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In post-1990 Bulgaria, the word борец ("wrestler") came to denote a mafia man (a common synonym is мутра (mutra), [2] literally "mug, or mean mug"). The image of the Bulgarian "mug", including a sturdy muscular build, a black suit, sunglasses , a shaved head, and golden jewellery , became synonymous with the so-called Bulgarian ...
In 2018, Bulgaria had a murder rate of 3.8 per 100,000 population. There were a total of 2055 murders in Bulgaria in 2016. [3]Contract killings aimed towards bosses of organized crime groups was a problem but mostly decreased following the arrest of five “Killers” gang members starting in 2010.
[2] [3] A colorful underworld character in the Bulgarian Mafia, he was reputed to be a killer "who never even shot a gun". [4] His nickname was "the Godfather" and they also called him "Capo di tutti Capi". His personal signature and phrase was "The good boys go in heaven, the bad ones wherever they want (like) to". [5]
Vasil Iliev Security, or VIS, was a criminal organization in Bulgaria dealing in extortion, car theft, drug trafficking and more. Set up in the early 1990s by Vasil Iliev, the company was declared illegal in 1994, but continued operating under the new name of VIS-2.
Bulgarian mafia; Multigroup; N. Naglite; S. Security Insurance Company; T. TIM (Bulgaria) V. Vasil Iliev Security This page was last edited on 29 November 2022, at 22 ...
Iliya Pavlov Naydenov (Bulgarian: Илия Павлов Найденов; August 6, 1960 – March 7, 2003) was a Bulgarian mobster.A banker, financier and philanthropist, he was the leader and founder of Multigroup organization and G-13.
TIM is an organized crime syndicate incorporated as a holding company based in Varna, Bulgaria. [1] The company is controlled by three veterans of an elite communist-era military unit: Tihomir Mitev, Ivo Kamenov, and Marin Mitev. [2] The abbreviation TIM stands for the first letters of each of the owners' first names.
Nik Radev relocated from his native Bulgaria (then known as the People's Republic of Bulgaria) to Australia in the early 1980s where he was granted refugee status. Unbeknownst to the Australian authorities, he already had an extensive criminal record in Bulgaria and had served time in both Bulgarian and Turkish prisons. [6]