in 1997 Supported with an audit of the financial and economic activities of the office of the Prosecutor-General of Russia which was investigated by Nikolai Yemelyanov (), Skuratov spearheaded a corruption investigation into the former acting Prosecutor-General of Russia
Alexey Ilyushenko (; b. 23 September 1957,
Anzhero-Sudzhensk,
Kemerovo Oblast,
Soviet Union) and his friend Pyotr Yanchev (). Ilyushenko was forced to resign on 8 October 1995 because of a 97 volume indictment on him involving the theft of 25 million tons of Russian oil, which was worth 2.7 billion rubles, from the Balkar Trading company (). Balkar Trading, formed in
Balashikha, was one of the largest Russian oil traders in the early to mid 1990s and was in competition with
Boris Berezovsky's interests. BAM-Credit (), which had Balkar Trading accounts, was the dominant financier of gold mining in the
Irkutsk and
Magadan regions. Because of a Swiss criminal investigation, the Geneva investigator S. Esposito froze the Swiss accounts of Balkar Trading's Swiss branch known as "Balcar Trading Sari", which was a June 1994 established shell company owned by both his wife Tatiana Vladimirovna Ilyushenko (), who was also an attorney for the Balkar Bank (), and Pyotr Golovinov (; b. 1968 or 1969) who was Yanchev's right-hand man and organized the movement of the foreign assets of Balkar Trading, BAM-Credit, and the
Russian House of Selenga (RDS) () to the Swiss firm "Balcar Trading Sari". On 1 November 1996, the Geneva Prosecutor indictments upheld the frozen Swiss accounts and Ilyushenko was detained in a pre trial jail for the next two years. However, on 11 May 2001, these charges on Alexey Ilyushenko and his friend Pyotr Yanchev (), who was the head of Balkar Trading, were dropped by
Vladimir Ustinov. In the late 1990s, Skuratov and
Carla Del Ponte with Filipe Turover providing evidence investigated Russian corruption involving high ranking Russian officials. Earlier, both Italian and German Tax officials had started investigations into corrupt Russian officials. Felipe Turover Chudínov, a senior intelligence officer with the foreign-intelligence directorate of the
KGB, alleged that $15 billion of IMF funds had been funneled through Switzerland, Lichtenstein and Caribbean countries as black cash or
obschak to support Kremlin friendly operations and companies. ==Scandal and dismissal==