Russian invader did not deal with Polaroid and left his photo in the looted apartment
The Russian invaders robbed the apartment of Irpin resident Valeria and left a photo “in memory”.
According to Valeria, her apartment is located in the Green Yard residential complex, where the Russian military lived for 3 weeks. “We were not in the city during the occupation. There were our neighbors who lived permanently (about three weeks) in the basement. According to them, they started robbing our apartment first, I don’t know why, maybe because we had air conditioning hanging,” – said the owner of the apartment.
Valeria discovered an interesting discovery in mid-May: under the carpet lay a picture taken with her Polaroid camera, and a selfie of a looter and invader. Probably, he just didn’t understand how the equipment works and threw out the photo. After all, the principle of Polaroid is as follows: a photo is printed immediately, but it takes some time for the image to appear.
”I found him under the carpet on May 14. Before that, I saw that my Polaroid camera was damaged, and I didn’t even turn it on (I thought they might have put something in it). And when I saw the photo, I realized that the soldier thought it was not working because the photo was initially black. He needs time to show up,” – says Valeria.
By the way, the Russians took out of the apartment a lot of valuables – not only touched the crosses, even with diamonds.
Thereafter, the Minister of Digital Transformation of Ukraine Mykhailo Fedorov stated that with the help of artificial intelligence the looter was identified – 26-year-old Nikita Tretyakov, a native of Rostov-on-Don.
“Today, every occupier must remember that we always watch him, know his every move and record all the data. Therefore, responsibility for the ruined lives of Ukrainians will not be avoided. The punishment will be harsh, but very fair,” – Fedorov said.