Considering that we are talking here about the Russian Bank, and the alleged Russian citizens who sell their legal bank cards to interested customers through intermediaries - there is something called Schengen Visa that every Russian citizen must get in order to enter the EU (legally of course). Such a visa is usually valid for a maximum of 90 days after it is issued, and the issuance of the visa and monitoring of its duration is supervised by the immigration authorities via a database.
First thing that you should know, is that an overstayed visa never goes unnoticed. The immigration authorities have registered in their databases every person that enters and leaves the Schengen, and every overstaying, even just for a day, is recorded. Secondly, intentional or unintentional, no overstaying is left unpunished. It could be a fine, immediate deportation or even getting banned from entering the Schengen Zone for a specific amount of time.
I am not misleading people or writing nonsense, there is nothing wrong with what I have stated in any post.
Again nonsense.
I guess you do not know that EU states can issue so called national visas that allow to stay 365 days a year in some EU country and 90 days in the whole EU.
I have had in the past D-type national Polish visa and stayed all the year in EU that way legally.
I confirm again that the type of pan european monitoring you mentioned in your previous post exists only your mind.