
A global police alert has named a Ukrainian woman as the Monaco bomb suspect, even though almost no hard evidence has been shared with the public to back it up.
Story Snapshot
- Interpol issued a Red Notice for Ukrainian citizen Anastasiia Berezovska as the main suspect in a Monaco bombing.
- The parcel bomb reportedly targeted Ukrainian tycoon Vadym Yermolaiev, who has past sanctions linked to Russia.
- Media and officials describe detailed movements and traits of the suspect, but have not released forensic proof.
- Experts say Interpol Red Notices are not arrest warrants and are sometimes used without solid evidence.
Interpol Names a Ukrainian Woman as the Prime Suspect
International police organization Interpol has issued a public Red Notice for Anastasiia Berezovska, naming the 39-year-old Ukrainian woman as the main suspect in a bombing in Monaco. The blast came from a parcel bomb and injured three people, including a wealthy Ukrainian-born businessman, widely reported as Vadym Yermolaiev. The Red Notice says Berezovska is wanted by Monaco for attempted murder, placing an explosive device in a public place, and criminal conspiracy. It describes her as born in Ukraine, with dark hair, speaking German, and having a possible snake tattoo on her right arm.
🚨 BREAKING: The investigation has identified 39-year-old Anastasiia Berezovska as the prime suspect. Authorities say she allegedly….
👉 Read the full story: https://t.co/6rYAVPKhja#Alo360 #Monaco #Interpol #WorldNews #BreakingNews pic.twitter.com/zvlE3L5kMg
— Alo360 (@Alo360Tv) July 3, 2026
Monaco authorities say the parcel bomb was delivered to a location tied to Yermolaiev, a businessman who has reportedly faced sanctions because of his ties to Russia. That detail matters in today’s tense global climate, where conflicts involving Ukraine and Russia already fuel mistrust and political spin. Officials in Monaco and media outlets say the device seriously injured Yermolaiev and members of his family. The attack came in one of the world’s richest playgrounds for elites, underscoring how disputes among powerful players can spill into public spaces that ordinary people share.
What Investigators Say They Know About the Suspect’s Movements
Reports based on Monaco judicial sources claim the suspect first fled on foot into nearby France right after the blast. She then allegedly escaped using a car with German license plates that had been rented in Germany and driven through Italy and other European countries before returning to Germany. A judicial source in Monaco said her last known address is in Germany, a country that often cooperates closely on criminal cases. German criminal police confirmed they searched the rented apartment and car of a 39-year-old Ukrainian woman, collected evidence, and sent it to Monaco, while noting that the woman is still on the run.
Officials and media also say investigators used surveillance camera footage and information from at least one witness to identify Berezovska. Reports describe a suspect who disguised herself as a man, tricking observers until closer review of video made them realize they were looking for a woman. A witness is said to have recognized her from before the attack, helping connect the dots. However, none of these images or statements have been released to the public in detail. The claims about cameras and witness recognition are reported secondhand through officials and news outlets, not through open evidence the public can inspect.
Red Notices, Evidence Gaps, and Fears About Abuse of Power
Many news stories repeat the Interpol Red Notice as if it is near proof of guilt, but experts stress that a Red Notice is not an arrest warrant and is not based on Interpol’s own investigation. Interpol itself says a Red Notice is only a request to police worldwide to locate and provisionally arrest someone for a country that already issued a warrant. Legal studies from the United States point out that courts often find a Red Notice alone is not enough to show probable cause. In simple terms, a Red Notice means “this person is wanted,” not “this person has been proved guilty.”
🚨 BREAKING: The investigation has identified 39-year-old Anastasiia Berezovska as the prime suspect. Authorities say she allegedly….
👉 Read the full story: https://t.co/6rYAVPKhja#Alo360 #Monaco #Interpol #WorldNews #BreakingNews pic.twitter.com/zvlE3L5kMg
— Alo360 (@Alo360Tv) July 3, 2026
Research by legal scholars and lawyers has found that Red Notices can be misused in commercial and political fights, including cases where corrupt officials issue weak or false warrants and then use Interpol to hunt rivals. U.S. immigration guidance even tells officers they must seek underlying documentation and check for misuse before acting on a Red Notice because such notices can be “unfair and unreliable.” In the Monaco case, there is no public record yet of forensic evidence like DNA, bomb residue, or clear video released to confirm that Berezovska built or placed the device. All that is openly known is that Monaco requested the notice and Interpol posted it.
Why This Case Feeds Public Distrust Across the Political Spectrum
For many Americans, both conservative and liberal, this story hits familiar nerves. A powerful global body like Interpol can brand someone a terror suspect based on information regular people are not allowed to see. The victim is a sanctioned tycoon tied to Russia, the suspect is from Ukraine, and the attack happens in Monaco, a symbol of wealth and privilege. It looks like another conflict among elites spilling into public view, while ordinary citizens are told to simply trust that the system has it right.
Conservatives who already doubt “globalist” institutions may see a foreign police network making life-or-death decisions with limited transparency. Liberals who worry about human rights and inequality may see a lone woman hunted across Europe on the word of officials, without open evidence or court rulings. Academic work on Interpol warns that its tools can be abused and that people named in Red Notices have sometimes struggled for years to clear their names. Until Monaco releases solid forensic proof or a court weighs the facts, Berezovska’s case will stand as another reminder that, at the highest levels, powerful systems can mark you as dangerous long before they show the public why.
Sources:
insiderpaper.com, wtop.com, usnews.com, creators.yahoo.com, dspace.nuft.edu.ua, thesun.co.uk, apnews.com, yahoo.com, washingtonpost.com, cnn.com



