Sign in
Edition of 06:00 CETFriday, June 19, 2026
311 outlets · 17 languages414 briefings today
Crime & DisastersWednesday, June 17, 2026

Arrest of 'Antikvar' Traber Reopens St Petersburg's 1990s Underworld

The detention of Ilya Traber, a port magnate long linked to Vladimir Putin, over a 2020 sniper killing has jolted Russia's business elite and revived scrutiny of networks forged in the post-Soviet chaos.

The arrest of 75-year-old Ilya Traber, one of St Petersburg's most enduring and enigmatic business figures, has sent ripples through Russia's political and commercial establishment. On 17 June, officers from the central apparatus of the FSB detained Traber and his long-time partner Vladimir Danilenko at his country estate in the Leningrad region, before flying them to Moscow for questioning. The Basmanny district court swiftly remanded Traber in custody on charges of contract murder, while a suspected gunman, Alisultan Nadirbegov, was also jailed. The case centres on the October 2020 killing of Alexander Petrov, a Vyborg municipal deputy and businessman, shot by a sniper outside his home just days before he was due to testify in a legal dispute involving Traber.

Viewed from Madrid, the arrest carries echoes of a long-running transnational investigation. Spanish prosecutors have for years sought Traber's extradition, naming him as a leader of the Tambov organised crime group, a syndicate that allegedly laundered money through Spanish property and wielded deep influence in Russia's northwest. La Vanguardia noted that the Kremlin has previously acknowledged Putin's acquaintance with Traber in the 1990s, while denying any ongoing friendship or commercial ties. That era, when Putin served in the St Petersburg mayor's office, saw Traber evolve from an antiques dealer—hence his nickname 'Antikvar'—into a dominant force in the city's port and fuel infrastructure, controlling assets such as the Petersburg Oil Terminal and the Ust-Luga deep-water port.

Russian media reports, synthesised by analysts in London, paint a picture of a stalled investigation suddenly revived. The murder of Petrov, whose son Vitaly became Russia's first Formula 1 driver with sponsorship traced to Traber's firms, had gone cold for nearly six years. According to sources cited by RBK and Fontanka, new information prompted the central apparatus of the Investigative Committee to take over the case from regional authorities. The involvement of Moscow-based FSB teams, bypassing local security structures, suggests a deliberate decision at the highest levels to act against a figure whose immunity had long seemed unassailable. Traber himself, in a rare 2022 interview, insisted a court ruling had cleared him of criminal associations, but the current charges strike at the heart of his legitimacy.

The business stakes are considerable. Traber's holdings, estimated at over a billion roubles, span strategic energy and logistics nodes on the Baltic coast. His partnership with Danilenko encompassed the Primorsky Universal Transshipment Complex and vast land banks near the Finnish border. The arrest has inevitably revived scrutiny of the networks that flourished during Putin's early career, including Traber's reported links to the Shamalov family—one of whose sons married Putin's daughter Katerina Tikhonova. For a Kremlin that has long suppressed public discussion of such connections, the spectacle of a central FSB operation against a man once described as 'without equal in Petersburg' is a jarring departure.

Forward-looking analysis suggests several possible interpretations. The move could signal a genuine anti-corruption drive by a security apparatus seeking to demonstrate reach, or it may reflect an internal elite realignment, with Traber's old-guard networks losing protection as a younger generation consolidates power. Alternatively, the case might be narrowly focused on the Petrov murder, with broader implications left deliberately unexplored. Whatever the motive, the detention of Ilya Traber has already cracked open a window onto the murky intersection of organised crime, business and politics that defined Russia's transition to capitalism—and whose legacies, it now appears, are not entirely beyond the reach of the law.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 2 languages

0%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Stampa europea continentaleStampa russa e CSI
Stampa europea continentale
scetticismodistacco

The arrest of Ilya Traber, a businessman with ties to Putin, in a 2020 murder case signals an FSB operation with raids and the detention of a partner. The affair turns the spotlight back on links between economic power and the presidential circle, as authorities give no official confirmation.

Stampa russa e CSI/ stato
urgenzapragmatismoallarme

Influential businessman Ilya Traber, with a billion-ruble estate and possible organized crime ties, has been detained in a long-unsolved murder. He will be questioned in Moscow as Russian media recall his rare interview and his 'Antikvar' nickname in the underworld.

Related articles

Read more
Breaking
Pentagon Seeks $80 Billion After Iran War as Peace Deal Signed·Trump’s Iran Deal Becomes a Boomerang From His Obama Critique·Mexico First to Reach World Cup Knockout Stage After Goalkeeping Blunder Sinks South Korea·Coalition Clash in Berlin as Global Working Time Reforms Gather Pace·Europe Embraces the Stadium Residency as Bad Bunny, Vasco Rossi and Bruno Mars Redraw the Live Music Map·The Quiet Crisis: Why Performative Leadership and Rote Learning Are Failing Societies·Real Madrid Seal Konaté Deal as Mourinho’s Rebuild Gathers Pace·Mexican Mayor’s ‘Good Vibes Girls’ Father’s Day Bash Ignites Political Firestorm·Pentagon Seeks $80 Billion After Iran War as Peace Deal Signed·Trump’s Iran Deal Becomes a Boomerang From His Obama Critique·Mexico First to Reach World Cup Knockout Stage After Goalkeeping Blunder Sinks South Korea·Coalition Clash in Berlin as Global Working Time Reforms Gather Pace·Europe Embraces the Stadium Residency as Bad Bunny, Vasco Rossi and Bruno Mars Redraw the Live Music Map·The Quiet Crisis: Why Performative Leadership and Rote Learning Are Failing Societies·Real Madrid Seal Konaté Deal as Mourinho’s Rebuild Gathers Pace·Mexican Mayor’s ‘Good Vibes Girls’ Father’s Day Bash Ignites Political Firestorm·
Upd. 08:09 PM2 languages · 3 outlets
PreviousCrime & DisastersNext
3 outlets|2 languages|3 min read
Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Arrest of 'Antikvar' Traber Reopens St Petersburg's 1990s Underworld

The detention of Ilya Traber, a port magnate long linked to Vladimir Putin, over a 2020 sniper killing has jolted Russia's business elite and revived scrutiny of networks forged in the post-Soviet chaos.

The arrest of 75-year-old Ilya Traber, one of St Petersburg's most enduring and enigmatic business figures, has sent ripples through Russia's political and commercial establishment. On 17 June, officers from the central apparatus of the FSB detained Traber and his long-time partner Vladimir Danilenko at his country estate in the Leningrad region, before flying them to Moscow for questioning. The Basmanny district court swiftly remanded Traber in custody on charges of contract murder, while a suspected gunman, Alisultan Nadirbegov, was also jailed. The case centres on the October 2020 killing of Alexander Petrov, a Vyborg municipal deputy and businessman, shot by a sniper outside his home just days before he was due to testify in a legal dispute involving Traber.

Viewed from Madrid, the arrest carries echoes of a long-running transnational investigation. Spanish prosecutors have for years sought Traber's extradition, naming him as a leader of the Tambov organised crime group, a syndicate that allegedly laundered money through Spanish property and wielded deep influence in Russia's northwest. La Vanguardia noted that the Kremlin has previously acknowledged Putin's acquaintance with Traber in the 1990s, while denying any ongoing friendship or commercial ties. That era, when Putin served in the St Petersburg mayor's office, saw Traber evolve from an antiques dealer—hence his nickname 'Antikvar'—into a dominant force in the city's port and fuel infrastructure, controlling assets such as the Petersburg Oil Terminal and the Ust-Luga deep-water port.

Russian media reports, synthesised by analysts in London, paint a picture of a stalled investigation suddenly revived. The murder of Petrov, whose son Vitaly became Russia's first Formula 1 driver with sponsorship traced to Traber's firms, had gone cold for nearly six years. According to sources cited by RBK and Fontanka, new information prompted the central apparatus of the Investigative Committee to take over the case from regional authorities. The involvement of Moscow-based FSB teams, bypassing local security structures, suggests a deliberate decision at the highest levels to act against a figure whose immunity had long seemed unassailable. Traber himself, in a rare 2022 interview, insisted a court ruling had cleared him of criminal associations, but the current charges strike at the heart of his legitimacy.

The business stakes are considerable. Traber's holdings, estimated at over a billion roubles, span strategic energy and logistics nodes on the Baltic coast. His partnership with Danilenko encompassed the Primorsky Universal Transshipment Complex and vast land banks near the Finnish border. The arrest has inevitably revived scrutiny of the networks that flourished during Putin's early career, including Traber's reported links to the Shamalov family—one of whose sons married Putin's daughter Katerina Tikhonova. For a Kremlin that has long suppressed public discussion of such connections, the spectacle of a central FSB operation against a man once described as 'without equal in Petersburg' is a jarring departure.

Forward-looking analysis suggests several possible interpretations. The move could signal a genuine anti-corruption drive by a security apparatus seeking to demonstrate reach, or it may reflect an internal elite realignment, with Traber's old-guard networks losing protection as a younger generation consolidates power. Alternatively, the case might be narrowly focused on the Petrov murder, with broader implications left deliberately unexplored. Whatever the motive, the detention of Ilya Traber has already cracked open a window onto the murky intersection of organised crime, business and politics that defined Russia's transition to capitalism—and whose legacies, it now appears, are not entirely beyond the reach of the law.

Source divergence

Crime & Disasters · 3 outlets · 2 languages

0%Low

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Neutral100%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 2 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Stampa europea continentaleStampa russa e CSI
Stampa europea continentale
scetticismodistacco

The arrest of Ilya Traber, a businessman with ties to Putin, in a 2020 murder case signals an FSB operation with raids and the detention of a partner. The affair turns the spotlight back on links between economic power and the presidential circle, as authorities give no official confirmation.

Stampa russa e CSI/ stato
urgenzapragmatismoallarme

Influential businessman Ilya Traber, with a billion-ruble estate and possible organized crime ties, has been detained in a long-unsolved murder. He will be questioned in Moscow as Russian media recall his rare interview and his 'Antikvar' nickname in the underworld.

This story appeared in

3 outlets · 2 languages

Related articles

Sport

Historic Canada rout marred by horrific Koné leg fracture

12 languages · 58 outlets

Sport

Mexico First to Reach World Cup Knockout Stage After Goalkeeping Blunder Sinks South Korea

9 languages · 34 outlets

Geopolitics & Politics

Vance Warns Israel It Risks Alienating Its Last Powerful Ally Over Iran Deal

6 languages · 17 outlets

Read more