When Kirillin passed away unexpectedly in 1978, he left behind a modest American bank account, a few personal effects, and a very big question: Who gets the money?
Under Soviet law at the time, private inheritance was tricky. The state claimed a significant chunk of an estate, and the bureaucratic hurdles to move money out of the U.S. and into the USSR were nearly insurmountable. Initially, the Soviet Consulate attempted to claim the funds on behalf of Kirillin’s family back in Moscow. But American banks refused to release the assets without a court order. The USSR argued that diplomatic immunity or consular notification should suffice. first of a soviet citizen to undergo probate
The man at the center of this legal anomaly was , a Soviet trade representative who died suddenly in Manhattan. His case set a precedent that no one in the State Department had ever considered: What happens to a Communist official’s inheritance when it’s sitting in a capitalist bank? The Deceased: A Man of the State Vladimir Kirillin wasn't a defector or a dissident. He was a loyal Soviet bureaucrat working for Amtorg Trading Corporation, the USSR’s purchasing agency in New York. In the 1970s, détente was thawing relations, allowing more Soviet officials to live and work in the U.S. than ever before. When Kirillin passed away unexpectedly in 1978, he
But in 1978, a probate judge in New York City found himself at the epicenter of a diplomatic first. For the first time in history, the assets of a Soviet citizen—who had died in the United States—were officially recognized and processed through the American probate system. and into the USSR were nearly insurmountable