Nikolay Rychkov
Nikolay Mikhailovich Rychkov was a Soviet statesman and lawyer. Deputy of the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union of the 2nd Convocation.
Biography
- 1909–1917 – Apprentice turner, metal turner at the Ural Nadezhdinsky Plant;
- 1917–1918 – Secretary of the Nadezhdinsky Executive Committee of the Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers' Deputies, Commissar of Local Economy;
- 1918 – Delegate to the 7th Congress of the Russian Communist Party, joined the "Left Communists";
- 1918–1920 – in the bodies of the All–Russian Extraordinary Commission in the Urals;
- 1921–1922 – Deputy Chairman of the Military Tribunal of the 5th Army, Irkutsk;
- 1922–1927 – Prosecutor of the Siberian Military District;
- 1927–1931 – Deputy Prosecutor of the Workers' and Peasants' Red Army;
- 1931–1937 – Member of the Military Collegium of the Supreme Court of the Soviet Union, divisional military lawyer;
- 1937–1938 – Prosecutor of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic;
- 1938–1948 – People's Commissar of Justice of the Soviet Union.
- 1948 – in the reserve of the Main Directorate of Personnel of the Ministry of the Armed Forces of the Soviet Union;
- 1948–1951 – Deputy Military Prosecutor of the Ground Forces;
- 1951–1955 – Deputy Chief Military Prosecutor;
- Retired from May 1955;
- Nikolay Rychkov died on March 28, 1959, in the village of Malakhovka, Lyubertsy District, Moscow Region. He was buried in Moscow, at the Vagankovsky Cemetery.
Participation in mass repressions
As People's Commissar of Justice of the Soviet Union, he repeatedly issued orders on the order of consideration of cases of counter–revolutionary crimes. At the same time, being guided by legal formalism and "insuring himself" against possible accusations, he ordered the courts to strictly observe procedural norms when considering any cases.
He took an active part in mass campaigns in cases of labor crimes, in cases of petty hooliganism and petty embezzlement at enterprises, in cases of labor crimes committed at military enterprises and so on.
In 1947–1948, he headed the Permanent Commission for Open Trials on the Most Important Cases of former servicemen of the German army and German punitive bodies, exposed of atrocities against Soviet citizens in the temporarily occupied territory of the Soviet Union.