Danil Suvorov poses for a photo with his mother after being released from the penal colony. April 2026.

Danil Suvorov poses for a photo with his mother after being released from the penal colony. April 2026.

Danil Suvorov poses for a photo with his mother after being released from the penal colony. April 2026.

Served Sentences

“You Shouldn’t Be Here” — Danil Suvorov Released From Prison

Krasnodar Territory

On April 7, 2026, 30-year-old Danil Suvorov was released from a penal colony in Mordovia. He spent more than 4.5 years behind bars. The believer served his sentence 1,500 kilometers from home, far from family and friends. Many people traveled from afar to meet him on that day.

Before the criminal prosecution, Danil worked as a sales assistant in a tool store. In August 2021, his home was searched, and he was accused of extremism for conversations on Bible topics. In the summer of 2023, the court sentenced him to six years in prison. For almost three of those years, Danil was kept in a special block of a pretrial detention center (SIZO)—often in solitary confinement and without visits. He was then transferred to a penal colony, where he remained until his release. There he worked in a garment workshop and had a reputation as a conscientious worker. According to Danil, one of the prisoners said about Jehovah's Witnesses: "You are the kind of people who definitely shouldn't be here."

Every three months, Danil's mother visited him in the colony. Friends wrote to him regularly: "In the letters they encouraged me, and I encouraged others," he said. "It helped me to live, not lose heart, and stay occupied. [...] I sent many bags of letters home."

Danil warmly thanked everyone who helped him, including strangers. "Out in freedom, it's a small thing, but in prison even a little candy means a lot," he said, adding: "Without my friends' help, I simply wouldn't have had even basic food to eat."

After returning to Sochi, Suvorov's freedom will remain restricted for another year and a half.

At present, seven Jehovah's Witnesses under the age of 30 remain in custody.

The Case of Danil Suvorov in Sochi

Case History
In August 2021, a wave of searches took place in Sochi as part of a criminal case against Danil Suvorov. He was detained and placed in a pre-trial detention center. The believer was accused of involving a local resident (as it turned out later, an infiltrated informant) in the activities of an extremist organization. Six months later, the Investigative Directorate of the Investigative Committee for the Krasnodar Territory initiated a criminal case against Danil and his elder brother Denis. They were charged with two articles: participation in the activities of an extremist organization and involvement in it. In April 2022, the case against Denis was separated into a separate proceeding. On the same day, Danil was charged with a new version, and in May his case went to court. In June 2023, the prosecutor requested 8 years in a general regime colony for Danil. The court sentenced the believer to 6 years in prison. A year later, the court of appeal upheld this decision. In April 2026, Suvorov was released.
Timeline

Persons in case

Criminal case

Region:
Krasnodar Territory
Locality:
Sochi
Suspected of:
"directly participated in religious training presentations, during which, acting in strict accordance with the goals and objectives of the religious organization, they disseminated its ideology, conducted and listened to lectures based on religious literature" (from the decision to initiate a criminal case)
Court case number:
12202030015000020
Initiated:
February 8, 2022
Current case stage:
the verdict entered into force
Investigating:
Investigative Department for the Tsentralnyy District of the City of Sochi of the Investigative Directorate of the Russian Federation for the Krasnodar Territory
Articles of Criminal Code of Russian Federation:
282.2 (1.1), 282.2 (2)
Court case number:
1-30/2023 (1-448/2022)
Court of First Instance:
Tsentralnyy District Court of the City of Sochi
Judge of the Court of First Instance:
Yekaterina Ostapenko
Case History
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