(Reuters) – Russia’s Supreme Court refused to consider supervisory appeal of prominent nationalist and former militia commander Igor Girkin against his four-year jail term, TASS agency reported early on Monday.
Girkin accused President Vladimir Putin and the army of failures in the war in Ukraine and was convicted a year ago of inciting extremism, a charge he denied.
“The panel of the Supreme Court of the Russian Federation decided to refuse to consider Igor Strelkov’s supervisory appeal,” TASS cited the court as saying.
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Girkin, who used the nom de guerre Igor Strelkov when he was a separatist commander in east Ukraine a decade ago, has filed several unsuccessful appeals against his sentence.
A supervisory appeal in Russia’s judiciary system is an appeal to the Supreme Court against a ruling or a court decision that has already entered into legal force, according to information provided on websites of Russian courts.
TASS, citing Girkin’s partner, reported that Girkin has been transferred to a colony in Kirovo-Chepetsk, in the Kirov region in central Russia, where former law enforcement officers are held.
(Reporting by Lidia Kelly in Melbourne; Editing by Stephen Coates)