The former civilian wife of the Film Russian Banker Sergei Pugacheva Alexander Tolstaya Countess revealed the terrible details of life in marriage and after parting with his spouse. Interview publishes Telegraph.
Sospeskaya Lioness said that during the eight years she lived in conditions of tyranny, without being able to work. For this reason, when Pugachev tried to make her follow him to France, where he was hiding from prosecution, she decided to stay in the UK. “I lived in fear of him and realized that I don’t want to go through it again,” she explained.
According to Tolstoy, after that, the man completely stopped providing her financially, at that moment she also lost their own tourism business. “I was not prepared for such a turn of events. Anxiety almost broke me out, but I still did not doubt my decision,” the woman admitted.
In addition, in May 2020, during a quarantine introduced due to the coronavirus pandemic, the Russian authorities evicted a woman from a mansion in London, where she lived with children because of the debts of her former beloved in front of the country. “I just did what sobbed. The situation was hopeless,” the material heroine concluded.
In June of the same year, it became known that Russia won a litigation with Pugachev, who demanded to recover from Moscow more than $ 14 billion (more than one trillion rubles). According to the results of consideration of the objections, the International Arbitration Court in Paris fell on the side of Moscow and rejected the banker’s demands. He must refund the Russian budget for the cost of a proceedings in the amount of 5.8 million dollars (417.6 million rubles).
Sergey Pugachev was a beneficiary of interprombank broken in 2010. In 2015, Moscow arbitration acknowledged him and three more top managers of the Bank guilty of actions that led to the bankruptcy of the credit institution. For example, they were accused of issuing obviously non-returnable loans and the conclusion of liquid assets. Pugacheva obliged to pay 75.6 billion rubles. The banker tried to challenge solutions in several instances in Russia, including the Supreme Court, but attempts were not crowned with success.