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St. Petersburg Information and Analytical Center SPb IAC

Company

Owners

+ Committee on Informatization and Communication of St. Petersburg

St. Petersburg Information and Analytical Center (St. Petersburg IAC) is a state unitary enterprise working in the field of informatization and information support of bodies of state power St. Petersburg and other organizations, as well as the provision of services in the field of creating and using modern information telecommunication and information systems, tools and technologies.

St. Petersburg IAC is under the jurisdiction of the Committee on Informatization and Communications of St. Petersburg.

The SPb IAC is responsible for the development and implementation of information and information-analytical projects and systems in various subject areas.

The expertise of SPb IAC is based on many years of successful work in the field of informatization of state authorities and a number of projects for state and commercial companies.

The main tasks of St. Petersburg IAC are the creation, maintenance and systematic integration of information and information-analytical systems of the Administration of St. Petersburg and its subordinate organizations based on modern achievements of information and telecommunications technologies.

History

2018: FAS convicted KIS and IAC of concluding contracts without bidding

2014: Fraud revealed in the structure of the St. Petersburg IT Committee

On November 6, 2014, the Main Investigation Department of the Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs for St. Petersburg and the Leningrad Region conducted searches at the State Unitary Enterprise "Information and Analytical Center" (St. Petersburg IAC), subordinate to the city's IT committee, St. Petersburg media reported.

According to them, searches were carried out as part of a criminal case initiated earlier, in October, on the fact of fraud on an especially large scale. It was revealed following an audit of the execution of a state contract in the amount of about 17 million rubles, concluded between St. Petersburg IAC and Nova Plus in 2011.

Under the terms of the contract, Nova Plus was supposed to ensure the uninterrupted operation of communications equipment in city state institutions. The work was supposed to be carried out by 16 engineers, however, as the audit showed, in fact only three of them were engaged in this, and the rest were listed only on paper. Thirteen residents of St. Petersburg surveyed by operatives, whose names and passport numbers were listed in the contract, acts of work performed and payroll, were not aware that they had ever collaborated with St. Petersburg IAC and Nova Plus.

Law enforcement agencies found that the work under the contract with St. Petersburg IAC was carried out by "dead souls."

During the investigation, the SPb IAC explained that they did not see the engineers themselves, since they worked directly at the facilities, but dealt only with the chief engineer of Nova Plus. He submitted applications and participated quarterly in summing up the work and compiling time sheets, on the basis of which certificates of acceptance of the services provided were signed, after which they were sent to the accounting department for payment.

The official commentary of the Committee on Informatization and Communications of St. Petersburg, which is referred to by the St. Petersburg media, states that after the arrival of the new head, Ivan Gromov, in 2012, the work of contractors of subordinate state unitary enterprises was checked. During it, a dubious state contract was discovered. The materials on it for further verification by law enforcement agencies were transferred by the committee itself.

"Due to the
fact that the inspection materials showed signs of corpus delicti, these materials were sent by the governor's administration to law enforcement agencies in order to make a procedural decision," the committee said, emphasizing that the contracts with Nova Plus were terminated after the audit..

The commentary also notes that the management of the IT Committee and St. Petersburg IAC intends to contribute in every possible way to the investigation so that the economic police can determine both the level of damage caused to the state as a result of concealing the company's funds from taxation, and determine whether the contracts in 2011 contained a corruption component and in favor of which officials.

2013: St. Petersburg IT Committee challenges suspicious IAC state contract

At the end of April 2013, the Arbitration Court at the suit of the Committee on Informatization and Communications of St. Petersburg (IT Committee) invalidated the state contract for the provision of services to maintain and update the databases of the protected AIS of the territorial executive authorities of the city for 2012.

The controversial contract was concluded at the end of 2011, even before the appointment of Ivan Gromov as IT Director of St. Petersburg, between the subordinate city IT committee of the St. Petersburg Information and Analytical Center (IAC) and Pi-Sistema LLC. The cost of services under the contract was about 27 million rubles.

As follows from the court decision, the IT committee motivated the requirement to invalidate the state contract by the fact that the IAC did not agree on the signing of the contract, which is a major transaction, with its founder - the city Property Management Committee, although under the law "On State and Municipal Unitary Enterprises" was obliged to do this.

Data from the databases of legal entities, in turn, indicate an even more curious context of this transaction: in particular, the executing company may be associated with the former management of the IAC itself. So, according to the Spark base, Pi-Sistema was established by Margarita Vasilievna Kuzko. An employee with exactly the same name, according to media reports, in 2009 was responsible for working with passports in the IAC and at the same time was a co-founder and general director of the Prestige travel company.

The second co-founder of Prestige, according to the Unified State Register of Legal Entities, is Boris Isaev, whose name and surname coincide with the name and surname of the former head of the IAC, who subsequently transferred to the St. Petersburg IT Committee as the first deputy chairman. In 2010, according to the Spark base, Margarita Kuzko changed her surname to Isaev.

It is worth noting that in 2009, the St. Petersburg media indignantly wrote that the IAC unexpectedly became an intermediary in the "travel agency-OVIR" chain when receiving passports, which is why the latter began to cost citizens more.

It is noteworthy that during the trial with the IT Committee of St. Petersburg, the data on the founder of Pi-Sistema in the Unified State Register of Legal Entities were changed: now he is not Margarita Kuzko (Isaeva), but Andrei Krutolevich.

Before the IT committee demanded that the state contract with Pi-Sistema be invalidated, the latter and the St. Petersburg IAC had already met in court. In particular, Pi-Sistema sued the IAC because it did not pay for its services under this state contract for the 2nd quarter of 2012 - 13.5 million rubles, and demanded to pay her this amount, as well as a penalty for late payment.

It follows from the court decision in this case that in June 2012, the IAC sent a letter to Pi-Sistema about the refusal of services under the contract due to the fact that the contractor "improperly fulfilled its obligations." However, the court ruled in favor of Pi-Sistema and ordered it to pay the required amount.

1980-1995

St. Petersburg IAC was formed as a result of the reorganization and renaming of the municipal enterprise "Collective Computing Center of the Executive Committee of the Leningrad City Council" (VTSKP).

The All-Russian Central Executive Committee was created in October 1980 by the decision of the Executive Committee of the Leningrad City Council.

In March 1985, the All-Russian Central Executive Committee withdrew from NTPO Lensistemotechnics and became an independent organization.

The creation of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee was caused by the need of the executive power of the city, enterprises and institutions of the city economy for automated data processing.

In April 1995, the All-Russian Central Executive Committee was renamed the state enterprise "Information and Analytical Center of the St. Petersburg City Hall" (IAC).