The images sparked national outrage, prompting police and investigators to descend on the facility the same evening. Russia’s Investigative Committee launched a criminal case, while the region’s minister of social protection announced an inquiry into eldercare in Bashkortostan.
However, for many Russians, the incident was hardly a surprise. In a country where the private eldercare industry operates largely unchecked, these exposés tend to play out in much the same way — shocking images, followed by official visits and promises of reform — and then no action until the next incident of abuse comes to light.
Ufa: a familiar horror
Pechki-Lavochki had enjoyed a solid reputation since opening in 2020, with the care facility being subjected to little public scrutiny until a regional Telegram channel, Chestny Reportazh, published a series of images from inside the home, on 18 July. Among them: the now-infamous footage of the bound man, and a woman named Valentina F., whom staff had reportedly deemed “mentally unfit” and transferred to a psychiatric facility, where she died the next day.
“I’m convinced it was the stress that killed her,” an anonymous source told the channel.
The images quickly went viral, forcing the facility’s management to issue a public statement in which not only did they deny that any abusive behaviour had taken place, but they accused their competitors of releasing the video in an attempt to smear Pechki-Lavochki.