 Russian General Serovkin ordered to keep silent and not leave residence. Sergei Serovkin, deputy commander of the joint grouping of Russian troops in Ukraine, has been suspended from his job, placed under house arrest, and ordered to keep quiet until his name is forgotten. Political media outlet, citing Russian military bloggers and media outlets, reported that there was no official investigation into Serovkin's actions, but he was placed under house arrest. The VCHK-OGPU blog, which is considered close to Russia's security forces, reported that Serovkin has been permitted visitors, including several of his subordinates. There is no official investigation, but Serovkin spent a long time in Limbo answering uncomfortable questions. The general has been advised to stay under the radar so that he is forgotten. Politico wrote, the Russian blog also reported that the decision on Serovkin's must be taken by one person and the longer this takes, the more this person will cool down, meaning Putin. A few days earlier, Russian State Duma MP Viktor Sobolev reported that Serovkin had been removed from his duties as commander of the Kremlin's troops in Ukraine. Sobolev also hinted that Serovkin could still be useful to the Russian army later, if no serious violations were found against him. On the 12th of July, Russian media outlets reported that Serovkin had been detained by counter-intelligence in connection with the mutiny led by Evgeny Prigoshin. Earlier, the Russian FSB announced that the case of Prigoshin's mutiny in Russia was closed. However, Serovkin, who has been repeatedly linked to Prigoshin by western media, has not appeared in public since his address to the Wagnerites on the night of the 23rd to the 24th of June, in which he called on them to lay down their arms. Bloomberg also wrote that the general had been interrogated by military prosecutors for several days about his ties to Prigoshin. The agency's source claimed that Serovkin was being held in a certain place but not in prison.