The family of an Odessa judge keeps millions of rubles in Russian banks — Slidstvo.Info
The parents of a judge at the Kyiv District Court of Odesa have been accumulating substantial sums of money in Russia for years. According to Slidstvo.Info, millions of rubles are held in accounts at Russian banks. Information regarding the origin of the funds and the potential consequences for the official has not yet been clarified.
According to data from Russian databases, in 2021, the accounts of Judge Tyshko’s parents in Russian banks in the then-occupied Crimea held 2.6 million rubles, or nearly 1 million hryvnias at the exchange rate at the time.
Meanwhile, in 2022, the amount of savings nearly tripled to 7.3 million rubles (3.6 million hryvnias). In 2023, the accounts held 5.8 million rubles (over 2.5 million hryvnias), and in 2024, 5 million rubles (2.1 million hryvnias), the publication notes.
Journalists were unable to obtain a comment from the judge’s parents. At the same time, the article states that their official incomes would not have allowed them to save such an amount.
According to Russian databases, the judge’s father, Anatoliy Tyshko, worked as a section chief in the transportation department of the municipal enterprise “ZhitloservisKerch” after the occupation of Crimea and received a salary from the enterprise, which was controlled by the occupying authorities, amounting to up to 30,000 hryvnias at the exchange rate at the time. The judge’s mother is now retired, having previously worked as a janitor.
Dmytro Tyshko himself assured journalists that his parents are retired and “have never worked for any organs of the occupying authorities.” At the same time, he refused to discuss the money in his parents’ accounts at Russian banks.
The publication’s journalists note that Judge Dmytro Tyshko has previously been involved in several high-profile cases. While working at the Central District Court of Mykolaiv in 2014, he released Konstantin Kovalyov, who was suspected of treason and planning an armed seizure of the Mykolaiv Regional State Administration building, to house arrest. After his release, the suspect fled and joined Russian militants in the occupied territories.
In 2024, Judge Tyshko approved the seizure of property belonging to the family of Russian General Mikhail Dmitriev in Odesa, valued at approximately $1.5 million, but for a long time refused to transfer it to the ARMA’s management, citing deficiencies in the petition.
At the same time, Judge Tyshko recently failed his interview for the position of judge at the Odesa Court of Appeals—the High Qualification Commission of Judges found that he had “failed to demonstrate the ability to administer justice in a general court of appeals.”
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