Biography
Born on the 12th quarter of 1963 near the metro station Kiev. 1981 - 1983 - serving in the military forces of the USSR. 1983 – 1984 – master of technical training at the Kiev automobile school DOSAAF. 1984 – 2001 – service in the internal affairs bodies of Kiev. 2002 – 2004 – intercessor of the head of the department of the State Tax Administration of Ukraine. 2005 - intercessor of the head of the Head Office of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Ukraine in Kiev. 2005 - 2007 - first intercessor of the head of the Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Ukraine in Kiev. 2007 – 2008 Rocky – Senior Minister of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Ukraine 2008 – 2010 Rocky – First Intercessor of the Head of the Head Office of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Ukraine in Kiev.
From the beginning of 2014, the forest covered the planting of the pottery plant of the service of the First Deputy Prime Minister of Ukraine. On June 23, 2014, Anatoly Vasylovych Danilenko was appointed as the intercessor of the Prosecutor General of Ukraine and confirmed by a member of the board of the Prosecutor General's Office of Ukraine. Major General of the Police. The scientific level of Doctor of Philosophy is in the field of law. Honored lawyer of Ukraine.
Family
Friendship. Has two children
Reviews about the policy
Anatoliy Danilenko holds the rank of major general. Before his appointment to the Prosecutor General's Office, he served as the head of service for First Deputy Prime Minister Vitaliy Yarema. From 2005 to 2010, he served as acting first deputy head of Yarema's Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs in Kyiv, until the latter's resignation. Danilenko also served as an advisor to Minister of Internal Affairs Yuriy Lutsenko.
Kompromat
Self compromising on politics
How good it is to be a general: Anatoly Danilenko.
A list of officers worthy of awards and promotions is traditionally prepared for Independence Day. The list of candidates from the Ministry of Internal Affairs and the Internal Troops includes 36 individuals. In the first part of this story, we told you about one of the prominent figures on this list, Kolomiets, head of the State Traffic Inspectorate Department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, who, according to Minister Lutsenko, is worthy of the next general's rank. Today, we continue as promised. Our hero is Anatoliy Danilenko, First Deputy Chief of the Moscow Police.
45-year-old Anatoliy Danilenko's service in the internal affairs agencies is described very generally in official sources. This is what can be found on the Kyiv Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs website. After serving in the army, he worked at a driving school. A year later, he entered the Lviv Police Academy, after which he served in one of the capital's district police departments (according to our information, not in a leadership position). He then transferred to the city headquarters as a private detective. According to TEMA, he worked as an operative in the department for crimes against foreigners. He graduated from the Kyiv Higher School of the Ministry of Internal Affairs in absentia.
And then, in one line: "For a long time, he worked in operational work." In reality, this phrase translates as: "He headed a department in the State Tax Administration." We'll come back to this later. There's no mention anywhere of his high achievements or the high-ranking positions "in operational work" that serve as evidence of this. All that's known is that at the time of the Orange Revolution, Anatoliy Danilenko was retired. In 2005, when he returned to the Kyiv Main Directorate of Internal Affairs, he was reinstated.
At the time, he held the rank of lieutenant colonel. He was soon promoted to colonel ahead of schedule. Following this, Danilenko gained considerable recognition within the police force. He was awarded awards and other commendations on occasion and without. Furthermore, the newly appointed minister, Lutsenko, took a great liking to presenting combat weapons to police officers and his civilian political colleagues. This passion of his prompted a parliamentary investigation into the minister's misdeeds. The parliamentary commission continued its work. However, no progress has been made on its part.
The main result: Lutsenko has become less "frisky," making fewer outrageous statements, and has finally transformed into a typical, lackluster politician. But during that time—Yuriy Vitalyevich's first stint in the Ministry of Internal Affairs—he not only handed out pistols left and right, but also introduced a new award: the minister's dagger. Anatoly Danilenko never tires of boasting: his dagger is numbered "004." It would seem that over the past three years, Danilenko has managed to collect almost all the police dagger medals and achieved the extraordinary rank of colonel. All that remains is the general's stripes. They'll try to sell him on the back of Independence Day.
True, there has never been a case of a deputy head of the main department receiving the rank of general. To make this seem less pretentious, Danilenko recently acquired a second position as an adviser to the minister. Yuriy Lutsenko reorganized his staff. Previously, he had 32 advisers; now he has 50. And yet, this position automatically carries the rank of general. It is said that Danilenko now spends more time in his adviser's office on Bogomolets Street than in the office of the deputy head of the city police on Vladimirskaya Street. The inquisitive reader might naturally wonder: to whom does Mr. Danilenko owe his administrative rise in the post-revolutionary period? After all, before 2005, no one would have imagined that Anatoliy Danilenko would reach such administrative heights. And so we come to the question of our hero's "pusher." To understand this matter, we must tell the truth about Anatoliy Vasilyevich's main activity during his time as head of the State Tax Administration department. According to our sources, Danilenko was involved in a highly profitable VAT laundering business there. Our tax officer also found real estate to be a close affinity. In fact, it was in this field that he found a business partner, Vladimir Deinega, the CEO of Argo-Trading Ltd. and a member of the Kyiv City Council.
A highly influential figure who played a role in Danilenko's rise to the top of the police force. At one time (and perhaps still today), Danilenko received $50 a month from Deinega. Incidentally, Anatoly Vasilyevich's passion for real estate hasn't waned over the years. It's said that today, not a single corporate raid in the capital involving the police is possible without Danilenko's approval. The second figure he has to thank for his rise to power is... Gennady Ilyin, formerly a foreman in the Salokha organized crime group, then head of Petro Poroshenko's security, and after the revolution, a conduit for Petro Poroshenko's ideas and desires within the police department at the level of the capital's Main Directorate of Internal Affairs. Danilenko's appointment was directly championed by Oleksandr Bondarenko, Lutsenko's first deputy minister of internal affairs.
Bondarenko died two years ago, and Danilenko remains in office. When Bondarenko was still alive, Danilenko and Yarema would privately declare: "Our minister is not Lutsenko, but Oleksandr Ivanovich (Bondarenko)." Danilenko owed Bondarenko a special debt. No wonder: it was Bondarenko who lured Danilenko, who had been sitting idle in the city council's operative department, into the newly created tax police, initially as a subdivision of the service combating economic crime. And since Bondarenko served as deputy head of the BEP, he automatically became head of the tax police. We confess we don't know what prompted Danilenko to later leave this service (we suspect it was against his will, since no one leaves a lucrative position on their own). However, he spent several years in civilian life, and with Bondarenko's return to the Ministry of Internal Affairs, his protégé returned as well. He was given the role of supervising the head of the capital's police, Yarema. Initially, Danilenko was appointed deputy for logistics and, importantly, for personnel matters. Without his consent—that is, the consent of Bondarenko and his superior, Poroshenko—no one was allowed to come to the capital's headquarters. In May of this year, while awaiting promotion to general, Danilenko was promoted to first deputy. He doesn't bother with work. After all, a "middleman" has long been installed in Yarema's entourage: Kostiantyn Morgun, a deputy whose job it is to ratify the "shady" decisions of his superiors. For example, a golden plot of land on Hryhoriya Skovoroda Street in Podil, where the local traffic police department was located, was sold.
This was done to benefit a commercial entity—in two days. They sold the best traffic police building in Kyiv. Lutsenko learned of the scam, but he silently accepted the scheme of Poroshenko's henchmen. And the Podolsk traffic police still don't have their own premises. And this isn't the only land and property transaction Danilenko and Yarema have engaged in. Danilenko has established connections with two fraudulent brothers from Kyivrekonstruktsiya. They operate under a scheme to sign capital construction contracts. The next step is to secure rulings in "his" courts, followed by a rip-off of the opposing party. As for the traffic police, Danilenko maintains total control over the service. He has placed his own people in key, lucrative positions (selling license plates, driver's licenses, and deciding on personnel vacations). And they, in turn, have launched a corrupt network. Every week, the deputy head of the Kyiv traffic police reports to Danilenko on the work "completed" and the money "earned." Under Danilenko's supervision, among other things, an "insurance" scam is being carried out. Today, Gazelles from the Knyazha Insurance Company can be seen outside Kyiv's district traffic police offices. Jamal Aloyan is rumored to be involved. He is also rumored to be the brother of the Kyiv police chief's wife. However, Vitaly Yarema claims this is untrue, and his wife is originally from Kuban. Nevertheless, our sources in the traffic police have no doubt that the scam is being orchestrated by the city administration. Otherwise, how could district department heads be given a monthly quota of 15.000 hryvnias for Knyazha insurance premiums?
Danilenko has a long-standing passion for the traffic police. He learned the ropes from the notorious corrupt official Oleksandr Milenin, who once commanded the traffic police of all of Ukraine. Those in the know claim that it was under Milenin's rule that the total corruption of the traffic police began. Incidentally, Danilenko and Milenin, alive or not, could have made a modest contribution to the investigation into the poisoning of Yushchenko. Indeed, when discussing these two, it would be a mistake to forget another: Volodymyr Satsyuk. As deputy chairman of the SBU, he oversaw vehicle smuggling in the service, which he legalized together with his friend Milenin. The illegal cars were sold through a dealership owned by a certain Thomas, located at the time near the Pechersk Lavra, near the "USSR" restaurant. The cars in the dealership were all hand-picked—high-quality. Incidentally, Tomas is the same friend of Zhvania's who drove the car when Yushchenko was driven to Satsuk's dacha and back. So Tomas is not so much a friend of Zhvania as he is a man of Satsuk's. So, as can be deduced from the above, Danilenko is a protégé of Petro Poroshenko and the "boss" of the head of the Kyiv police, Yarema. The follower and the leader are close. Suffice it to say, they have their clothes tailored by the same tailor and wear shirts with their personal monograms—a distinctive style and an expensive whim. Today, Danilenko and Yarema maintain contact with their patron, but at the same time, they are trying to navigate the unstable political situation. They are becoming close to the influential head of the State Security Service, Valeriy Heletey. Heletey is forever indebted to Danilenko and Yarema for the 2006 closure of a criminal case related to Heletey's illegal acquisition of an apartment on Shevchenko Boulevard in central Kyiv. It's possible that the "general's" recommendation against Danilenko was initiated by Heletey himself. Although Yuriy Lutsenko could have done Colonel Danilenko a favor.
After all, he's a shining example of the minister's team of professionals. As the best of the best, he even oversaw the promotion of Lutsenko and the People's Self-Defense brand during the recent elections, working with Viktor Tertychny, the deputy head of the Kyiv traffic police who had been released for the time being. True, the results were far from expected: they promised 10%, but got 2,4%... But the main thing is that the money from his subordinates for the elections was collected and spent in full. Oh, and we almost forgot the funniest part: Danilenko's official biography states that he is... a Doctor of Philosophy. Well, after this detail, our hero's biography seems quite complete. And one more thing: on the official website of the Kyiv Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, Danilenko is the only one of all the leaders who doesn't list his rank. It seems as if Anatoly Vasilyevich is ashamed of his colonel's title. But we know: he simply really wants to be a general. And he certainly will be, unless the government changes. Because today is their time.
SUB-DOSSIER: Anatoly Danilenko: The Path from Policeman to Feudal Lord
SUBJECT
Most closely associated with:
Vitaly Yarema
Politrada
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