A Criminal Case Against Three Jehovah's Witnesses Has Been Closed in Severodvinsk. No Crime Was Found
Arkhangelsk RegionOn May 17, 2022, in the Arkhangelsk Region, the criminal case against Vladimir Teterin, Andrey Maksimovich and Sergey Potylitsyn was closed. Their criminal case was dismissed due to the lack of corpus delicti, the arrest was lifted from the money and the car.
The decision to terminate the criminal case was issued by Colonel of Justice D.V. Vereshchagin, Deputy Head of the Second Department for Investigation of Particularly Important Cases of the Investigation Department of the Russian Investigative Committee for the Arkhangelsk Region and the Nenets Autonomous Okrug. In making this decision, he was guided by the decision of the Plenum of the Supreme Court of the Russian Federation of June 28, 2011, according to which, when considering extremist cases, it is necessary to establish specific actions and prove the motives that guided the guilty person.
The resolution also states that according to the Decree of the President of the Russian Federation of May 29, 2020 No. 344 "On Approval of the Strategy for Countering Extremism in the Russian Federation until 2025", manifestations of extremism are "socially dangerous illegal actions that threaten the constitutional order of the Russian Federation."
A comprehensive psychological and linguistic religious examination of the video recordings of worship services organized by Teterin, Maksimovich and Potylitsyn did not establish signs of extremist manifestations: there were no "statements containing signs of incitement to hatred or enmity on the basis of attitude to religion, propaganda of the exclusivity and superiority of Jehovah's Witnesses" at the meetings. The main topics of communication "were reading and studying the Bible, religious norms, instructions and examples of behavior, and preaching ministry." The investigation also considered that the presence of Maksimovich's young son at the services did not constitute a crime.
Thus, the investigation established that Vladimir Teterin, Andrey Maksimovich and Sergey Potylitsyn, by organizing liturgical meetings, “realized the constitutional right guaranteed to them to freedom of religion (Article 28).” Believers have the right to rehabilitation.