Viktor Shemchuk

Ukrainian politician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Viktor Viktorovych Shemchuk (Ukrainian: Віктор Вікторович Шемчук; born 4 November 1970) is a Ukrainian politician.

Preceded byMykhailo Kostiuk
Succeeded byOleh Salo
Succeeded byOleksandr Medvedko
Quick facts Governor of Lviv Oblast, Preceded by ...
Viktor Shemchuk
Віктор Шемчук
Governor of Lviv Oblast
In office
2 March 2013  31 October 2013
Preceded byMykhailo Kostiuk
Succeeded byOleh Salo
Acting Prosecutor General of Ukraine
In office
24 May 2007  1 June 2007
Preceded bySvyatoslav Piskun
Succeeded byOleksandr Medvedko
Presidential representative of Ukraine in Crimea
In office
21 February 2007  4 May 2007
Preceded byHennadiy Moskal
Succeeded byVolodymyr Khomenko
People's Deputy of Ukraine
6th convocation
In office
23 November 2007[1]  12 December 2012
ConstituencyOur Ukraine–People's Self-Defense Bloc, 33rd on party list
Personal details
BornViktor Viktorovych Shemchuk
(1970-11-04) 4 November 1970 (age 55)
PartyNon-partisan
Alma materLviv University
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Early life

Shemchuk was born on 4 November 1970 in the city of Ternopil, which was then part of the Ukrainian SSR in the Soviet Union.[2] After graduating from the University of Lviv in 1993 within the Faculty of Law, he started working as an intern at the Prosecutor's Office of Ternopil.[2] He steadily worked his way up within the office until 1999, becoming an assistant prosecutor, investigator, then senior investigator.[2]

In January 1999, he transferred to the Proseecutor's Office of Simferopol, becoming an investigator there.[2] He was then appointed Deputy Head of the Department for Oversight of Special Units Fighting Organized Crime there, and was the head of that department until 2005.[2] In 2005, he was briefly acting prosecutor for AR Crimea, before being fully appointed as prosecutor for AR Crimea until 2007.[2]

Political career

In 2007 he served as a Presidential representative of Ukraine in Crimea.[2] That same year, he served as Acting Prosecutor General of Ukraine, and then again as Prosecutor of AR Crimea.[2] However, with the ban on dual mandates, when he was elected during the 2007 Ukrainian parliamentary election as a People's Deputy, he gave up those positions. He was elected from Our Ukraine–People's Self-Defense Bloc, as no. 33 on the list, and served as a member of the Committee on Legislative Support of Law Enforcement, and he served for one term until 2012.[2]

In March 2014, he came back into power when he was appointed Governor of Lviv Oblast, which he did until October 2013.[2] He then became an adviser to the President of Ukraine.[2]

Later years

In 2014, after his retirement from politics, he became an associate professor Hetman Petro Sahaidachnyi National Ground Forces Academy in Lviv, working there until 2016.[2] Simultaneously, he worked as a scientific consultant to the Verkhovna Rada Committee on Law Enforcement and as deputy head of the working group on cyber-security and cybercrime legislation reform.[2] Since 2017, he has been deputy chair of the Qualification‑Disciplinary Commission of Prosecutors.[2]

References

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