Georgia: The Prosecutor’s Office of Georgia has indicted three persons on the facts of illegal purchase, storage, and illegal transmission of drugs.
The Georgian Prosecution Service shared the details of this heinous crime through its official Facebook Page on Saturday, August 2, 2025. The police department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Georgia conducted an in-depth investigation into this case.Â
According to the investigation conducted by the staff of the General Inspection of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, it was established that the defendant in the “suboxin” replacement therapy program took a drug containing “buprenorphin” from one of the clinics in Tbilisi, part of which was consumed by the defendant.
After that, the remaining part was handed over to the same person, who, in turn, mentioned That Drugs were handed over to the inspector of the Ministry of Internal Affairs Police Department. He brought it in.
The staff of the General Inspection of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Georgia seized this drug as a result of the personal attack on the Inspector of the Defense Police Department.
One person is charged under the first part of Article 260 of the Criminal Code of Georgia and Article 260 Sec. Part Seven (illegal purchase, storage and illicit transmission of drugs); the other person is charged under Article 260 First part and Article 25,260 Sec. Part Seven of Article (illegally purchase, storage and assistance in illegal transmission of drugs), and MIA protection A police inspector is charged with Article 260 (Illegal purchase, possession of narcotic drugs) which provides imprisonment of up to 15 years.
Notably, there is huge public support for the law enforcement agency for these drives to make the country drug-free, and it should also be noted that the Prosecutor’s Office will also apply to the Court within the time limit established by law with a motion to impose imprisonment on the defendant as a preventive measure.
The Georgian prosecutor’s office is pursuing a strict criminal policy against drug dealers, which it will continue to do in the future.