Sergo Goglidze


Sergo Goglidze was a Soviet NKVD official of Georgian ethnicity.

Biography

Born in Korta, a village near Kutaisi, Serghei Arsenievici Goglidze joined the Cheka in 1921. He served with GPU-NKVD border troops, rising through the ranks. In 1934 he was appointed People's Commissar of Internal Affairs of the Transcaucasian SFSR, and, from 1937, of the Georgian SSR. Goglidze was a close associate and friend of Lavrentiy Beria, who promoted him to high-level positions.
In 1941, he was appointed Plenipotentiary of the People's Commissar's Council in Moldavia, and was put in charge of a major deportation. In July 1941, after the start of the war, he was moved to Khabarovsk, working as a chief of the Soviet security apparatus in the Far East.
In 1951, he was moved to the headquarters of the MGB in Moscow, serving as a Deputy Minister of State Security. Goglidze was in charge of the investigation of the Doctors' Plot.
In 1953, after the death of Stalin and downfall of Beria, he was arrested and shot together with a group of other NKVD officers close to Beria.