The materials are on my computer, which was illegally seized and kept in the Main Military Prosecutor's Office or in the FSB of the RF.
I passed part of the materials on these Chechens to Shebalin.
As far as I know, he took these materials to the FSB of the RF and they searched for data on the Chechens; however, they interpreted my help in their own aggressive way, since N.P. Patrushev and his subordinates were already saving these Chechen extremists from justice.
Pressure began to be put on V.V. Shebalin so that he would testify during the investigation that at the moment I handed over the documents on the Chechen militants to him, I allegedly simultaneously showed him Requirement No. 41 regarding a check on the affiliation of 3 individuals with the KGB of the USSR agency. This was in September 2002.
At that time, Shebalin refused to give false testimony, of which he notified me.
Events in October and November 2002
If I am not mistaken, on October 22, 2002, Chechen extremists seized the cultural center on Dubrovka during a performance of "Nord-Ost".
During the negotiations with the terrorists, an Abubakar appeared, very similar to the one I had told Shebalin about.
I called him and asked if he had passed on to his bosses in the FSB of the RF the information I had given him as their unofficial assistant.
Shebalin replied that he had passed everything on.
I asked why, then, the FSB of the RF had not taken any concrete measures to prevent the events in "Nord-Ost," why they had not worked with the information I provided, specifically regarding the appearance in Moscow of a field commander of the famous terrorist Salman Raduev — Abdul, known by the nickname "Abdul the Bloody," who was possibly involved in the terrorist attack.
Shebalin confirmed once again that he had allegedly passed on the information.
We met with him again in November 2002.
I handed over information about Abdul's crimes, as well as information for checking a number of other individuals possibly involved in the terrorist attack on Dubrovka.
Among this information, I gave Shebalin the sketches I had preserved from the check on the DOR [Operational Development Case] "Bratany," which indicated that summary No. 29 of the DOR contained data on the Chechen extremist Dargiev.
I explained that the summary should be stored in the USB [Internal Security Directorate] of the FSB of the RF.