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Spy Kids: The son and daughter of Russian GRU head Kostyukov own real estate worth hundreds of millions


Igor Kostyukov, the head of Russian military intelligence, is under Western sanctions over his interference in the US election, the Skripal poisoning in Salisbury, Britain, and cyberattacks on the Bundestag. But the chief intelligence officer feels more than comfortable in Russia. He was appointed head of the General Staff Main Directorate in late 2018, and the following year his adult children became owners of expensive real estate.

Kostyukov's daughter Alena Solomonova

According to The Insider‘s data, obtained from a source in the tax service, the GRU head’s daughter Alena Solomonova (she changed her last name after marriage) purchased a land plot in the village of Lipka on Novorizhskoe highway in November 2019. However, the extract from the Rosreestr register (the official State Property Register) does not specify the name of the owner, and reads «Russian Federation» instead.

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The neighboring plot was also purchased by Alena’s brother in November 2019. The name of the GRU head’s son can be found in the archived extract from the Unified State Register of Real Estate which records the transfer of real estate ownership rights. According to the extract, Oleg Kostyukov’s plot was also re-registered in the name of «Russian Federation» in 2020. At the same time, according to The Insider, Kostyukov Jr. remained the owner of a summer cottage located on the plot. Although in this case, his identity is also hidden under «the Russian Federation» moniker.

The neighboring plots are also recorded in the Rosreestr register under «the Russian Federation». According to satellite images, right after the land purchase the Kostyukovs cut down trees and began the construction of a house on the 6,000 square meters of the combined area of the two plots.

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According to current offers on CIAN, the Kostyukov family’s country property is worth nearly 170 million rubles. And that’s not all: according to The Insider, in addition to the land in Lipka, the siblings also jointly own a 12-hectare plot in the Beliye Rosy 1 gated community. Their real names are also hidden in the Rosreestr register. Combined with Oleg’s apartment on 2nd Chernogryazskaya Street, Moscow, his Mercedes-Benz GLE 350 d 4MATIC and Alena’s Mercedes-Benz C200, we estimate the cost of property owned by the GRU head’s children to be at least 200 million rubles.

Their own income is clearly insufficient for such expensive acquisitions. Oleg Kostyukov, 35, is employed by the Foreign Ministry. His annual income before buying the land in Lipka was only one and a half million rubles. Alena Solomonova, 37, manages the Regions group of companies owned by the United Russia State Duma deputy Zelimkhan Mutsoyev and his brother, British citizen Amirkhan Mori. Her annual income is 2.2 million rubles.

Alena also tried to start her own business but failed. Her husband’s firms went bankrupt and were liquidated, and he now works as a hired manager, has unpaid debts, and does not earn much. At least on paper.

Despite her unclear sources of wealth, the daughter of the head of intelligence does not deny herself luxury. She once had a 2-million-ruble diamond ring stolen from her. Judging by the ads on Avito, Alena was selling her Chanel watch, Valentino bag and other expensive items.

The GRU head and his children did not respond to calls or messages from The Insider. The questions sent via Telegram were read by Alena Solomonova and Oleg Kostyukov but were never answered.

Русская версия расследования – здесь


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Michael Novakhov's favorite articles

What Does Russia’s Shadowy GRU Intelligence Agency Do?


To find out more about how the GRU works, listen to True Spies podcast: Moonlight Maze

The enigmatic GRU is the foreign intelligence arm of the Russian Ministry of Defense, accused of an incredible mix of operations from interfering in the US election to poisoning Sergei Skripal in England, running foreign sleeper agents, and a hacking campaign targeting Ukraine. (The GRU denies all.)

GRU officers reportedly undergo three years of specialist training including cybernetics, foreign languages, geopolitics, the use of codes, and other elements of espionage. General Igor Kostyukov, a naval officer who commanded Russian forces in Syria has been in charge since 2018. The GRU – officially known as the Main Intelligence Directorate – gathers human intelligence through military attaches and foreign agents, and maintains electronic signals intelligence and imagery reconnaissance and satellite imagery capabilities.

Though its acronym is less well known than the once-feared KGB, Russia’s military intelligence service has been part of the largest operations of the past century from the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis to the war in Ukraine.

Russian's head of the GRU intelligence agency with Putin

Igor Olegovich Kostyukov (left), head of the GRU

According to the Netherland’s Security Service AIVD: “The GRU’s main focus is on gathering military intelligence, but it also collects intelligence that is more political or technological in nature. The GRU not only collects information, its officers carry out covert influencing operations. These are a few of its many operations: 

Special Forces – The elite military until Spetsnaz GRU is said to have fought in the Syrian war, helping President Bashar al-Assad, as well as against separatist rebels in Chechnya. Russia reported losing its first GRU military intelligence spy in the ongoing Ukraine war in March 2022. GRU agents also spied on Ukrainian forces in 2014, intercepted communications and seized important military outposts, credited for the ‘bloodless seizure of Crimea’.

Sleeper agents – GRU Department 5, the so-called Illegals program – deploys groups of undercover illegals who enter foreign nations under false identities to gather intelligence for Russia. In 2023, for example, Slovenian authorities arrested two foreign nationals suspected of spying for Russia’s GRU. Separately, in 2022, Olga Kolobova – the daughter of a Russian colonel – was accused of being a GRU spy who embedded herself in Nato circles in Italy and introduced herself as a Latin American jewelry designer. (An illegals’ program is also said to be run by the Russian SVR foreign intelligence service.) In the mid-1980s, researchers estimated that the GRU operated 150 illegals.

Ukraine cyber operations The GRU is seen as a major Russian cyber player linked to many military operations including a 2023 attempt to penetrate the Ukrainian military planning operations systems through Android tablet devices. “Our enemy is extremely focused on getting insight into these systems,” Illia Vitiuk, the head of the Cybersecurity Department of Ukraine’s Security Service, told NPR.

Interfering in the 2016 US Presidential Elections – The US sanctioned GRU officers including its head – Igor Korobov – for cyber attempts to interfere in the 2016 presidential election. Although Russia denied meddling, 12 Russians accused of operating on behalf of the GRU were criminally charged with hacking and leaking the emails of senior Democrats.

Failed Coup in Montenegro – In 2019, a Montenegro court sentenced 14 people – including two Russian GRU officers – to up to 15 years in prison for a failed coup to overthrow the government. The GRU was accused of orchestrating the 2016 coup from neighboring Serbia, allegedly aimed at preventing the country from joining Nato.

The GRU is suspected of hacking the US election

Moonlight Maze - True Spies podcast

To find out how the GRU works, listen to True Spies podcast: Moonlight Maze

Olympic doping – The GRU has also been implicated in a state-sponsored hacking and doping program that aimed to manipulate drug tests and allow Russian athletes to compete in the Olympics while using performance-enhancing substances. This led to Russia’s ban from the 2018 Winter Olympics.

Attack on Germany’s parliament – In 2020, the EU sanctioned two Russian intelligence officers and the GRU over their involvement in hacking the German parliament in 2015. The EU sanctions targeted the GRU’s Unit 26165, better known as hacker group ‘Fancy Bear’ or ‘Advanced Persistent Threat 28’.

Cuban Missile Crisis, 1962 – Lt. Col. Oleg Penkovsky was a GRU spy and double agent who smuggled military documents, photos, and human intelligence out of Russia – including gossip he’d pick up at parties – which he passed to British businessman Grenville Wynne during business meetings. Penkovsky ostensibly wanted to trade Soviet military secrets for a new life in the West with his wife and daughter.

In addition to the GRU, Russia has two other main spy organizations: the Federal Security Service (FSB), which oversees internal security, and the Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) with a role similar to Britain’s foreign spy agency MI6.


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