The verdict was announced behind closed doors after midnight and the six main defendants, including the
mayor of the city, were
executed by shooting on 1 October 1950. Stalin's government had reinstated the
death penalty in the Soviet Union on 12 January 1950; it had previously been repealed in 1947. It was applied to the accused
retroactively. Over 200 Leningrad officials were sentenced to prison terms from 10 to 25 years. Their families were stripped of rights to live and work in any major city, thus limiting their lives to
Siberia and other remote regions of the country. About 2,000 of Leningrad's public figures were removed from their positions and exiled from their city, thus losing their homes and other property. All of them were
repressed, together with their relatives. Respected intellectuals, scientists, writers and educators, many of whom were pillars of the city's community, were exiled or imprisoned in the
Gulag prison camps. Intellectuals were harshly persecuted for the slightest signs of dissent, such as
Nikolai Punin, who was killed in a prison camp for expressing his dislike of Soviet propaganda and "tasteless"
Lenin portraits. The Leningrad affair was organised and supervised by Malenkov and Beria. Executions and purges were done by
Viktor Abakumov and the
MGB. The graves of the executed leaders of Leningrad were never marked and their exact locations are still unknown. All of the accused were later
rehabilitated during the
Khrushchev Thaw, many of them posthumously.
Alexei Kosygin, the future
Chairman of the
Council of Ministers, and
Iosif Shikin, the political director of the Red Army, survived but their political careers were hampered for some time. ==References==