BDK, no, that is a completely separate B-25. The one in the photo in this thread is the one that was completed by Aero Trader to static-only condition for the (undisclosed) Russian museum, and was covered in an article in Warbirds International in 2017 - I believe it was only briefly fully assembled and pulled out for photos for the article, before it was disassembled and shipped. Rod Lewis' B-25J is finished in a tri-color upper camouflage over gloss black lower surface paint scheme (through both its original restoration and repairs), where as the B-25J completed for the Russian museum, as seen in the photo in this thread, was painted in OD over grey (both are authentic finishes).
You'll note that also, unlike Rod Lewis' B-25, the static Russian museum B-25, as seen in the picture in this tread, was completed to look more historically accurate - including the correct wartime carb scoops, all 28 short stack exhaust fairings, and although lacking the rare internal Bendix turret setup, the turret dome and frame is of the correct Bendix type (not the incorrect Martin type, as seen on the Lewis and numerous other B-25's). The Lewis B-25 also has the post-war civilian extra windows added behind the cockpit.
According to the Wabirds International article, the static Russian B-25J (as seen in the photo in this thread) comprises the cockpit section and rear fuselage of one of the two B-25J's used in the filming of "Tora! Tora! Tora!", 44-31504 (N9753Z), and a center section that had been discovered in a fire pit in Porterville, CA (identity of the airframe it came from unknown). The tail section incorporates parts from B-25J 44-31104 (ex-N39E) and B-25J 45-8882 (ex-N32T). Although restored to static, the WI article states it took over 5,300 man-hours to complete.
It's not the whole article, but a clipping of the first two pages can be seen here, and shows the aircraft as it looked assembled just before it was disassembled and shipped to Russia:
http://warbirdsintlnow.com/issue-spread ... Bomber.pdf