The first trial On 12 March 2003 Khudyakov was accused of the murder of civilian residents of Chechnya, and on 17 March 2003 he was summoned to the military prosecutor's office of the city of Khankaly as a witness. The accused were charged with a murder, robbery, willful destruction of someone else's property and abuse of the officer. The accused pleaded not guilty of the murder and in June 2004 they were acquitted by North-Caucasian district military tribunal. Later the Military collegium of the Russian Federation's Supreme Court repealed the guilty verdict and the case was submitted to a new trial.
The second trial In October 2005 Arakcheev and Khudyakov were acquitted again by the jury. During the second trial some of the associates of the accused retracted their testimony. The soldier Ermolyaev explained to the jury that his previous testimony had been given under duress: "I was beaten many times, called to the interrogation at night, and the interrogator threatened to put me behind bars with Chechen fighters".
Ramsan Kadyrov, the future President of Chechnya and a former Chechen rebel, commented on this acquittal saying that "the initial cause of the acquittal was the jury’s failure to fully understand the will of my [Chechen] people in this criminal case". But that time prosecutors did not find any procedural infractions in the course of the trial. Then-president of Chechnya
Alu Alkhanov made a request to the
constitutional court of Russia, which determined that the jury was to be formed according to the territorial principle, that is, from subjects of the Federation in which the crime was committed. As there is no jury trial in Chechnya, the military men were to be judged by competent judges. On 25 April 2006, on the basis of this order of the constitutional court, the Supreme Court recalled the second acquittal, having submitted the case to the North-Caucasian district military tribunal again for re-trial by another composition of the court. In this case "another composition of the court" meant a single judge.
The third trial On 19 December 2006, the preliminary hearing took place in the North-Caucasian district's military tribunal and resulted in the change of the measure of restraint for Arakcheev and Khudyakov, and on 20 December the officers were arrested in the courtroom and sent to the Rostov pretrial detention center. The aggrieved party in its motion for detention of Arakcheev and Khudyakov stressed the fact that during the second trial the accused influenced the witnesses. But the higher authorities (the Supreme Court of the Russian Federation) in its order from 25 April 2006, determined the measure of restraint for the military men as recognizance not to leave, and after that there were no infringements. On 1 February 2007, the Military collegium of the Russian Federation's Supreme Court at the request of the Russian
State Duma members
Dmitry Rogozin,
Aleksey Mitrofanov and
Sergei Baburin disaffirmed the decision of the North-Caucasian district military tribunal about the arrest of the officer of Internal Troops Sergei Arakcheev. Arakcheev and Khudyakov were released in their own custody. On 27 December 2007 Arakcheev and Khudyakov were sentenced to 17 and 15 years of imprisonment, respectively. However, only Arakcheev was placed under detention as Khudyakov did not come for the sentence pronouncement and hid himself from the law-enforcement authorities having broken the recognizance not to leave. On 14 January 2008, Evgeny Khudyakov was put on a federal wanted list. He was arrested and taken into custody in 2017. Arakcheev commented on his decision: I made a decision to stay and go [with this trial] to the end. Because if I went into hiding, then those who influenced and twisted my case, those who destroyed evidence, those who falsified testimony, those who revoked the jury verdicts - they would win. They would say: "You see, we were right - he is guilty, he ran away." I could not allow this to happen. I have nothing on my conscience and I have no reason to run. The lawyers of the accused appealed against the sentence, but on 28 August 2008, the Russian Federation's Supreme Court kept guilty verdict for two former officers in force. Arakcheev was released on parole in December 2016. In 2022, Khudyakov was released from prison early after volunteering for service in the
Wagner Group in the
Russian invasion of Ukraine. He was killed in action on 10 September 2022. == Rehabilitation ==