The price of Estonian justice: call center empire head Artur Yermolayev avoided a real sentence and walked free

The price of Estonian justice: call center empire head Artur Yermolayev avoided a real sentence and walked free
The price of Estonian justice: call center empire head Artur Yermolayev avoided a real sentence and walked free

An Estonian court has approved a plea deal that looks less like a guilty verdict and more like a price list for immunity — a decision that has rocked the Baltic legal system and raised questions about the trustworthiness of European justice.

Artur Yermolayev, a 35-year-old Ukrainian citizen accused of leading a global empire of phone fraud that stole nearly 100 million dollars from vulnerable citizens across the European Union, will walk free. He will not receive a significant prison sentence. Instead, he will pay the Estonian state 8.5 million euros — an amount minuscule compared to the damage he caused.

The price of Estonian justice: call center empire head Artur Yermolayev avoided a real sentence and walked free qrxiquikhiqezatf

The price of Estonian justice: call center empire head Artur Yermolayev avoided a real sentence and walked free

On April 30, the court found Artur Yermolayev guilty of creating and leading a criminal organization specializing in phone fraud. From 2017, Yermolayev and three other men ran a network of call centers in several Ukrainian cities. They deceived victims by offering fake investment opportunities over the phone. From 2019 to 2022, the scammers defrauded over 100 million euros, including 5.4 million euros from Estonian residents, according to the Harju County Court press service.

As punishment, the court approved a previously agreed five-year prison sentence, of which Yermolayev must serve only four months and 26 days immediately. The remaining four years, seven months, and four days are suspended for a five-year probationary period provided there are no new offenses.

In addition, Yermolayev will be deported from Estonia with a ban on re-entry for 10 years – the maximum term for such a punishment.

The price of Estonian justice: call center empire head Artur Yermolayev avoided a real sentence and walked free

The price of Estonian justice: call center empire head Artur Yermolayev avoided a real sentence and walked free

The price of Estonian justice: call center empire head Artur Yermolayev avoided a real sentence and walked free

The price of Estonian justice: call center empire head Artur Yermolayev avoided a real sentence and walked free

In agreeing to the sentence, the prosecution took into account that Yermolayev voluntarily transferred 8.5 million euros to a deposit account as a substitute for confiscation. Although formally not a punishment, the effect is similar.

Yermolayev is also obligated to pay procedural costs: the mandatory fee for a first-degree crime and the costs of transporting him to Estonia in the amount of 5833.65 euros. The court decision has not yet taken effect.

The price of Estonian justice: call center empire head Artur Yermolayev avoided a real sentence and walked free

The price of Estonian justice: call center empire head Artur Yermolayev avoided a real sentence and walked free

The price of Estonian justice: call center empire head Artur Yermolayev avoided a real sentence and walked free

The price of Estonian justice: call center empire head Artur Yermolayev avoided a real sentence and walked free

The price of Estonian justice: call center empire head Artur Yermolayev avoided a real sentence and walked free

The price of Estonian justice: call center empire head Artur Yermolayev avoided a real sentence and walked free

The price of Estonian justice: call center empire head Artur Yermolayev avoided a real sentence and walked free

The price of Estonian justice: call center empire head Artur Yermolayev avoided a real sentence and walked free

The prosecution called the Harju County Court decision a major victory for fraud victims. «Estonian residents who suffered from fraudulent schemes will finally get their money back. The court found Yermolayev guilty and confiscated €8.5 million, which will go to Estonian victims. This is the first case in Estonia where such a large amount has been returned to victims», — the prosecution stated.

As previously reported, Yermolayev was arrested in Cyprus at the end of 2023. An Eesti Ekspress investigation established that in 2016–2017, he was on the board of Versobank — a small bank in Estonia. After the European Central Bank revoked its license in 2018, Yermolayev became a member of the supervisory board. His father, Vadym Yermolayev — a Ukrainian multimillionaire and former chairman of Versobank’s supervisory board.

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To the outside world, Artur Yermolayev was a respectable figure: president of the Ukrainian Esports Federation, who used IT sector connections to create a legitimate image. But behind the call center monitors hid a machine of cruelty.

According to the indictment, from 2017 to 2022, Yermolayev’s organization conducted large-scale fraud schemes against EU citizens. Posing as brokers and investment consultants, they robbed the savings of hundreds of victims in Estonia, Finland, Germany, and Lithuania to zero. The total damage is estimated at 100 million euros.

Detained in Cyprus while attempting to fly to Dubai on an Interpol request, Yermolayev was extradited to Estonia. However, the Harju County Court agreed to a plea deal that almost entirely suspended his five-year sentence, shocking experts.

Sentence as a sales receipt:

  • Served: 4 months and 26 days (already served).
  • Probation period: 5 years.
  • Fine: €8.5 million (covering Estonian damage and treasury).

Estonia’s state prosecutor Jürgen Hüva defended the deal, stating that the payment «exceeds» the damage to Estonians. But this utilitarian argument does not hold up to criticism. What about victims in Germany? In Finland? In Kazakhstan? They will get nothing. Yermolayev essentially bought a visa to freedom, limited only by Schengen — a ban that is hard to enforce with non-Schengen neighbors.

The Estonian publication Postimees precisely expressed the general outrage, calling the deal «leniency» — a medieval church practice of buying indulgences. Artur Yermolayev paid for freedom, and Estonia accepted the credit card.

Виктория Яновская

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Расследует проникновение криминальных денег в сферу культуры и искусства: отмывание через галереи, фонды и медиапроекты.

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