What sounds like a script for a secret service thriller is actually in the explosive legal act: BVT agent Egisto Ott is supposed to bring back the runaway wife of Putin’s friend Rotenberg.
The investigation file of the special committee ‘Fama’ and the Vienna public prosecutor’s office, which now contains thousands of pages, reveals exciting details.
Putin’s closest confidante Arkady Romanowitsch Rotenberg also plays a prominent role in this. The real story behind it could have come from a cheap spy thriller script. In the course of the separation or divorce, the oligarch, who was on the sanctions list due to the war in Ukraine – his fortune is estimated at four billion dollars – “walked away” from his wife Natalia.
Russian billionaire’s wife spied on
This is where the now overthrown Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution, Egisto Ott, alias “Aigistos”, comes into play with his good contacts in Russia. The ex-chief inspector and police attaché, who was arrested on Saturday in his Tuscan villa in Carinthia, is said to have “informed Natalia through the intelligence service” or hatched a treacherous criminal plan for her “repatriation”. Because drugs had been planted in the car, Ms. Rotenberg should have been arrested and then deported. Of course that never happened.
Hundreds of short messages are recorded
Meanwhile, the arrest of the ex-spy, who is constantly being interrogated, causes a stir among the parties. This includes insidious cell phone chats with a former blue grandee. The secret service’s crime file contains hundreds of short messages between the suspect and the politician during the BVT-U committee.
In addition to photos – taken from non-public interviews – of committee witnesses and derogatory comments (“No mercy” or “You are smart, he is looking”), these also suggest that taxpayer money from the party coffers had been used for information. It is the presumption of innocence.
Source: Krone

I am Ida Scott, a journalist and content author with a passion for uncovering the truth. I have been writing professionally for Today Times Live since 2020 and specialize in political news. My career began when I was just 17; I had already developed a knack for research and an eye for detail which made me stand out from my peers.