A Kamyshlov woman, once honored with the medal “Mother’s Glory” in the Urals region, is facing possible charges for beating and issuing threats of death. Reports from a local newspaper indicate she has a history of legal trouble and has been tried on multiple occasions in the past. E1.
Throughout the years, she has accumulated administrative penalties for mistreating adults and children, humiliating others, or damaging property. Courts have issued only small fines, yet violations have recurred. This mother of seven was previously convicted of similar offenses and has been monitored by the Child Affairs Inspectorate since the age of 10.
Her early life featured delinquent acts, including theft as a teenager and an assault on a 17-year-old friend with a log. The convict attributes a family history of antisocial behavior, noting that his mother and grandmother, both of whom he defended, also have prior records for hooliganism.
In 2009, the girl faced another beating conviction, a crime committed not long after her first release from prison.
As authorities moved toward administrative accountability for minor assaults, the woman appears to have perceived that violence could be exercised with minimal personal consequence. Over time, she reportedly engaged in frequent fights, stripped people of their clothing, insulted children, and continued to accrue fines that remained unpaid.
In recent weeks, a 33-year-old woman described as a “hero mom” is reported to have bitten a neighbor.
Psychiatric examination linked to the case determined that the accused, Irina, was sane. The proceedings began in mid-2022, a period during which she gave birth to her seventh child.
One lawyer involved in the case remarked that childhood intervention and monitoring of the family had not produced the intended effects. He suggested that the measures taken to support the family had limited impact, and that removing a child from a household that cannot be stabilized might have shaped different life outcomes for the accused’s children.
The man indicated his plan to push for criminal charges against the offender for the perceived unpunished acts of violence.
There is also interest in pursuing a criminal case over a death threat, a crime that carries the possibility of imprisonment. Yet, the lawyer cautioned that even if a severe sentence is imposed, there may still be an opportunity for suspension of the sentence because the youngest child was under 14 at the time of the alleged offenses, and the defendant had shown exemplary conduct in the interim.
Despite this, the lawyer believes that an actual risk of imprisonment could serve as a meaningful deterrent against abusive conduct by a parent with many children.
Earlier incidents tied the same individual to a separate altercation at a Ryazan playground used by local children. The person in question is the guardian of five biological children and five foster children.
According to the mother of the injured boy, police responses have been slow, and district officers have reportedly not answered calls. The mother fears the offender may escape punishment altogether.