Russian exiled journalist makes a bombshell claim about Viktor Orban’s alleged secret luxury palace in Moscow

The rumor about a 7,000 m², 89 million dollar palace near Moscow for Viktor Orban surfaced online from Russian opposition journalist Rostislav Murzagulov, who says he has documents showing that such a property in the Greenfield settlement, a luxury elite cottage settlement located 23–24 km from the Moscow Ring Road (MKAD) along the prestigious Novorizhskoye Highway in the Istrinsky district, was bought for Orban using money from a Russian car‑industry scheme.

Various outlets and social media posts repeat Murzagulov’s story, but they all trace back to this single source and to documents he has not yet made public in a verifiable way.

So his story goes like this.

Rostislav Murzagulov disclosed that he had received a package of documents that allegedly reveal the mechanism of a hidden “bribe” by Putin to Viktor Orban.

Viktor Orban heavily promoted the Takata automotive supplier plant in Miskolc with state funds. Following Takata’s global bankruptcy due to fatal airbag defects (exploding inflators), the group was acquired by the US Key Safety Systems (KSS), a subsidiary of the Chinese Joyson Group.

According to Murzagulov, the buyers’ capital was insufficient. Only through long-term supply contracts, which Putin is said to have forced upon Russian automakers, did the buyers receive the necessary credit collateral for the billion-dollar takeover.

The company Joyson Safety Systems Rus served as the key Russian vehicle to generate the necessary credit collateral for the billion-dollar takeover of Takata’s assets through state-enforced supply contracts.

These contracts secured the profitability of the Miskolc plant, in whose construction and operation structures linked to Orbán’s confidant Lőrinc Mészáros were involved. The Russian scheme was used to purchase a palace for Viktor Orbán in the Greenfield settlement on the outskirts of Moscow.

The palace covers 7,000 square meters and is valued at 89 million US dollars. Members of the FSO (Federal Protective Service) recently removed the owner’s name from this property’s databases.

This is an indirect indication that the luxury estate does not simply belong to a businessman, but to a person whose data is classified as a state secret. The palace is not a mere gift but a strategic tool of dependency that makes Orbán blackmailable through criminal involvement while guaranteeing him a secure exile under Putin’s control. The journalist is prepared to hand over the originals of these documents to the relevant authorities and journalists in European countries.

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