CEO of New Russian Cosmodrome’s Operator Arrested on Charges of Abuse of Office and Forgery

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A high-ranking official at the helm of the new state-of-the-art Vostochny spaceport has been arrested on charges of fraud in a high-profile scandal. The scheme reportedly cost the state over $6.5 million, RT informs.

Roman Bobkov, the head of the space center, a state entity operating the cosmodrome, has been placed in pre-trial detention for two months by a local court and is facing several charges, including fraud, abuse of office, and incitement to abuse of office and forgery. He assumed the role of director at Vostochny in March 2019.

Bobkov is accused of using bribery to entice a senior Defense Ministry inspector, Dmitry Fomintsev, to file fake reports on the commissioning of several of the spaceport’s major water-supply facilities. The fraudulent documents were allegedly drawn up to conceal Bobkov’s own misconduct during their construction, which had left them unfinished.

The official’s machinations have cost the Russian authorities some 500 million rubles ($6.56 million), the Kommersant daily newspaper reported. They also posed a potential safety hazard, as the water-supply facilities in question were meant to provide water for both the rocket-fuel production facility, and fuel storage and fire protection systems in the neighboring town of Tsiolkovsky, in the Amur Region, in Russia’s Far East.

Fomintsev was arrested earlier this week. According to the Russian media, he had agreed to forge the reports in exchange for a lucrative job offer that had been extended by Bobkov. The director offered both the inspector and his wife positions within his domain, with a salary of 500,000 rubles ($6,560) a month each.

The scandal also rocked the Russian space agency Roscosmos. Its head, Dmitry Rogozin, has fired another senior manager operating the Vostochny cosmodrome and given a reprimand to Bobkov’s superior, Andrey Okhlopkov, who leads a bigger structure within the space agency, supervising the management of both the Vostochny and Baikonur cosmodromes.

Designed as a cutting-edge spaceport and expected to become a backbone of Russia’s future space exploration, Vostochny has been plagued by scandals and fraud cases throughout its construction period. These problems reached such a scale that President Vladimir Putin grilled the government over the issue in November 2019, in the wake of several other high-profile embezzlement cases.

The cosmodrome could still play a major role in Russia’s space program. Last year, Roscosmos said it had developed a way for Soyuz spacecraft to travel to the International Space Station (ISS) three times faster than they do now. Such flights could take just two hours to reach the ISS, saving fuel and resources in the process, thanks to the reduced number of orbits a spacecraft would be required to make around Earth before reaching the station.

The scheme, which is expected to be put into practice in about two years’ time, could be further used in Russia’s Moon exploration program. The Vostochny cosmodrome would be much more convenient for “quick launches” than the currently used Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, Russian scientists believe.