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FAQ security.
Federal Wanted List
A quick and easy guide to surviving in the Federal Wanted List in the Russian Federation, by an unknown author.
If you have been put on the Federal Wanted List, first of all, get rid of all your mobile phones and SIM cards. Each mobile phone has an IMEI number that can be easily tracked using mobile communications equipment. You will be positioned with an accuracy of 2-3 m and will be detained immediately (if there is an order to do so).
You should buy a second-hand phone at one of the markets and buy a completely new SIM card for it. If you have made at least one call using a new SIM card, from an old phone, or from a new phone using an old SIM card, their numbers will be linked and you will be immediately identified. Or use phones with the IMEI change function and other features, fortunately, they are not difficult to find on the modern Internet.
The next way to catch you is to work on your contacts - relatives, friends, good acquaintances.
Therefore, you need to abruptly cut off all contacts. Don't even call, because your relatives' or friends' phones may be tapped, or they may not be, and simply by monitoring incoming calls, they will figure you out with your new SIM card and new handset. Therefore, the first 3 months - NO CONTACTS, or contacts via Internet telephony (no SKYPE!!!)
Usually they look for wanted people with the help of informers - operational sources.
It is quite possible that one or more of your acquaintances will turn out to be just such informers.
In the Russian Federation, VERY MANY PEOPLE have sold their souls to the devil of Putinism, so TRUST NO ONE. LIMIT YOUR CONTACTS TO A MINIMUM.
Do not disclose your new place of residence and your plans for the future to ANYONE, even your closest relatives.
Investigators are excellent psychologists. Therefore, it costs them nothing to convince your parents, children, spouses that, “you will only be sentenced to a fine, in extreme cases – a suspended sentence, but if he/she does not show up for a conversation, then there will definitely be a real term and a long one.” And your closest relatives, out of fear for you and NAIVE FAITH in the words of the investigator, will simply give you up. After all, the FOUNDATION OF HELL IS LAY DOWN ON GOOD INTENTIONS.
As a rule, they only search intensively during the first months. They open a Investigative Case, and suspend the Criminal Case, set up ambushes at the place of residence and at the places of residence of the closest relatives. After a month, the activity of the investigation sharply decreases, and in 3 months your Investigative Case will already be gathering dust on the shelf next to the criminal one.
Here they will find you if you commit some drunken debauchery and fall asleep at the scene of the debauchery.
Therefore, it is difficult to survive only the first month.
You should rent an apartment immediately.
It is better to rent from newspaper ads.
There is no point in going to my cousin's aunt in Saratov, because
Firstly, it is easier to get lost in a big city than in a village - in a village the local police officer knows everyone by sight, and a new person - you - will be immediately detected.
Secondly, it is precisely through your family connections, namely, at your cousin's in Saratov, that they will look for you and wait for you.
You should not rent rooms in hostels, because when checking in they require passports, and since hostels are the most criminalized environment, it is the hostel commandant who informs on new guests to his local police officer every day. Well, and then, based on the description, a capture group and other delights of the Russian "law enforcement" system and prison.
The same applies to hotels.
But the owner of a normal one-room or even a two-room apartment is unlikely to run to the local police officer to inform on you, simply because he himself DOES NOT PAY TAXES on the amount that you pay him for renting his apartment.
It is best to buy food for a week or even two, and spend the entire time in a rented apartment without going outside.
During the first month, leave the house as little as possible and DURING THE DAY, no later than 10 PM. After 10 PM, you may attract the attention of some random police patrol. You can ride the metro, because the Russian metro, unlike the metro of other countries, has not yet introduced a computer facial recognition system for people wanted by video cameras. I don’t think they will introduce it in the next five years. But it is still better to travel by ground transport.
Behave quietly in a rented apartment, don’t cause trouble, don’t play loud music, so that the neighbors don’t call the cops and you don’t get caught.
Be polite to your neighbors during random encounters, remember the movie “Politeness is a thief’s best weapon.”
It is advisable to change your rented apartment every 2-3 months. Let's say you can tell the owners that you are here on a business trip for 2-3 months. And after that period of time - move to a new apartment.
At each railway ticket office, when they sell you a ticket, they check your passport details. If you are wanted, you immediately stand out in red on the cashier's monitor. According to the instructions, the cashier should not even pretend to be wanted, she should sell you a ticket and inform you on the computer that you, a wanted person, bought such-and-such a ticket for such-and-such a date and such-and-such a train, in such-and-such a car, in such-and-such a seat. When you board, a detail will already be waiting for you at the car.
But still, if there is a need to move, it is better to get there "by dogs", to travel by electric trains.
Now you can get to almost any point in the Russian Federation by changing from electric train to electric train.
I remember how I traveled from St. Petersburg to Moscow "by dogs" for only 1 dollar. And my biggest adventure was a trip with 17 dogs from Moscow to Sochi (more than 2500 km). So this type of travel is very reliable and safe.
You can also get around Rashka by hitchhiking. But when hitchhiking, there is a greater risk that the car you are traveling in will be stopped at a traffic police post, they will check not only the driver's documents, but also yours - and then detain you. This happens EXTREMELY RARELY on commuter trains.
Well, in 3-6 months, start slowly trying to resolve your Criminal Case, or prepare for emigration, ask for asylum.
Federal Wanted List
A quick and easy guide to surviving in the Federal Wanted List in the Russian Federation, by an unknown author.
If you have been put on the Federal Wanted List, first of all, get rid of all your mobile phones and SIM cards. Each mobile phone has an IMEI number that can be easily tracked using mobile communications equipment. You will be positioned with an accuracy of 2-3 m and will be detained immediately (if there is an order to do so).
You should buy a second-hand phone at one of the markets and buy a completely new SIM card for it. If you have made at least one call using a new SIM card, from an old phone, or from a new phone using an old SIM card, their numbers will be linked and you will be immediately identified. Or use phones with the IMEI change function and other features, fortunately, they are not difficult to find on the modern Internet.
The next way to catch you is to work on your contacts - relatives, friends, good acquaintances.
Therefore, you need to abruptly cut off all contacts. Don't even call, because your relatives' or friends' phones may be tapped, or they may not be, and simply by monitoring incoming calls, they will figure you out with your new SIM card and new handset. Therefore, the first 3 months - NO CONTACTS, or contacts via Internet telephony (no SKYPE!!!)
Usually they look for wanted people with the help of informers - operational sources.
It is quite possible that one or more of your acquaintances will turn out to be just such informers.
In the Russian Federation, VERY MANY PEOPLE have sold their souls to the devil of Putinism, so TRUST NO ONE. LIMIT YOUR CONTACTS TO A MINIMUM.
Do not disclose your new place of residence and your plans for the future to ANYONE, even your closest relatives.
Investigators are excellent psychologists. Therefore, it costs them nothing to convince your parents, children, spouses that, “you will only be sentenced to a fine, in extreme cases – a suspended sentence, but if he/she does not show up for a conversation, then there will definitely be a real term and a long one.” And your closest relatives, out of fear for you and NAIVE FAITH in the words of the investigator, will simply give you up. After all, the FOUNDATION OF HELL IS LAY DOWN ON GOOD INTENTIONS.
As a rule, they only search intensively during the first months. They open a Investigative Case, and suspend the Criminal Case, set up ambushes at the place of residence and at the places of residence of the closest relatives. After a month, the activity of the investigation sharply decreases, and in 3 months your Investigative Case will already be gathering dust on the shelf next to the criminal one.
Here they will find you if you commit some drunken debauchery and fall asleep at the scene of the debauchery.
Therefore, it is difficult to survive only the first month.
You should rent an apartment immediately.
It is better to rent from newspaper ads.
There is no point in going to my cousin's aunt in Saratov, because
Firstly, it is easier to get lost in a big city than in a village - in a village the local police officer knows everyone by sight, and a new person - you - will be immediately detected.
Secondly, it is precisely through your family connections, namely, at your cousin's in Saratov, that they will look for you and wait for you.
You should not rent rooms in hostels, because when checking in they require passports, and since hostels are the most criminalized environment, it is the hostel commandant who informs on new guests to his local police officer every day. Well, and then, based on the description, a capture group and other delights of the Russian "law enforcement" system and prison.
The same applies to hotels.
But the owner of a normal one-room or even a two-room apartment is unlikely to run to the local police officer to inform on you, simply because he himself DOES NOT PAY TAXES on the amount that you pay him for renting his apartment.
It is best to buy food for a week or even two, and spend the entire time in a rented apartment without going outside.
During the first month, leave the house as little as possible and DURING THE DAY, no later than 10 PM. After 10 PM, you may attract the attention of some random police patrol. You can ride the metro, because the Russian metro, unlike the metro of other countries, has not yet introduced a computer facial recognition system for people wanted by video cameras. I don’t think they will introduce it in the next five years. But it is still better to travel by ground transport.
Behave quietly in a rented apartment, don’t cause trouble, don’t play loud music, so that the neighbors don’t call the cops and you don’t get caught.
Be polite to your neighbors during random encounters, remember the movie “Politeness is a thief’s best weapon.”
It is advisable to change your rented apartment every 2-3 months. Let's say you can tell the owners that you are here on a business trip for 2-3 months. And after that period of time - move to a new apartment.
At each railway ticket office, when they sell you a ticket, they check your passport details. If you are wanted, you immediately stand out in red on the cashier's monitor. According to the instructions, the cashier should not even pretend to be wanted, she should sell you a ticket and inform you on the computer that you, a wanted person, bought such-and-such a ticket for such-and-such a date and such-and-such a train, in such-and-such a car, in such-and-such a seat. When you board, a detail will already be waiting for you at the car.
But still, if there is a need to move, it is better to get there "by dogs", to travel by electric trains.
Now you can get to almost any point in the Russian Federation by changing from electric train to electric train.
I remember how I traveled from St. Petersburg to Moscow "by dogs" for only 1 dollar. And my biggest adventure was a trip with 17 dogs from Moscow to Sochi (more than 2500 km). So this type of travel is very reliable and safe.
You can also get around Rashka by hitchhiking. But when hitchhiking, there is a greater risk that the car you are traveling in will be stopped at a traffic police post, they will check not only the driver's documents, but also yours - and then detain you. This happens EXTREMELY RARELY on commuter trains.
Well, in 3-6 months, start slowly trying to resolve your Criminal Case, or prepare for emigration, ask for asylum.