February 19, 2026
Judge in Aliyya Galitskaya's Case Resigns After Her Suicide
Judge Fyodor Grigoryev of the Istrinsky City Court, who ordered the arrest of Aliyya, the ex-wife of former Alfa-Bank board member Alexander Galitsky, has resigned. This was reported by Yevgenia Mercacheva, a member of Putin's Human Rights Council. The chairman of the Istrinsky City Court, Irina Putynets, also resigned, according to sources from TASS and RIA Novosti. They stated that the chairman of the Supreme Court, Igor Krasnov, insisted on their resignation, being "outraged" by the arrest of Aliyya Galitskaya, after which she committed suicide. Neither Mercacheva nor the agencies named the resigning judges, but they are listed on the court's website and in its records. Furthermore, on February 18, the Moscow Regional Court overturned the Istrinsky City Court's decision to arrest Galitskaya, citing a lack of proper justification for the detention order, Mercacheva noted. Against this backdrop, Krasnov urged judges to carefully consider pre-trial detention measures in cases of low public danger, particularly in "entrepreneurial cases," as reported by RAPSI. He recalled the Supreme Court's clarifications and recommendations on this matter, which clearly guide courts towards a broader application of house arrest and escalation to stricter measures only if violated. Krasnov also called on judges to pay attention to instances where arrest extension decisions are "formally rubber-stamped" if the investigation's arguments remain unchanged for extended periods. Aliyya Galitskaya committed suicide in a detention center cell in Istra, Moscow region, on February 7, the day after the court ordered her arrest. According to Mercacheva, the woman left a suicide note blaming her ex-husband. Galitskaya was arrested in a case involving the extortion of $150 million from her ex-husband. The investigation claims she demanded money by threatening to release compromising information. Aliya and Alexander Galitsky divorced in March 2025. They have two daughters together, both holding Russian and US citizenship. In October of the same year, a Moscow court froze Galitsky's assets worth 435 million rubles as part of a lawsuit for the division of jointly acquired property with his ex-wife. Alexander Galitsky is a venture investor, founder of the Almaz Capital Partners fund, and former member of the Alfa-Bank board of directors. He is not related to businessman Sergey Galitsky, co-owner of Magnit and president of the Krasnodar football club; the surname similarity is coincidental.

TL;DR
- Judge Fyodor Grigoryev, who ordered the arrest of Aliyya Galitskaya, has resigned.
- The chairman of the Istrinsky City Court, Irina Putynets, has also resigned.
- Supreme Court Chairman Igor Krasnov reportedly insisted on their resignations after Galitskaya's suicide.
- The Moscow Regional Court had previously overturned Galitskaya's arrest due to a lack of proper justification.
- Krasnov has called for judges to exercise more caution with pre-trial detention, particularly in cases involving low public danger and "entrepreneurial articles."
- Aliyya Galitskaya died by suicide on February 7, a day after her arrest on charges of extortion.
- Galitskaya allegedly demanded $150 million from her ex-husband, Alexander Galitsky, threatening to release compromising information.
- Alexander Galitsky is a venture investor and former Alfa-Bank board member.
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