Kremlin Rejects Review of Prisoner Pardons After 'Satanist' Freed

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
The Kremlin said Wednesday that it had not changed its policy of pardoning prisoners in exchange for fighting in Ukraine, after local media
reported a "satanist" killer had been released.Nikolai Ogolobyak, 33, was sentenced to 20 years for the ritualistic murder of four teenagers
in 2008
He was freed earlier this month after fighting in Ukraine, local media said Tuesday."Now everyone is studying the pardon lists very
closely," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters."But I repeat once again, we are talking about certain conditions that are related
to being on the front line," he said, adding: "There have been no revisions in this regard."Ogolobyak and six other members of a
self-proclaimed cult were handed lengthy jail terms for the gruesome murders, which took place in Russia's Yaroslavl region 15 years ago.He
would have been jailed until 2030 but was drafted into one of Russia's "Storm-Z" battalions for offenders and convicts after the conflict
began, the 76.RU media outlet reported."After being wounded, he is disabled," Ogolobyak's father told the outlet.Russia has probably
recruited 100,000 people from prisons to fight in the conflict, the head of an independent prisoners' rights group Olga Romanova has
estimated.The practice is controversial and local media have reported several instances of released prisoners going on to commit serious
offences, including murders, after leaving the army.The Kremlin acknowledged the use of prisoner recruits to fight in the conflict earlier
this month but said convicts could "atone for their crime on the battlefield with blood."