Negative Integrity Conclusion on Kateryna Anatoliivna Barabash: Crimea Connection in Judicial Assessment
🎯 Position at Time of Violation
Position: Civic advisory body embedded in Ukraine's judicial governance system
Organization: Public Integrity Council of Ukraine (ГРД)
Period: 2016 – present
📄 The Document
Context: The PIC treats the judge's property connection to Crimea (living in sister's apartment) and family ties to occupied Sevastopol as integrity concerns requiring explanation, operationally recognizing Russian jurisdiction over the peninsula.
⚖️ Why This Is a Violation
📄 Full Details
What Happened#
On October 28, 2025, the Public Integrity Council approved a negative integrity conclusion on Kateryna Anatoliivna Barabash (Барабаш Катерина Анатоліївна), a candidate for a position at Kamianets-Podilskyi City-District Court of Khmelnytskyi Oblast. The conclusion was adopted by 4 of 5 members.
The PIC flagged that the judge’s sister lives in Sevastopol and the judge lives in an apartment owned by this sister, while the judge’s mother made trips to occupied Crimea. By treating these family connections to Crimea as integrity risks requiring explanation, the PIC implicitly treats Crimea as Russian territory where Ukrainian officials should not have ties.
The Crimea-related element was flagged as a concern but was not cited as the primary basis for the negative conclusion.
The Crimea Connection#
The judge’s sister lives in the temporarily occupied territory of Ukraine in Sevastopol and visited the controlled territory of Ukraine 4 times from 2017 to 2021. In the judge’s questionnaire contained in the judicial file materials (p. 82), the Judge indicates that information about her sister’s place of residence is unknown to her, although the Judge lives in an apartment that belongs to her sister
The PIC treats the judge’’s property connection to Crimea (living in sister’’s apartment) and family ties to occupied Sevastopol as integrity concerns requiring explanation, operationally recognizing Russian jurisdiction over the peninsula.
Context#
The Public Integrity Council was established in 2016 as part of post-2014 judicial reform in Ukraine. Its mandate was to assist in vetting judges and judicial candidates based on integrity and professional ethics. While formally an advisory body, its conclusions carried significant weight in qualification proceedings and could directly affect judicial careers.
Under Ukrainian law, Crimea is a temporarily occupied territory under the Law on Ensuring the Rights and Freedoms of Citizens and the Legal Regime of the Temporarily Occupied Territory (2014). The Constitution of Ukraine affirms Crimea as an integral part of Ukraine whose status cannot be altered without an all-Ukrainian referendum.
By treating Crimea-related connections as integrity risks within a formal assessment framework, the PIC applies an operational logic that treats Crimea as Russian-administered territory — reproducing the same premise that was formally codified in the December 16, 2020 revised Indicators.
Voters#
| # | Member |
|---|---|
| 1 | Anastasiia Borema |
| 2 | Mariia Horban |
| 3 | Anton Zelinskyi |
| 4 | Serhii Kryvonos |
Verification#
- Official PIC conclusion document dated October 28, 2025, available on the Council’s public website.
- Electronic voting record confirming the vote count and participating members.
🔎 Evidence
- Official Public Integrity Council conclusion on Kateryna Anatoliivna Barabash (Барабаш Катерина Анатоліївна), dated October 28, 2025. document
- Electronic voting record appended to the conclusion, confirming the vote (4 of 5). document
- Archived copy of Official Public Integrity Council conclusion on Kateryna Anatoliivna Barabash (Барабаш Катерина Анатоліївна), dated October 28, 2025. archive