Story about Putin's $1.3 Billion Palace Two days after Alexey Navalny, head of Russia's Anti-Corruption Foundation (FBK) was arrested on his return to Moscow from Berlin, he released a video expose that shocked Russians and people around the world. In the video, "Putin's palace. History of the world's largest bribe," Navalny alleged that an opulent property near Gelendzhik, a town in the southern Russian region of Krasnodar, was constructed for Russian President Vladimir Putin with illicit funds of $1.35 billion, provided by members of his inner circle, and that Putin is the real owner of the palace (https://bit.ly/3zIhckC). The palace's features apparently include a port, a vineyard, a church, a casino, an underground hockey rink, and toilet brushes costing $850 a piece. "It is a separate state within Russia… And in this state there is a single, irreplaceable tsar. Putin," Navalny said in the video. Allegedly covering an area of 17, 691 square meters, it is the largest private residential building in Russia. Putin denied the claims. "Nothing listed there has ever belonged to me or my close relatives," he said Tuesday. Within 24 hours of its release to YouTube, the video reached 20 million views and within a week, 93 million, making it the activist's most popular investigation. By analysing more than 100,000 bank transactions, Pevchikh and Alburov say they uncovered a complex web of transfers and shell companies that facilitates the flow of money needed to sustain the palace and its vineyards. They include the state-owned pipeline monopoly Transneft, oil giant Rosneft and its Chief Executive Igor Sechin, and Gennady Timchenko, Putin's business partner from the 1990s. Much of this money comes from rental agreements between state companies and two companies that own the palace and the vineyard respectively, FBK claims. Navalny says that Transneft paid 4.3 billion rubles ($56.7 million) in 'rent' and to legitimize monthly payments of 120 million rubles ($1.6 million), and that Transeft president Nikolai Tokarev visits the area annually to deliver speeches and pose for photos. Navalny said Binom's employees are also employed by an obscure company, Aktsept, which is owned by Mikhail Shelomov, Putin's cousin once removed (Putin's mother was Shelomov's great aunt). The link to a family member was significant, Pevchikh said, pointing out that Putin has transferred his palace's management from individuals associated with the Kremlin to his own flesh and blood. Through Aktsept, Shelomov owns 0.2 percent of Gazprom, worth more than 8 billion rubles ($108.6 million) and the annual dividends alone bring in more than 560 million rubles ($7.6 million), according to the investigation. Despite apparently becoming one of Russia's richest people, Shelomov kept his day job at Sovcomflot, the country's largest shipping company, and continued to live relatively modestly in a townhouse in St. Petersburg. This is because the wealth in his name really belongs to Putin, claims FBK - "he is just a nominee", says Pevchikh.