Earlier, Litvinova posted a post on her Telegram channel in which she wished Sobchak strength during the time "when everyone rushes at one and poisons."

“Dear Renata, we are all very worried about the hunted.

True, less than for those who are now on the front lines, and not in the backyards of countries that supply weapons from which our people are killed.

And we wish you the strength to realize a simple truth - you can’t poison people, you can’t poison people for money either.

Bullying for money is punishable by law,” Zakharova wrote.

The diplomat noted that bullying is calling people "genetic scum", considering children "little bastards", mocking other people's shrines and arrogantly humiliating those who are weaker and poorer.

“But when it’s also for money, and not just, but the money of forces deliberately destroying the country and people, this is a slightly more complicated story,” she added.

On October 26, a source told RT that Sobchak had left Russia prior to the searches of her Moscow suburban home and the arrest of her commercial director, Kirill Sukhanov, in an extortion case.

According to the interlocutor, Sobchak herself also became a defendant in this case and could have been detained if she had not left Russia.

The ex-editor-in-chief of Tatler, Arian Romanovsky, was also detained in the case of extortion.

TV presenter Tina Kandelaki published in her Telegram a photo of Israeli documents of Ksenia Sobchak.

Prior to this, Sobchak claimed that she did not have Israeli citizenship.

In turn, the head of the Lithuanian State Security Department, Darius Jauniškis, officially confirmed that Sobchak was in the country and entered it with an Israeli passport.