A 36-year-old Russian crypto tycoon met a fiery end when his flashy Lamborghini Urus slammed into a barrier and erupted in flames on Moscow’s International Highway. Alexei Dolgikh, already notorious for his tangled dealings with Russian banks over shady money moves, didn’t stand a chance; the £329,000 speed machine flipped like a coin before becoming a fireball, leaving banknotes fluttering down the asphalt like macabre confetti.
Dolgikh and his buddy Ivan Solovyov were toast—gone on impact. Two younger passengers, barely out of their teens, are clinging to life in critical condition. Cops clocked the Lambo doing a reckless 93 mph when it kissed that barrier, a final thrill in a life crammed with fast cars and faster cash.
Here’s the kicker: in just 15 months of owning that beast, Dolgikh racked up over 500 traffic fines, almost all for speeding. Talk about living in the fast lane. His grisly exit isn’t just another rich guy’s wreck—it’s part of a dark trend hitting Russia’s crypto big shots. Days before, the dismembered remains of another Russian crypto figure, Roman Novak, and his wife, Anna, were discovered in the Dubai desert.
The Novaks had vanished after traveling to meet alleged investors in Dubai’s Hatta region. Investigators later detained three Russian suspects linked to the couple’s abduction and murder, including a former homicide detective and two ex-soldiers who fought in Ukraine. Reports suggest the group demanded access to Novak’s cryptocurrency wallet, only to find it empty.
Authorities believe the couple was killed when their captors failed to secure ransom funds. Novak had been under investigation for the alleged theft of more than £380 million from global investors before his death.
Two dead crypto kings, two brutal finales. In Russia’s shadowy digital gold rush, fast money and faster exits go hand in hand—no happy endings here. Just burned cars, empty wallets, and bodies stacking up.
Source