Ukraine's anti-corruption court places Zelenskiy's former chief of staff under arrest


Former Head of the Presidential Office Andriy Yermak, who according to the National Anti-Corruption Bureau of Ukraine is a suspect in a corruption probe, appears at court for a hearing on the choice of a preventive measure, amid Russia’s attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine, May 12, 2026. REUTERS/Alina Smutko

KYIV, May 14 (Reuters) - Ukraine's anti-corruption court on Thursday ordered the arrest ⁠of Andriy Yermak, a close ally of President Volodymyr Zelenskiy ‌and former head of his administration, on money-laundering charges.

The court also set bail at 140 million hryvnias ($3.19 million), which would allow Yermak, who has denied the allegations against him, to be ​released pending a final ruling in his case.

"I ⁠don't have that kind of ⁠money, and my lawyer will now work with friends and acquaintances (to raise the ⁠money ‌for bail)," Yermak told reporters after the court's decision.

"My legal team will file an appeal. We will use every legal avenue to ⁠seek justice and the truth."

Ukrainian authorities on Monday named ​Yermak as a suspect ‌in a major corruption probe. His arrest was the closest that ⁠anti-corruption officials have ​come to the president's inner circle.

In a statement, Ukraine's anti-graft agencies said Yermak is suspected of participating in a criminal group that laundered around $10.5 million through an ⁠elite housing development outside the capital Kyiv.

Yermak was ​widely seen as Ukraine's second most powerful person after Zelenskiy, wielding outsize influence across much of Ukrainian politics despite holding an unelected position.

The former film producer ⁠and entertainment lawyer frequently appeared at the president's side at public events, and had also been Kyiv's lead negotiator in U.S.-backed peace talks with Russia.

His resignation last year came amid a broader government shake-up aimed at restoring trust ​in the president's office, which has been shadowed ⁠by allegations of centralised power.

Charges against Yermak are not likely to pose an ​immediate threat to Zelenskiy, but could lead to ‌longer-term reputational damage if he runs for ​re-election after the war, some analysts say.

($1 = 43.89 hryvnias)

(Reporting by Pavel Polityuk and Dan Peleschuk; Editing by Daniel Flynn and Sharon Singleton)

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