A Kaliningrad resident recently learned that his driving license had been revoked, a consequence tied to an attempt to replace a lost license from 2011. As reported by the Amber Mash Telegram channel, the individual’s situation unfolded when he sought a duplicate license after losing his document in 2011 and later dealing with enforcement actions years later.
The man, identified as Sergey Malyshev, says he lost his driver’s license in 2022 and separately approached the MFC to obtain a new one. According to his account, the Kaliningrad license was denied and subsequently forwarded back to the traffic police. The explanation he received indicated that his license had been withdrawn back in 2011 due to his refusal to undergo a medical examination.
Six years after this deprivation, Malyshev’s license was replaced with a new document due to the expiration of the prior licenses. Yet he then lost this newer document as well. Even after pursuing a court case, he has not been able to recover the license. The recalculated disenfranchisement period, it is noted, will end six months from now, potentially allowing him to reapply or regain driving privileges once the period lapses.
In a separate note, it was previously reported that a stranger, acting through Telegram, convinced a resident of Moscow to set a car on fire. This claim highlights the broader concerns about manipulation and the spread of dangerous instructions through messaging platforms, underscoring the potential risks and legal consequences involved in such online activity.