« With regard to the archives of the Uraloblsovet and Ural Cheka, today we can not say with certainty, are it survived or not. All attempts to find these archives have not been successful – and such attempts were undertaken yet in the 1920s. My conscience is at peace; I made a serious effort to this search.»
…
Amazing! Surprisingly the following:
1. There is no doubt that these archives were safely evacuated from Yekaterinburg between 17 and 25 July 1918. It is known that the trains left from Yekaterinburg in those days without problems, and Yakov Yurovsky himself calmly went in train to Moscow with a large luggage (the royal family jewels and documents) – he left Ekaterinburg in a few days after the murder of the royal family. The Bolsheviks and the Ural Cheka had 7—8 days to quietly take out all their archives to Moscow.
2. We know how reliably and passionately there guarded and are guarding communists and especially Cheka to their archives. And the archives of Uraloblsovet and Ural Cheka were lost in Moscow?! It is impossible to believe!
3. Pay attention to the fact that there are inaccessible the archives just of the period from May to December 1918: April 30, Tsar’s family was taken to Yekaterinburg; on July 17, the murder took place; but till December 1918 Cheka continued the searching of the Tsar’s youngest daughter (Anastasia) across all controlled by them Russian lands. – That’s why there are inaccessible the archives of the period from May to December 1918!
Hence the conclusion:
These archives from the very beginning were so secret that till now it is unavailable even for goverment investigators (!). Or these archives were destroyed by the Bolsheviks (KGB) after their arrival in Moscow – because we know (according Soloviev’s words), that yet in the 1920s it was allegedly lost. My version of why these archives could be destroyed or forever classified as top secret, you can read in the section «Why did Stalin in 1928 canceled the anniversary of the execution of Tsar.»
These archives, presumably, contained the information so much divergent from the official version, contained in the so-called «Notes of Yurovsky» that chiefs of security officers found it necessary to destroy or scramble forever all these documents. It is also possible that these archives contained details of such atrocities against the female part of the Tsar’s family (according one of the versions they were exported to Perm) that the current leadership of the FSB and the Kremlin finds it impossible to open these files. It is also possible that the files contain information about the fate of the severed head (after the execution) of Nicholas II, who, according to one version, was preserved in alcohol and taken to Moscow to prove the fact of the execution of Tsar. By the way, in the book of Helium Ryabov about the search history of the remains («How was it. The Romanovs. Hiding bodies, the searching and the consequences», 1998), as I recall, there is a chapter about this severed head, where Ryabov said about his dream: at the beginning of the search, he was summoned to the KGB Chairman Andropov, who pulled out of the safe and showed him alcoholized head of Nicholas II… It is only one not documentary chapter inside the fully documentary book… Ostensibly it was a dream?
Photographer Yurovsky and photo-apparatus Kodak
Twenty years ago Edvard Radzinsky in his book («Nicholas II. The Life and Death») wrote that Yakov Yurovsky knew the photo-business and loved to photograph – so strange that he did not two photos: a living Tsar’s family (in the basement of the Ipatiev’s house), and second, terrible photos – the corpses of family members… Both photos were needed to Moscow. Photo of alive Tsar’s family was necessary to Lenin for the misinformation of the world community, especially due that since just before the execution (July 16), Lenin assured the correspondent of a Danish newspaper, that the Tsar’s family is alive and safe. Photos of corpses were needed for Yurovsky himself in Moscow, for the upcoming report about the execution…
The evidence was absolutely necessary for the report to Sverdlov. He never did believe anyone on the word, and Yurovsky knew this from previous work with him.
All jewels of Tsar’s family would not could be evidence of the death of alltheir members. Ural Bolsheviks and their leader Sverdlov were known not only as the most brutal red thugs (yet since 1905), but also as the most stringent and brutal in the relationship between them themselves. They did not trust absolutely no one. We can no doubt that Yurovsky was obliged to present for Sverdlov the solid evidence of killing of allmembers of the Tsar’s family – photos of corpses.
We also know that in those days Yurovsky has had a photo-apparatus – German camera Kodak – the one that was confiscated during the search of Alexandra Feodorovna 17 (30) April in Ipatiev House – the first day of her arrival there. Radzinsky wrote about this referring to the memories of the commandant Avdeeva (the first commandant of the Ipatiev House). In addition, Radzinsky, made a reference to the entries in the book of the Guard on duty:
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