The defendants were accused of setting up the "All-Union Bureau of Mensheviks."
Vladimir Groman gave a public testimony that he and
Vladimir Bazarov (who was not on trial) headed a counterrevolutionary group in
Gosplan, purportedly organized in 1923, which attempted at "influencing the economic policy of the Soviet authorities so as to hold the position of 1923–25." Groman, being a member of the Presidium of the Gosplan the star figure among the accused, damned himself and his colleagues with testimony that at Gosplan they had spent their time Putting into the control figures and into the surveys of current business planning ideas and deliberately distorted appraisals antagonistic to the
general Party line (lowering the rates of expansion of socialist construction, distorting the class approach, exaggerating the difficulties), stressing the signs of an impending catastrophe (Groman) or, what is close to this, assigning a negligible chance of success to the Party line directed toward the socialist attack (Bazarov, Gukhman) ... The indictment stated that the common goals of the three groups of the accused were the restoration of capitalism in the country by means of a coup, with the support of a foreign intervention and exploiting the connections with Western bourgeoisie and the
II International. The main activities within the country were "
wrecking" (economic sabotage) and disruptive work in the army. ==Final day==