suited them or businesses in their care, Soldatov said. By the late
    2000s, the Russian business community realized it had been overwhelmed
    and taken over by those it originally hired to protect it, he added.

    Corrupt officials, or "white-collar criminals," pose a much greater
    danger to Russia today than the thieves-in-law, Gurov said.

    But early in the game, the "siloviki" option looked much more
    attractive than the mafia, with its violent gunfights and other rough
    tactics. So the official-looking guys took away market share from
    the shadier-seeming ones, both experts said.

    No More Songs In 1998, Russian police estimated the number of known
    thieves-in-law across the world at 1,560. But by 2010, the last
    year for which statistics were available, they numbered about 150,
    according to Russia's Interior Ministry.

    Back in 2008, declaring the war on the Russian mafia victorious,
    the Kremlin disbanded police units combatting organized crime and
    created an anti-extremism department instead, which busied itself
    cracking down on political dissenters.

    Russian organized crime has not disappeared, but its activity is now
    mostly limited to traditional domains such as arms trade, illegal
    drugs and prostitution, Volkov said.

    "It is a part of the [society's] eco-system, you could say, and nobody
    [in the law enforcement services] sees it as a serious threat anymore,"
    Soldatov said.

    Many crime bosses have turned a new leaf, investing money earned in
    the 1990s in perfectly legitimate enterprises, said Kirill Kabanov,
    who heads the National Anti-Corruption Committee. The late Usoyan was
    reported to run several hotels in southern Russia in addition to his
    other pursuits.

    A handful of minor gangs from the past "that attract the youth through
    a romanticized vision of crime" have survived, but only in remote
    backwaters, Kabanov said.

    "New ethnic Asian groups from Tajikistan and others" have emerged,
    but "they are not yet rich and don't wield much power," he added.

    Most importantly, the legend of the Russian mafia itself is fading from
    the nation's mind. There are no more daily briefs on goings-on in the
    gangster world in the media, and a criminal career is not attracting
    the young: According to a nationwide poll by state-run VTsIOM in 2009,
    the list of young Russians' dream jobs is topped by posts at national
    gas giant Gazprom and the Kremlin administration. By contrast, media
    in the 1990s often cited anonymous polls of high school students who
    named "mafia hitman" and "prostitute" as their highest job aspirations.

    Glorious mafiosi have been sidelined by college students and medical
    interns on primetime television, and "chanson" performers are outsold
    by a new breed of artists who, music reviewers say, sing essentially
    the same songs, but with lyrics about love and life instead of gang
    shootings and doin' time.

    "The Russian mafia is sticking to its old violent ways," Volkov said.

    "It's just that the public isn't paying much attention to it anymore."

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