Genrikh Padva: "No one can tell a lawyer who and how to defend." Biography of Heinrich Padva: family and personal life, education, lawyer career, job reviews Who is Padva g p

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Genrikh Pavlovich was born into a Moscow family of an engineer and a ballerina in 1931. The family lived modestly in a communal apartment. But parents always tried to give their son the best. Therefore, Heinrich Pavlovich received his education in one of best schools. He studied with the children of public and political figures. Since childhood, Heinrich Pavlovich dreamed of a lawyer profession. He studied the works of great lawyers, improved his oratory and spoke at public events.

After leaving school, he tried several times to enter the Moscow Law Institute (problems arose either in the lack of points, or in the Jewish nationality and the absence of a Komsomol ticket). In the end, he nevertheless entered there by transfer from Minsk.

Career of Padva Heinrich Pavlovich

After graduating from the first institute, by distribution, he ended up in Kalinin ( modern name- Tver) region, where in 1961 he graduated from the Pedagogical Institute. There he met his love the most beautiful woman Kalinin, his first wife Albina.

The practice of law of Genrikh Pavlovich Padva began in 1953 in the Kalinin region. However, it was quite difficult. He often faced the injustice of the courts. In addition, it was difficult for Genrikh Pavlovich to start his career in a different region, a completely different environment than the one he was used to from childhood. There wasn't even enough money to live on. He had a hard time adjusting. And in the first decade of his practice as a lawyer, he even wrote a letter of resignation from the bar. In 1971, Genrikh Pavlovich returned to Moscow again with extensive experience in law practice and became a member of the Moscow City Bar Association. Among his colleagues, he began to enjoy great respect for his accumulated experience in conducting legal affairs in the countryside.

The heyday of a career fell on the period of the nineties. When he began to protect not only ordinary people, but also criminal authorities (Vyacheslav Kirillovich Ivankov (“Jap”) and others), political leaders (Pavel Pavlovich Borodin, Anatoly Petrovich Bykov, Pyotr Anatolyevich Karpov, Anatoly Ivanovich Lukyanov, Anatoly Eduardovich Serdyukov and others ), representatives of the business environment (Lev Weinberg, Frank Elkaponi (Teimour Fizuli oglu Mamedov), Mikhail Borisovich Khodorkovsky, etc.), as well as television “stars” (Vladislav Borisovich Galkin and others). Also, various legal entities(Izvestia editors, Menatep, PepsiCo, CitiBank, etc.). In 1995, Genrikh Pavlovich opened his own law firm, which continues to operate successfully to this day.

Of course, not all cases were won by Heinrich Pavlovich, there were also lost cases. Especially during his residence in the Kalinin region, when there was practically no humanism in the court. But, despite all the difficulties, he has been working as a lawyer all his life. After all, this is not only a profession, but also a vocation.

Special achievements of Padva Heinrich Pavlovich

Genrikh Padva is an Honored Lawyer of the Russian Federation. He was awarded the Fyodor Nikiforovich Plevako gold medal and other awards. Heinrich Pavlovich played a big role in the abolition of the death penalty in Russia. It was on his complaint to the Constitutional Court that this measure of punishment was declared unconstitutional. Currently, the office of Heinrich Padva has become the best in providing services in the field of criminal law.

Personal life of Padva Heinrich Pavlovich

The first wife of Heinrich Padva was a neurologist and, unfortunately, did not live long with him. She died in 1974, leaving him a daughter. Twenty-two years later, the lawyer married a second time to the notary's assistant Oksana. Moreover, Oksana also has a child from her first marriage - this is a son. According to various sources, despite the fact that her husband spoils her, he nevertheless decided to draw up a prenuptial agreement. It seems that in order to avoid various risks, this is quite fair, because she is forty years younger than him. The lawyer himself reports on this occasion that he perfectly understands a woman's love for him. However, there are doubts about the sincerity of such love - it seems that many women are only interested in his fame.

Hobbies and hobbies of Padva Heinrich Pavlovich

Successful lawyer Genrikh Padva is a comprehensively developed person. He believes in life and death. Able to combine work, creativity and personal life. AT different periods In his life, he loved various hobbies - he was engaged in motor sports, photography, gymnastics, collecting, and so on.

Periodically, his hobbies changed. Now he is the author of several books. But he retained his love for sports and active leisure. Football and tennis are his favorite sports. In addition, he is fond of music and painting.

Special personality traits of Padva Heinrich Pavlovich

Heinrich Pavlovich is a unique person. He is professionally passionate, considers himself kind, honest and enthusiastic. Despite the fact that he does not like to compare himself with anyone, he is quite strict with himself. In his work, he likes to take interesting cases. As Reznik's friend and colleague Henry Markovich points out, famous lawyer Padva Heinrich Pavlovich is distinguished not only by his humanity, he has a rare quality modern life- high legal culture. The talented lawyer Genrikh Pavlovich Padva is respected by colleagues, and young lawyers strive to be like him.

This eminent lawyer handled countless cases in his 60+ years in the legal profession. Thanks to his efforts, legislation and arbitrage practice have changed in better side. It is to him that we owe the creation in 1989 of the first professional community lawyers throughout the country - the Union of Lawyers of the USSR. Portal GARANT.RU talked to the managing partner of the law office "Padva and Partners", Honored Lawyer of the Russian Federation Heinrich Padva.

The Man Who Couldn't Change the Bar

Genrikh Pavlovich, you studied at school No. 110 in the capital and successfully completed it in 1948. It would seem that the doors to all professions were "open" before you. Why did you decide to opt for a rather outlandish jurisprudence in those days?

I have dreamed of law since school years when I first read the works of the great pre-revolutionary lawyers N.P. Karabchevsky, S.A. Andreevsky, and others. Their talent inspired me. Then I decided for myself that I would study, become a lawyer and defend the unfortunate and oppressed people.

Is it true that you twice failed to enter the Moscow Law Institute, and the second time you "failed" on the question of the rivers of Great Britain?

Indeed, everything was so. Then, as entrance exams to a law school, they passed geography, history, Russian language and literature. And in geography, I was asked to list the rivers of Great Britain. I named only the Thames, which did not suit the examiner. I don’t know if this question was an accident or if I was asked it deliberately to “fill up”, but when I later asked different people, including the professor who taught geography, no one except the Thames could name other rivers.

After two failed attempts to pass the entrance exams to the Moscow Law Institute, I went to Belarus to enter the Minsk Law Institute. This university gladly accepted me, but I studied there for only a year - at the end of the first year, I nevertheless returned to the capital and transferred to the Moscow Law Institute. Four years later, immediately after the graduation of my course, this university ceased its independent existence and was merged with the Faculty of Law of Moscow State University named after M.Yu. Lomonosov.

After graduating from the Moscow Law Institute in 1953, you undergo a six-month internship in Rzhev, and then go to work as a lawyer in the small regional center Pogoreloye Gorodishche. Remember your first case as a lawyer?

Of course I remember. In all my practice, this was the only case in which a person actually turned himself in to confess. In fact, the vast majority of confessions are "far-fetched": the suspect is arrested and only then persuaded to confess to his deed in exchange for a lighter sentence. It was a completely different case. A respected worker who could boast of his name on the honor roll, an order bearer, a father of two daughters, appeared at the police station in Stalingrad [now it is Volgograd. - Ed.] and confessed that he had raped an underage girl eight years ago. He was arrested, transported to Pogoreleye Gorodishche, where the crime took place, the case was taken from the archive, they began to look for the victim, witnesses ... I represented his interests.

As a result, the court sentenced my client to three years in prison - considering all the extenuating circumstances, he was given a sentence below the lower limit, which, according to those laws, was about eight years. I was dissatisfied with the verdict and believed that the case should be dismissed altogether, but since by the time the judgment my client served most of his sentence, we decided not to appeal against the sentence.

After working in Pogorely Gorodishche, you move to the city of Kalinin [now it is Tver. - Ed.], where, in parallel with the practice of law, you study at the Faculty of History of the Kalinin Pedagogical Institute [now - Tver State University. – Ed.]. Have you decided to change your profession?

No way - I would never cheat on the bar! The fact is that in those days the authorities tortured everyone with party studies. Nobody liked it, but it was impossible to get off without a good reason. Then one friend advised me to enter the university for the second higher education- the students were treated condescendingly and were not given an additional party load. That's exactly what I did.

And I chose the Faculty of History because I always loved history and studied it in depth at the Moscow Law Institute. In addition, upon admission, many exams that I had already taken before were credited to me. Of course, this study was a formality - by that time I was already well known in Kalinin, I was on friendly terms with many teachers. Now I don’t even remember where my diploma of graduation from the Kalinin Pedagogical Institute is.

Why did you return to Moscow only in 1971?

If I could, I would have done it much sooner. Kalinin is a wonderful city, but Moscow my house, where all my relatives and friends live. I dreamed of returning to Moscow since I left! But bureaucratic obstacles prevented me from doing so. Previously, citizens did not have the right to choose their place of residence, so before moving, it was necessary to first register for a future place of residence, which was not easy to do.

Heinrich Padva: famous, popular, venerable

You have been fortunate enough to represent the interests of many public people, but about the "Izhevsk case" - the case of embezzlement of state Money especially large sizes when organizing concerts by Vladimir Vysotsky - legends still circulate. Tell us more about it.

This process is not remarkable except for the fact that popular artists were interrogated as witnesses. The prosecutor opened an embezzlement case against a group of concert organizers Vladimir Vysotsky, Valentina Tolkunova and Gennady Khazanov. The artists themselves had nothing to do with it. But since the authorities did not favor Vysotsky, they, it seems to me, wanted to involve him in the flaring scandal - they say, Vladimir Semenovich knew about fraud with tickets at his performances, and maybe even contributed to this. Fortunately, I managed to defend his honest name. On July 5, 1980, I flew from Izhevsk to Moscow with the joyful news that Vysotsky's name had not been tarnished by the verdict. From the airport, I drove to the Taganka Theater and informed Vladimir Semenovich about our victory, and 20 days later the artist was gone.

For example, for a long time It was believed that only the father could challenge paternity. I was approached by a woman who wanted to challenge the record of paternity for her son. I immediately doubted the possibility of doing this, since there was no corresponding practice then, but I got down to business. We filed an application with the court, but it was not even accepted. Then I began to appeal against this refusal and reached the Presidium of the Moscow City Court, which recognized the mother's right to challenge the paternity of her child. This is now considered the norm.

Every lawyer dreams of such achievements as yours. Share your recipe for success.

My "recipe for success" is very boring: work, work, work... Unfortunately, few people are fortunate enough to work in the profession for which they were created by God. I'm sure I've been so fortunate.

Your work experience in the legal specialty has exceeded 60 years. Have you been bored with your profession over the years?

No, not bored - I'm just very tired. But the end of a career as a lawyer for me is tantamount to physical death. My work is my life. So I'm still "at the helm".

If you had to choose a profession again, what would you be?

Only a lawyer. I love advocacy for freedom - no one can tell a lawyer who and how to defend. If I am sure of the innocence of my principal, I have the right to insist on an acquittal, and they cannot forbid me to do so. I am not dependent on anyone.

Each lawyer's case is special and unique. Protecting a person, you understand that his fate is partly in your hands. It is an incredible responsibility, but also an indescribable happiness - to hear from the judge "I decide to find the defendant innocent and release him in the courtroom." For the sake of such moments it is worth living and working!

The documents

Born February 20, 1931 in Moscow. Father - Padva Pavel Yulievich. Mother - Rappoport Eva Iosifovna. The first wife is Noskova Albina Mikhailovna (died in 1974). Wife - Mamontova Oksana Sergeevna. Daughter - Padva Irina Genrikhovna, photo artist. Granddaughter - Albina.

Heinrich Padva was born into an intelligent Moscow family. His father, a major planning engineer, held senior positions in organizations of such magnitude and significance as the Northern Sea Route. He worked under the legendary Schmidt and Papanin. went through the whole Great Patriotic war, was shell-shocked. In 1945 he was appointed commandant of one of the German cities, he solved reparations issues; met with the rank of captain. The mother was a ballerina, who, by all accounts, had a figure of amazing beauty. After the birth of her son, she decides to leave the stage, but Terpsichore does not change - she gives dance lessons.

Before the war, Heinrich studied at the prestigious metropolitan school No. 110, where among his classmates there were many children of high-ranking officials, prominent scientists, and popular artists. Largely due to the high level of teaching at the school, many of its graduates subsequently achieved outstanding success in various fields of professional activity.

With the outbreak of war, Heinrich, along with his mother, grandfather and other family members, was evacuated to Kuibyshev (Samara). Shelter found at distant relatives, where ten of them had to live in one room, sleep on chests and just on the floor. In the evacuation, despite all its hardships, there were also pleasant events, there were interesting meetings: so, for a few days, the wonderful playwright and writer Nikolai Erdman, who was returning to Moscow after serving his term in the Stalinist camp, stayed in their apartment for several days. He left a mark in my memory as a person of remarkable personal qualities, extremely interesting in communication. The boy's imagination, among other things, was struck by Erdman's ability to show amazing charades.

When German troops were thrown far away from Moscow, Heinrich and his mother returned home, renovated their room in a communal apartment, heated by a makeshift brick stove. He continued his studies at the same 110th school, which he successfully completed in 1948. I decided to enter the Moscow Law Institute, but on the first attempt I did not get points. (It should be noted that when entering a university in those years, the presence of a Komsomol ticket was taken into account, which Heinrich was in no hurry to acquire, as well as an entry in the "nationality" column.)

A year later - a new, this time more successful attempt at admission: a "semi-passing" score was scored. Unfortunately, after confidently passing the Russian language and literature and history, Henry received "satisfactory" in the geography exam: the rivers of Great Britain became the question "for backfilling". From the examination room, the young man brought out the feeling of an injustice that had happened: practically everyone to whom he subsequently asked this question - even professional geographers - could not remember anything except the Thames ...

At the end of the entrance exams, Genrikh Padva receives an invitation from representatives of the Minsk Law Institute to study at this university and accepts it. Having moved to Minsk, he starts his studies, and very successfully: the first-year student Padva passes both sessions with excellent marks. Here he found an opportunity not only to gain knowledge from highly professional teachers, but also to actively go in for sports, became interested in student amateur performances.

After studying for 2 semesters, Heinrich is transferred to the Moscow Law Institute, which he successfully graduates in 1953. According to the distribution, he ends up in Kalinin (now Tver), is placed at the disposal of the Kalinin Department of Justice. The career of a young lawyer began with a six-month internship in the ancient city of Rzhev. After completing an internship, Padva goes to work in the small district center Pogoreloe Gorodishche to become the only lawyer here.

A native Muscovite, Padva plunged into the exoticism of rural life: housing is a corner in a wooden house, a barnyard is behind the wall, lilacs are under the windows, and the singing of nightingales is heard from the edge of the forest. I remember many vivid impressions related to this period of my life: participation in hunting for wolves and real fishing, pleasure from a full basket of mushrooms and a simple walk through the forest ... But perhaps the greatest experience and the most valuable experience was a close acquaintance with ordinary people, their difficult life, horrendous poverty and lack of rights.

The defendants in the first cases, in which Padva acted as a lawyer, were just such ordinary villagers: front-line soldiers who were tried for a hot word against the authorities, young workers who were threatened with prison for being late for work for several minutes. Of course, such trials under the then justice, when a person was given 10-15 years for the slightest violation, rarely ended successfully for a lawyer and his client. But over time, the authority of G. Padva grew - not only in the courtroom, but also in the eyes of fellow villagers. His opinion and arguments gained more and more weight, the district prosecutor began to listen to the arguments more often - an honest and decent man, but who did not have a higher education.

A year and a half later, Padva continues his legal career in Torzhok. Here he improves his skills, reads exceptionally much - fortunately, provincial life, not rich in entertainment, left enough free time. Here he meets his future wife. Soon he moves to Kalinin, where his chosen one studies at the medical institute. Some time later they got married. In parallel with the practice of law, G. Padva graduated in absentia from the history department of the Kalinin Pedagogical Institute - one of the reasons for this decision (to receive a second higher education) was the unwillingness to "voluntarily-compulsorily" study at a party school.

The professional authority of Heinrich Pavlovich is constantly growing, but only in 1971 he returns to Moscow. At first, his hometown, the city of his childhood, met him unkindly: an acute shortage of humanity prevented him from adapting, but bureaucracy, on the contrary, turned out to be in abundance. At first, colleagues helped to cope with difficulties, the support of the Deputy Chairman of the Presidium of the Moscow City Bar Association I.I. Sklyarsky. The efforts and talent of Padva himself did not go unnoticed: he began to be highly valued, first in professional circles, and then among the public.

Wide famous name G.P. Padva became after a case initiated by one American entrepreneur against the Izvestia newspaper: the businessman accused the publication of slandering him. The plaintiff won a court in his homeland, which ordered to recover from the newspaper many thousands of compensation for the moral damage caused. For a long time, Soviet official structures ignored the events that took place in this case, nodding that the American side was limited in its ability to enforce the decisions of its court. Then the Americans went to action: the property of the Izvestia bureau in the United States was arrested, the process began to threaten complications at the diplomatic level. I had to mobilize all legal resources. As a result of the actions taken by domestic lawyers headed by G. Padva, it was possible to achieve the annulment of the decision of the American court. (Let us add that a few years later G. Padva met with the same injured businessman, who by that time had already retired; all these years he did not hold a grudge against his "offender", who demonstrated high professionalism in his field.) After this history, the mention of the name of G. Padva in the press often began to be accompanied by the epithets "famous", "eminent", "venerable", etc.

Throughout his many years of law practice, G.P. Padva successfully participates in lawsuits, a significant part of which was in the focus of media attention and had a great socio-political resonance.

The 1990s were special years in the career of the lawyer Heinrich Padva. His dossier contains resounding successes that have strengthened the authority of the master of human rights.

During the days of the August putsch of 1991, G.P. Padva, being vice-president of the Union of Advocates of the USSR, was in the United States and addressed the international legal community, in which he spoke about the illegality of the actions of the State Emergency Committee. He returned to Moscow when the putsch had not yet been defeated, with understandable fears of being arrested. Soon, as you know, everything was over, and a few days after the arrest of the putschists, Henry Pavlovich received a call from the daughter of A.I. Lukyanov with a request to protect her father. After personal communication with Anatoly Ivanovich G.P. Padva agreed, emphasizing that he would not change his assessment of the recent dramatic events and would only undertake to defend Lukyanov personally, but not to support the political phenomenon as a whole.

The lawyer began by speaking on television with a statement about the inadmissibility of accusations against Lukyanov as the ideologist of the coup: each person can have his own political views, and it is unacceptable to persecute him for dissent alone. These arguments were accepted, and the flow of such accusations came to naught. The unacceptability of the accusations of treason brought against members of the State Emergency Committee was also substantiated. As for A. Lukyanov himself, it is generally difficult to talk about his direct participation in the coup - therefore, in 1994, a fundamental question arose before him and G. Padva: should they accept the amnesty announced by the State Duma in the case of the State Emergency Committee? Unfortunately, the unrest experienced worsened Lukyanov's health, and it was decided to agree with this decision, since the continuation of the struggle could cost too much, the victory could become pyrrhic.

In 1996, the case of Deputy CEO Federal Office for the Insolvency of Enterprises P. Karpov, after several years accused of taking a bribe while staying at one of the Saratov enterprises. Karpov was arrested twice - in Saratov and Moscow, and yet, after a long trial that stretched for 2 years, G.P. Padva was eventually rehabilitated.

In the mid-1990s, Genrikh Pavlovich defended the big businessman L. Weinberg, who was accused of giving a bribe (the businessman presented an employee of the customs committee gold chain). The case was investigated by the General Prosecutor's Office and proceeded with violations of the rights of the accused. The lawyer managed to achieve the release of his client from custody, and some time later the case was completely dismissed.

Significant and successful was the participation of G. Padva and his colleague at the law office "Padva and Partners" E. Sergeeva in a high-profile epic with the detention in the United States at the Kennedy airport of the former chief of staff of the Presidential Administration P. Borodin, who was accused by the Swiss prosecutor's office of money laundering and participation in a criminal organization. Lawyers had to work in different directions: assistance to Russian political government agencies, appeals to legal authorities in the United States, interaction with investigative authorities in Switzerland. As a result, in April 2001, the charge of participation in a criminal organization was dropped from Borodin, and in March 2002, the prosecutor of the canton of Geneva B. Bertossa stopped the criminal case against the former manager of affairs.

In 2003, G. Padva, together with his colleague A. Gofshtein, defended the Azerbaijani politician and businessman with the sonorous surname Elkaponi, who was accused of storing and transporting drugs. The head of the People's Patriotic Union "Azerbaijan-XXI" and businessman F. Elkaponi were detained in Moscow with a kilogram of pure heroin in June 2001. Part of the potion was taken from under the detainee's jacket by the officers of the Department for Combating Illicit Drug Trafficking of the Main Internal Affairs Directorate of Moscow, the other - in his apartment. Lawyers managed to prove that Elkaponi's drugs had been planted, and in March 2003 the Golovinsky Inter-municipal Court of Moscow acquitted the Azerbaijani businessman, releasing him from custody after months in prison.

G. Padva's client for several years has also been the former chairman of the board of directors of the Krasnoyarsk aluminum plant A. Bykov, whose name has few competitors in terms of frequency of appearance in modern court chronicles. In 1999, the first attempt was made to prosecute Bykov for involvement in the murder and money laundering - he was detained in Hungary and transferred to the pre-trial detention center in Krasnoyarsk. In the fall of 2000, the businessman was released by the decision of the court of the Central District of Krasnoyarsk, but after some time he was again detained on charges of organizing an attempted murder of Krasnoyarsk businessman V. Struganov. Strong arguments of G. Padva spoke in favor of Bykov's innocence, however Petty-bourgeois court The city of Moscow issued a half-hearted decision: he found Anatoly Bykov guilty, while imposing a suspended sentence of 6.5 years on him. The Moscow City Court upheld this decision. Since Genrikh Padva, on the one hand, is confident in the innocence of his principal, and on the other hand, he claims numerous human rights violations during the process, he does not stop making efforts to appeal the verdict, including in the Strasbourg Court of Human Rights.

Since March 2003, Padva has participated in the consideration in the Krasnoyarsk Regional Court of a new criminal case on charges of Anatoly Bykov - this time of involvement in the murder of local businessman O. Gubin. On July 1, 2003, the court found Bykov and his accomplices not involved in this murder. Bykov was found guilty under another article - 316 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation (concealment of a murder committed without aggravating circumstances), sentenced to a year in prison and immediately amnestied.

G. Padva is not one of the lawyers who speak openly only about successful trials with their participation. In his profession, Genrikh Pavlovich finds a lot in common with medicine: a doctor cannot always help, and a lawyer is not omnipotent either. With great regret, he recalls the failure in a civil case to return part of the legacy of B. Pasternak to his muse and beloved Olga Ivinskaya, who was arrested after his death on charges of smuggling and later rehabilitated. In his defense of the truth, G. Padva reached the Supreme Court of the Russian Federation, but he failed to return the archives of the great poet (which had to be done both according to legal and universal norms). It reached the point of absurdity and mockery of the memory of a genius: officials demanded documents on donating O. Ivinskaya with a manuscript of a poem dedicated to herself!

Now G.P. Padva is the head of the Padva & Partners law office, under whose auspices about 20 lawyers work. Genrikh Pavlovich - Honored Lawyer Russian Federation, was elected a member of the Council of the Moscow City Bar Association, Vice-President of the International Union of Lawyers. Awarded with the gold medal named after F.N. Plevako (1998). Cavalier of the Badge of Honor of the Russian National Fund "Public Recognition".

For many years he has been fond of painting, favorite artists: El Greco, Utrillo. From modern masters prefers the work of Natalia Nesterova. Collects antique porcelain. Appreciates beautiful football, tennis.

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Father:

Pavel Yurievich Padva

Mother:

Eva Iosifovna Rapopport

Voice recording of G. P. Padva
From an interview with Ekho Moskvy
December 14, 2006
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Genrikh Pavlovich Padva(born February 20, 1931, Moscow) - Russian lawyer. Honored Lawyer of the Russian Federation.

Education

Born in the family of Pavel Yurievich Padva and Eva Iosifovna Rapopport. Graduated (), Faculty of History of the Kalinin State Pedagogical Institute (in absentia;).

advocacy

He began the practice of law by distribution in the Kalinin region, and, which Padva himself especially notes, in the year of Stalin's death.

Represented the interests of Boris Pasternak's girlfriend Olga Ivinskaya and her heirs in a lengthy (-) lawsuit over the fate of the Pasternak archive (the interests of the writer's heirs, daughter-in-law Natalya and granddaughter Elena were represented by lawyer Lyubarskaya). Later, with great regret, he recalls the failure in this civil case: It reached the point of absurdity and mockery of the memory of a genius: officials demanded documents on donating O. Ivinskaya with a manuscript of a poem dedicated to herself!

He has been an advocate for a number of notable individuals, including:

  • crime boss Vyacheslav Ivankov, better known as "Jap" (); Ivankov was acquitted of charges of illegal possession firearms, however, he was sentenced to 14 years in prison.
  • former chairman of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR Anatoly Lukyanov (-; “GKChP case”, which ended with an amnesty);
  • a major businessman Lev Weinberg ( -; the client was released from custody, and soon the case was dismissed);
  • Deputy Director of the Federal Office for Insolvency (FUDN) Petr Karpov ( -; accused of taking a bribe, twice taken into custody and twice released on bail, the case was dismissed under an amnesty);
  • former chairman of Rosdragmet Yevgeny Bychkov (; the client was amnestied, some of the charges against him were dropped);
  • former business manager of the President of Russia Pavel Borodin ( -; Borodin was arrested as part of the investigation of the “Mabetex case”, the case was dismissed);
  • former chairman of the board of directors of KrAZ Anatoly Bykov (2000,; the defendant was found guilty, but he was given a suspended sentence);
  • businessman Frank Elkaponi (Mamedov) (2002-2003; the charge of possession and transportation of drugs was dropped, the defendant was released in the courtroom);
  • former head of Yukos Oil Company Mikhail Khodorkovsky (; the defendant was sentenced to 9 years in prison, then the term was reduced to 8 years);
  • actor Vladislav Galkin;
  • former Russian Defense Minister Anatoly Serdyukov.

Data

Family and hobbies

Heinrich Padva is married for the second time to a woman 40 years younger than himself. Wife since 1996 - art historian and notary assistant Oksana Mamontova (b. 1971), graduated from the Moscow Law Academy. Her son from his first marriage, Gleb, perceives Heinrich Pavlovich, according to Oksana, as own father. The couple entered into a marriage contract.

Albina 's first wife died in 1974 . From this marriage he has a daughter.

Notes

Literature

Links

  • - article in Lentapedia. year 2012.

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An excerpt characterizing Padva, Heinrich Pavlovich

The valet got up and whispered something. Timokhin, suffering from pain in his wounded leg, did not sleep and looked with all his eyes at the strange appearance of a girl in a poor shirt, jacket and eternal cap. The sleepy and frightened words of the valet; "What do you want, why?" - they only made Natasha come up to the one that lay in the corner as soon as possible. As terrifying as this body was, it must have been visible to her. She passed the valet: the burning mushroom of the candle fell off, and she clearly saw Prince Andrei lying on the blanket with outstretched arms, just as she had always seen him.
He was the same as always; but the inflamed complexion of his face, the brilliant eyes fixed enthusiastically on her, and especially the tender childish neck protruding from the laid back collar of his shirt, gave him a special, innocent, childish look, which, however, she had never seen in Prince Andrei. She walked over to him and, with a quick, lithe, youthful movement, knelt down.
He smiled and extended his hand to her.

For Prince Andrei, seven days have passed since he woke up at the dressing station in the Borodino field. All this time he was almost in constant unconsciousness. The fever and inflammation of the intestines, which were damaged, in the opinion of the doctor who was traveling with the wounded, must have carried him away. But on the seventh day he ate with pleasure a piece of bread with tea, and the doctor noticed that the general fever had decreased. Prince Andrei regained consciousness in the morning. The first night after leaving Moscow was quite warm, and Prince Andrei was left to sleep in a carriage; but in Mytishchi the wounded man himself demanded to be carried out and to be given tea. The pain inflicted on him by being carried to the hut made Prince Andrei moan loudly and lose consciousness again. When they laid him down on the camp bed, he lay with his eyes closed for a long time without moving. Then he opened them and whispered softly: “What about tea?” This memory for the small details of life struck the doctor. He felt his pulse and, to his surprise and displeasure, noticed that the pulse was better. To his displeasure, the doctor noticed this because, from his experience, he was convinced that Prince Andrei could not live, and that if he did not die now, he would only die with great suffering some time later. With Prince Andrei they carried the major of his regiment Timokhin, who had joined them in Moscow, with a red nose, wounded in the leg in the same Battle of Borodino. They were accompanied by a doctor, the prince's valet, his coachman and two batmen.
Prince Andrei was given tea. He drank greedily, looking ahead at the door with feverish eyes, as if trying to understand and remember something.
- I don't want any more. Timokhin here? - he asked. Timokhin crawled up to him along the bench.
“I'm here, Your Excellency.
- How is the wound?
– My then with? Nothing. Here you are? - Prince Andrei again thought, as if remembering something.
- Could you get a book? - he said.
- Which book?
– Gospel! I have no.
The doctor promised to get it and began to question the prince about how he felt. Prince Andrei reluctantly but reasonably answered all the doctor's questions and then said that he should have put a roller on him, otherwise it would be awkward and very painful. The doctor and the valet raised the overcoat with which he was covered, and, wincing at the heavy smell of rotten meat spreading from the wound, began to examine this terrible place. The doctor was very dissatisfied with something, he altered something differently, turned the wounded man over so that he again groaned and, from pain during the turning, again lost consciousness and began to rave. He kept talking about getting this book as soon as possible and putting it there.
- And what does it cost you! he said. “I don’t have it, please take it out, put it in for a minute,” he said in a pitiful voice.
The doctor went out into the hallway to wash his hands.
“Ah, shameless, really,” said the doctor to the valet, who was pouring water on his hands. I just didn't watch it for a minute. After all, you put it right on the wound. It's such a pain that I wonder how he endures.
“We seem to have planted, Lord Jesus Christ,” said the valet.
For the first time, Prince Andrei understood where he was and what had happened to him, and remembered that he had been wounded and that at the moment when the carriage stopped in Mytishchi, he asked to go to the hut. Confused again from pain, he came to his senses another time in the hut, when he was drinking tea, and then again, repeating in his recollection everything that had happened to him, he most vividly imagined that moment at the dressing station when, at the sight of the suffering of a person he did not love , these new thoughts that promised him happiness came to him. And these thoughts, although vague and indefinite, now again took possession of his soul. He remembered that he now had a new happiness and that this happiness had something in common with the Gospel. That's why he asked for the gospel. But the bad position that had been given to his wound, the new turning over again confused his thoughts, and for the third time he woke up to life in the perfect stillness of the night. Everyone was sleeping around him. The cricket was shouting across the entryway, someone was shouting and singing in the street, cockroaches rustled on the table and icons, in autumn a thick fly beat on his headboard and near a tallow candle that was burning with a large mushroom and stood beside him.
His soul was not in a normal state. Healthy man he usually thinks, feels and remembers at the same time about an innumerable number of objects, but he has power and strength, having chosen one series of thoughts or phenomena, to stop all his attention on this series of phenomena. A healthy person, in a moment of deepest reflection, breaks away to say a courteous word to the person who has entered, and again returns to his thoughts. The soul of Prince Andrei was not in a normal state in this respect. All the forces of his soul were more active, clearer than ever, but they acted outside of his will. The most diverse thoughts and ideas simultaneously owned him. Sometimes his thought suddenly began to work, and with such force, clarity and depth, with which it had never been able to act in a healthy state; but suddenly, in the middle of her work, she broke off, was replaced by some unexpected performance, and there was no strength to return to her.
“Yes, a new happiness has opened up to me, inalienable from a person,” he thought, lying in a half-dark, quiet hut and looking ahead with feverishly open, stopped eyes. Happiness that is outside the material forces, outside the material external influences on a person, the happiness of one soul, the happiness of love! Any person can understand it, but only God alone can recognize and prescribe its motif. But how did God ordain this law? Why a son? .. And suddenly the train of these thoughts was interrupted, and Prince Andrei heard (not knowing whether he was delirious or really hears this), heard some kind of quiet, whispering voice, incessantly repeating to the beat: “And drink, drink, drink,” then “and ti ti” again “and drink ti ti” again “and ti ti”. At the same time, to the sound of this whispering music, Prince Andrei felt that some strange airy building of thin needles or splinters was being erected above his face, above the very middle. He felt (although it was hard for him) that he had to diligently keep his balance so that the building that was being erected would not collapse; but it still collapsed and again slowly rose to the sounds of evenly whispering music. "It's pulling! stretches! stretches and everything stretches, ”Prince Andrei said to himself. Together with listening to the whisper and with the feeling of this stretching and rising building of needles, Prince Andrei saw in fits and starts the red light of a candle surrounded by a circle and heard the rustling of cockroaches and the rustling of a fly beating on the pillow and on his face. And every time a fly touched his face, it produced a burning sensation; but at the same time he was surprised that, striking in the very region of the building erected on the face of his face, the fly did not destroy it. But besides that, there was one more important thing. It was white at the door, it was a statue of a sphinx that crushed him too.
“But maybe this is my shirt on the table,” thought Prince Andrei, “and these are my legs, and this is the door; but why is everything stretching and moving forward and drink, drink, drink, and drink—and drink, drink, drink…” “That’s enough, stop it, please leave it,” Prince Andrei begged someone heavily. And suddenly the thought and feeling came up again with unusual clarity and force.

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