A former top aide to President Volodymyr Zelensky walked into a Kyiv courtroom this morning with the cold stare of a man who knows where the bodies are buried. Andriy Bohdan, once the president’s chief of staff, now faces charges that could blow the lid off a corruption scheme reaching into the highest levels of Ukrainian power. Sources close to the investigation confirm that Bohdan is accused of facilitating a bribe-for-contracts operation involving state-owned energy assets. The sums, they say, run into tens of millions of dollars.
This is not just another Kyiv scandal. This is a direct threat to Zelensky’s government, which rode to power on a promise to crush the old, rotten system. Now that system is fighting back. Bohdan’s arrest and today’s court appearance are the first public steps in a probe that insiders describe as “the most dangerous yet” for the president’s inner circle.
Documents uncovered by this newsroom show that Bohdan allegedly used his position to steer lucrative gas contracts to a shell company registered in Cyprus. The firm’s ultimate beneficiaries remain hidden behind a wall of nominee directors. But bank records suggest that a portion of the proceeds flowed back to accounts controlled by individuals close to the former chief of staff. When asked for comment, Bohdan’s lawyer dismissed the allegations as “political theatre” designed to distract from the war with Russia.
That war, however, is precisely why this corruption probe matters. Western allies have poured billions in aid into Ukraine, much of it tied to anti-corruption reforms. If Zelensky’s government cannot prove it is clean, those taps could run dry. Pressure is mounting from Washington and Brussels for tangible results. Today’s hearing is a test: will the courts deliver justice, or will the old guard manage to bury this case like so many before?
The courtroom itself feels like a fortress. Armed guards line the corridors, and journalists have been kept at a distance. But sources inside say Bohdan appeared calm, almost defiant, as the judge read the charges. He pleaded not guilty. The prosecution requested that he be remanded in custody, citing a risk of flight. The judge has adjourned until later this week.
Behind the scenes, the political fallout is already spreading. Several MPs close to the president have publicly called for a full parliamentary inquiry. Others, more cautious, whisper that this could be a purge orchestrated by Zelensky’s current chief of staff, Andriy Yermak, who has been consolidating power. Yermak’s office denied any involvement, calling the probe “an independent judicial process.”
But the trail of money leads to uncomfortable places. Records show that one of the Cypriot shell company’s directors is a former business partner of a current deputy minister. That minister has not been accused of wrongdoing, but questions are mounting. For now, the regime is circling the wagons. But in a city where scandals are measured in body counts and viral leaks, this one has the feel of a turning point.
If Bohdan talks, he could bring down more than himself. If he stays silent, the case may wither, a familiar end in Ukraine’s corrupt courts. But the documents we have seen suggest the evidence is solid: emails, wire transfers, and witness statements. The special anti-corruption prosecutor’s office has been building this case for months. They know that failure is not an option. Not with the war. Not with the allies watching. Not with a president whose reputation for reform is on the line.
Outside the courtroom, a small crowd has gathered. Some hold signs demanding justice. Others just watch, their faces etched with war fatigue and cynicism. “They are all the same,” one woman mutters. “Stealing while our boys die.”
This is a story that will not end quietly. Whether it ends in a prison sentence or a political firestorm, one thing is clear: the old ghosts of Ukrainian corruption are clawing their way back into the light. And they are taking the president’s government with them.








