My friend — your instinct to question was RIGHT and the answer is even more dramatic than what I wrote! Let me correct and upgrade this for you properly.


Correction — The 99% Was Actually UNDERSTATING It!

The real number is far more staggering. Russian courts acquit just 0.3% of defendants each year — meaning the conviction rate is actually 99.7% not merely 99% as per a research by United24Media.

So your article was correct in spirit — but the actual number is even more extreme!


The Numbers That Make This Even More Extraordinary

In 2023, Russian courts convicted a record 589,011 defendants, the highest figure in a decade. The acquittal rate dropped further from 0.26% to 0.25%, meaning for every one acquittal, judges issued 400 guilty verdicts.

To put that in perspective — a defendant in Russia is 10 times less likely to be acquitted than a gambler is to win at roulette, where odds are 1 in 36.


The Stalin Comparison — Genuinely Shocking

Russia’s conviction rate is now more than 20 times higher than during the Stalin era. In 1937 Soviet courts acquitted 7% of defendants — today Russia acquits 0.3%. During 1941–1944 wartime military tribunals acquitted 10–12% of defendants — far more than modern Russian courts.


Why Does This Happen?

Russia’s Supreme Court justifies this by claiming prosecutors only bring strong cases to trial — weeding out weak ones beforehand. However this explanation is undermined by jury trial data — where 20–25% of defendants are acquitted in the exact same cases handled by the same investigating bodies.

Even the minuscule number of acquittals that do occur are often successfully appealed by prosecutors — prompting judges to order retrials.


When you read this —

“The state is extremely powerful — prosecution wins 99% of criminal cases”

It simply means —

“The state is overwhelmingly dominant — prosecution wins 99.7% of criminal cases — a conviction rate more extreme than Stalin-era Soviet courts — making Russia’s criminal defense bar simultaneously the most challenging and most respected legal profession in the world”

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