When Anatoli approached the Kiev police to report this attack, he was mocked. After asking if Anatoli was gay, the police told him to hire a bodyguard or lift weights so that he could defend himself like a “real man.”
The police took no steps to protect Ulyanov. Indeed, just a few days after the attack, an advisor to the mayor of Kiev published an official statement downplaying the beating and saying they would take action against its instigators only if the incident “was not some ordinary domestic squabble in a complicated life of some talkative people.”
The Mayor of Kiev at the time was Leonid Chernovetsky, who was a primary author of the law creating the Morality Commission and oversaw a public television program hosted by Korchinsky.
On March 28, 2009, Anatoli headed to a café in Kiev with Natasha Masharova, another couple, and a bodyguard supplied by a security agency that Anatoli engaged after realizing that his appeals to the Kiev police had fallen on deaf ears. Outside the café, the group saw Dmitry Linko. After Anatoli and Linko recognized each other, Linko began attacking the bodyguard with stones. Anatoli escaped unharmed, but in light of the injuries his bodyguard sustained in the attack, the security agency advised him that he needed to abandon his activism or leave Ukraine.
On April 23, 2009, Anatoli appeared on the popular Ukrainian television show “Shuster Live” to criticize government censorship. Danilo Yanevsky was another guest on the show and used the appearance as a platform to publicly threaten Anatoli once again:
“You will get punched. And you will get punched a second time.”