 Russia's security forces granted access to Yevgeny Prigazin's burial site in St. Petersburg on Wednesday, August 30, after a low-key private funeral for the Wagner boss was held on Tuesday. Most of the first people to visit the grave were members of the press, with only a handful of members of the public and people wearing Wagner insignia scene at the burial site. Secrecy surrounded arrangements for Tuesday's closed funeral meaning it could not turn into a large-scale show of support for the man whose massive mutiny in June amounted to the largest-ever threat to President Vladimir Putin's rule. Putin did not attend the ceremony, according to the Kremlin. Russia says Prigazin was on a plane that crashed into a region on August 23 killing all ten people on board, including key Wagner figures Dmitry Utkin and Valery Chekolov. Russian authorities have not said why the plane crashed, and the Kremlin has rejected speculation that Putin ordered Prigazin's death over the mutiny as an absolute lie.