Gazprom: Russia’s state corruption giant
A money-laundering scheme and a luxury hotel in Montenegro may be tied to the mysterious death of a top Gazprom manager. An investigation by Novaya-Europe and Transparency

Numerous top managers of Russian oil and gas companies died one after another over the course of 2022 under suspicious circumstances. Alexander Tyulyakov, deputy director general for corporate security at Gazprom’s Unified Processing Centre, allegedly committed suicide in late February 2022. His body was found in a garage located in Gazprom’s guarded corporate settlement near St. Petersburg, and a suicide note was placed next to the body.
Two months later, the dead body of Vladislav Avaev, 51, vice president of Gazprombank, was found lying near the dead bodies of his wife and underage daughter in their apartment in Moscow. TASS reported, citing its sources, that the investigators’ theory was that Avaev had murdered his wife and daughter, and then committed suicide.
Even a year after the events, there is still no certainty about what caused these deaths. There has not been any progress in the investigation, nor has there been any reaction from the state companies. Novaya Gazeta Europe and Transparency International Russia have found out that these top managers used to work at entities that we assume to have been involved in accounting fraud connected with multi-billion contracts with Gazprom. The beneficiaries of these contracts include the family of Gazprom’s deputy chairman of the board and his friends, former security and military officers.
Khomyakov, according to sources of Transparency and Novaya-Europe, used to serve in the Karelian branch of the KGB; this explains the gap in his public biography between 1976 and 2002.
The Gazinformservice certification centre was established in 2011, and 90% of its authorised capital now belongs to Valery Pustarnakov, the same man that owns a part of Lazure Montenegro.
The UCSS runs contracts with both state bodies and Gazprom. It also made more than 2 billion rubles (€25 million) in several years of such partnership with the state corporation.
The investigation team believes that Tyulyakov committed suicide, but it was just one case in a series of suspicious deaths of top executives in oil and gas companies: Leonid Shulman from Gazprom Invest previously died in the same settlement where Tyulyakov was found.
Khomyakov’s son, Fyodor, is also not just a CFO in Gazinformservice, a Gazprom partner, but also founded or co-founded several companies — Datagile and Nauka-Servis-Meditsina.
However, unlike other companies, it did not work with Gazprom, opting for state-funded companies instead: maternity clinics as well as general and city hospitals.









