U.S. Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco, who attended a security forum in Aspen, Colorado, made statements about the operations they carried out against the Russian oligarchs.
ONE OF THE FEW EGG REMAINING IN THE WORLD
Monaco, giving details about their operation on a super yacht belonging to a Russian oligarch, said, “Let’s come to the most interesting part, the yachts. We found a Fabrege egg on one of these yachts. Therefore, the situation becomes interesting.” Monaco, which did not give more details about the seized yacht, stated that the yacht belonging to the Russian oligarch left Fiji last month and anchored in San Diego.
Monaco stated that if the egg turns out to be real, it means it is one of the few eggs left in the world and would be worth millions of dollars.
50 UNITS MANUFACTURED IN THE Tsarist PERIOD
Faberge eggs, which were designed to be given as a gift to the Empress, wife of Russian Tsar Alexander the 3rd, on Easter Feast, but became a tradition, have survived to the present day and have become an indicator of luxury and splendor. He knows that 50 pieces of Faberge eggs, which became a tradition in the Romanov dynasty, were produced, but some of them are not found today.
On the other hand, within the framework of the US sanctions against Russia, the 107-meter luxury yacht named Amadea, worth 300 million dollars, belonging to the Russian oligarch Suleiman Kerimov, was launched on May 5 in Lautoka, Fiji, upon the request of the US Department of Justice and the Federal Bureau of Investigation ( It was seized by Fiji law enforcement with support from the FBI. It is estimated that the Faberge egg in question was found on the yacht belonging to Kerimov. (UAV)