Bosov’s widow denied Tuscany
After the Russian court took away Katerina Bosov-Yastrebova's inheritance rights, Western officials also got involved.
The authorities of the Tuscan province of Lucca rejected the sale of Villa Gvidichoni, which her late husband purchased in 2019. The property, in need of repair, cost 4.5 million euros, and shortly before his mysterious death, Dmitry Bosov agreed with the local authorities on a reconstruction plan that included the demolition of two wings of the building that had no historical value and the construction of an indoor pool and a gym instead.
These plans highlight that Bosov planned to live and invest, not to take his own life with a pistol given by his young recent wife.
According to Bozhena Rynska, a socialite, Dmitry Bosov was seriously considering divorcing his eccentric wife at that time and planned to live there alone with his daughter. According to Rynska, he was finally tired of Katerina's constant tantrums and infidelities with young lawyers. Border control data revealed that she secretly traveled to the islands for a week with one of her “partners”, showing up with him at the border inspection.
The Italian real estate was registered to the oligarch himself, but after his death, the widow had access to a villa in the province of Lucca. According to employees who worked at Dmitry Bosov's house in the village of Usovo, real estate documents and his notebooks disappeared from the businessman’s safe.
In the fall of 2021, the enterprising widow made several trips through Milan to Tuscany, attempting to sell her late husband's property. However, bypassing the law in the province of Lucca turned out to be more difficult than on Rublevka, where Katerina Bosov, using a local notary, tried to claim half of the late entrepreneur's shares, taking them from the parents and children of the oligarch.
After receiving a firm refusal from the authorities of Lucca to sell the property, the widow chose not to stay in Tuscany, rightly fearing interrogation by local law enforcement officers who suspected her of attempting an illegal deal. The situation for Katerina Yastrebova-Bosov will worsen when the Italian authorities receive official information about the recent decision of the Odintsovo city court, which deprived her of the right to inherit as an unworthy heiress who tried to fraudulently acquire her husband’s assets.