Ilovlinsky District Head Ivan Gel forced his subordinates, including the deceased administration employee, to participate in extinguishing a fire and interfered with the work of emergency services, witnesses said.
As reported by "Kavkazsky Knot," Ilovlinsky District Head Ivan Gel has been charged with abuse of office causing grave consequences (Article 286 of the Russian Criminal Code). According to investigators, he sent unauthorized administration employees to extinguish the fire, resulting in the death of 52-year-old Alexander Pereyarin from burns and the injury of three of his colleagues. On August 7, the court returned the case to the prosecutor's office. In October 2025, the Volgograd Regional Court upheld the appeals of the prosecutor's office and the victims against the decision of the Ilovlinsky District Court to return the case of Ivan Gel, head of the same district, to the prosecutor's office. The case of abuse of power due to the death of Gel's subordinate in a steppe fire was returned to the trial court.
The court suspended Gel from his post, but he continued to perform his duties, challenging the court's decision. In December 2024, despite protests from residents, deputies re-elected Ivan Gel as head of the district. Gel's opponents were his subordinates, who had not campaigned in the election.
He reported that the people who participated in extinguishing fires on the orders of the district head had not undergone special training, lacked equipment or protective clothing, and were only equipped with backpacks. Employees were also not insured against accidents. The head of the Krasnodon rural settlement admitted that he himself was forced to follow Ivan Gel's orders and participate in firefighting efforts in the district.
Vladimir Glazkov, who was well acquainted with Alexander Pereyarin, who died while extinguishing a fire, confirmed that Pereyarin intended to resign as head of the Civil Defense and Emergencies Department of the Ilovlinsky District Administration because he did not want to follow Ivan Gel's orders, which were unrelated to his job responsibilities.