Name: Antyukhin Aleksey Stanislavovich
Date of Birth: May 1, 1976
Current status: convicted person
Articles of Criminal Code of Russian Federation: 282.2 (1)
Time spent in prison: 1 day in a temporary detention facility, 142 day in a pre-trial detention
Current restrictions: detention center
Sentence: imprisonment for a term of 6 years in a general regime penal colony
Currently held in: Detention Center No.1 for Voronezh Region

Antyukhin Aleksey Stanislavovich, born 1976, Detention Center No.1 for Voronezh Region, ul. Zhelyabova, 56, Voronezh, Voronezh Region, 394030

Letters of support can be sent by regular mail or through the F-pismo system. To pay for service with the card of a foreign bank use Prisonmail.

Note: discussing topics related to criminal prosecution is not allowed in letters; languages other than Russian will not pass.

Biography

On July 13, 2020, as a result of a large-scale raid on Jehovah's Witnesses in modern Russia - 110 searches in one day in the Voronezh region - Aleksey Antyukhin was sent to the detention center.

Aleksey was born in Shymkent (Kazakhstan) in 1976. He grew up together with his sister. In his youth, he was fond of sport shooting and cross-country skiing. He graduated from the school as an electric and gas welder and from the Moscow University of Steel and Alloys as an engineer.

Before criminal prosecution, he worked as an electric and gas welder. He liked skiing, swimming and construction.

Since 2013 Bible study became an important part of Aleksey's life.

In 2014 he married Natalya, and the spouses moved to Voronezh city. In 2019, they returned to Old Oskol town to take care of Aleksey's elderly mother, who had just become widowed.

After Aleksey’s arrest, his wife and his mother found it difficult to cope with rural life on their own, as he was the only breadwinner and helper in the family. They are very worried about their family member.

Case History

On a single day, July 13, 2020, 110 searches were carried out in seven localities of the Voronezh region—a record-breaking operation against Jehovah’s Witnesses in Russia. Five believers reported being tortured by law enforcement officers. The Investigative Committee charged ten men (aged 24 to 56 at that moment) with organizing extremist activity and sent them to pre-trial detention, where most remained for nearly five months. The events in Voronezh sparked widespread public outcry: EU countries, as well as the United Kingdom and the United States, expressed regret and bewilderment over what had happened. The believers themselves deny any guilt in extremism and emphasize that, as Christians, they respect the authorities and peacefully practice their faith in accordance with constitutional rights. The trial began in December 2021. Nearly four years later, the believers were sentenced to various punishments—ranging from six years of suspended sentence to seven years in colony.
Back to top