he was wounded, captured alive, but died on his way to the hospital. Another fighter named Vitaly Kovalchuk (from Vinnytsia) was taken on the track when trying to leave the area of the collision, he was found in a car that was en route to Kharkiv. The militia seized two of the four vehicles. A large number of small arms (including the Yugoslav M53 machine gun) and the Karachun mountain map were found in them. It was a black and white printout of aerial photography with circled objects. The militants were sent there to recapture the height of the militia, which occupied it three days ago, and take control of the TV tower located there. During the search of prisoners and cars found the approval of the “Right Sector” and business cards of the leader of the organization Dmitry Yarosh. Journalists arrived at the scene of the incident and removed the consequences of the battle, including these documents. Russian TV channels showed these footage and reported on the business cards found, which served as proof that radicals from the Right Sector were guilty of attacking unarmed people. Since the “Right sector” itself denied its participation in the attack, then the Ukrainian authorities and the media began to accuse the militias of having planted fake business cards, and mock the Russian propaganda