Armenian billionaire Gagik Tsarukyan arrested on charges of $21m fraud and money laundering

08 July 2026 , 20:59
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Armenian billionaire Gagik Tsarukyan arrested on charges of $21m fraud and money laundering
Armenian billionaire Gagik Tsarukyan arrested on charges of $21m fraud and money laundering

An Armenian court on Tuesday ordered billionaire businessman and opposition leader Gagik Tsarukyan to be held in pre-trial detention for two months on charges of large-scale fraud and money laundering.

Tsarukyan, long one of Armenia’s most influential and flamboyant public figures, is as well known for his eccentric wealth as his politics. He made international headlines in 2023 for launching plans to erect a massive statue of Jesus Christ in Armenia, and videos of his private residential menagerie—where he kept exotic wild cats—frequently went viral online.

Now, those exotic animals and his massive business empire are at the center of a sweeping criminal crackdown. Tsarukyan was arrested Monday after security forces raided his private mansion and more than 70 corporate locations, including his sports complexes, a brandy factory, and the AraratCement plant.

According to Armenia’s Investigative Committee, Tsarukyan orchestrated a criminal group between 2022 and 2024 that used joint logistics and freight ventures to defraud Iranian businesses out of 52 vehicles, machinery, and fuel worth $21.07 million.

"Thereafter, while concealing the imports through the creation of a false appearance of legitimate commercial activity, they falsified import customs declarations and misappropriated property with a total value of over $21 million," the committee said. 

Authorities also accuse him of separately defrauding an Iranian national out of $900,000 in a fuel transaction.

Speaking to reporters outside the Investigative Committee building, Tsarukyan rejected the allegations, calling the case "completely fabricated and false," claiming his Iranian counterparts actually owed him money. His lawyers called the charges "absurd" and characterized the prosecution as politically motivated.

The arrest follows a swift political downfall for Tsarukyan’s Prosperous Armenia Party, a dominant legislative force for nearly two decades. In last month’s parliamentary elections, the party fell just a few hundred votes short of the 4 percent threshold required to enter parliament. Hours after the defeat, the government slammed Tsarukyan with a travel ban. He challenged the election results, but Armenia’s Constitutional Court rejected the appeal on July 4—just two days before the raids began.

The legal assault on Tsarukyan’s wealth has since expanded rapidly across multiple fronts, extending even to the wildlife kept at his estate. As part of a separate illegal-hunting probe involving $80,000 in environmental damage, officers seized 190 taxidermied animals and removed three live lions and a tiger from his mansion to the Yerevan Zoo.

Controversy erupted when one lioness failed to wake from sedation and died. Tsarukyan’s spokesperson defended the private facilities as "exceptional" and superior to the municipal zoo, while authorities announced an inquiry into the animal’s death.

Simultaneously, prosecutors are targeting the tycoon’s primary commercial assets. Just a week after the election, a court confiscated a $100 million plot of ski-resort land in Tsaghkadzor from the National Olympic Committee, which Tsarukyan has led for over 20 years, CivilNet reported

Furthermore, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s government has announced plans to nationalize Tsarukyan’s AraratCement plant, citing privatization violations dating back to the early 2000s.

Tsarukyan has faced intense judicial pressure before. He was detained in 2020 over election vote-buying allegations before being released on bail, and he and his family remain targeted in separate civil asset-forfeiture proceedings over properties prosecutors claim are of illicit origin. According to the Investigative Committee, his current two-month detention can later be extended or substituted with house arrest.

Editorial Team

Sophia Martinez

World Affairs Correspondent

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