A paper trail linked to the suspect in the killing of a Georgian citizen in Berlin suggests Russia provided “active support” to the suspect, according to an international team of investigators. Germany last month arrested a man who goes by the name Vadim Sokolov on suspicion of killing Zelimkhan Khangoshvili, who fought alongside anti-Moscow separatists in Chechnya. Sokolov allegedly received a Russian passport, a French visa and traveled to Europe within a month, according to information obtained jointly by the German weekly Der Spiegel, the Russian investigative site The Insider and the U.K.-based investigative outfit Bellingcat.

The outlets’ joint report published Friday provides “overwhelming evidence that the arrested assassin acted with the full support of the Russian state,” Bellingcat said. The team of outlets has obtained a copy of Sokolov’s still-active tax file, which was first opened weeks before he received his passport. The tax file, which Sokolov would need to show proof of employment to receive an EU visa, contained a 2015 Russian passport that raised another flag for Bellingcat. A real-time passport database used by Bellingcat’s unnamed source marked Sokolov as a “person protected by law…To obtain this file, contact an administrator.” The restrictions apparently first appeared after the investigative outlet identified the suspects in last year’s poisoning of Russian defector Sergei Skripal as military intelligence officers. The phone number of Sokolov’s listed employer allegedly matches that of a Russian Defense Ministry-owned company, according to Bellingcat. The outlet had suggested earlier that Sokolov’s passport number linked him to Russian security services. “These findings preclude the hypothesis that this was an organized crime operation, or even a semi-official operation that received only limited support from individual corrupt officials,” Bellingcat said. An anonymous email sent to investigators alleged that the suspect was a contract killer named Vladimir Stepanov released early from a Russian prison to assassinate Khangoshvili, The New York Times reported Wednesday. However, Bellingcat after extensive research called The New York Times’ report a “false lead.”

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