Posts Tagged ‘borshchev’

19
July 2011

Russia Says It Will Try Jail Doctors in ’09 Case

New York Times
Twenty months after a 37-year-old lawyer died in pretrial detention after repeatedly requesting medical care, the authorities on Monday announced that criminal cases have been opened against two former prison doctors in connection with his death.

The announcement came as lawmakers in several countries threatened to impose sanctions on officials linked to the prosecution of the lawyer, Sergei L. Magnitsky, who had been drawn into a feud between Russian officials and his employer, Hermitage Capital, an investment fund based in London.

Russia’s top investigative body said the two suspects in Mr. Magnitsky’s death were Dr. Larisa Litvinova, who oversaw Mr. Magnitsky’s treatment during the last weeks of his life; and Dr. Dmitri Kratov, formerly the chief medical officer of Butyrskaya Prison.

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19
July 2011

Two Arrested In Magnitsky Case

Robert Amsterdam

It has been reported this afternoon that the Investigative Committee has charged two former prison doctors in connection with the death of Sergei Magnitsky, the Hermitage Capital lawyer who died in pretrial detention in 2009, after being denied treatment for pancreatitis. Since Magnitsky’s death a barrage of criticism has been launched against the Kremlin for its failure to investigate the death of the corruption-fighting lawyer, who claimed to have discovered a $230 million tax fraud case that involved high-ranking officials.

Some will greet the news of the arrests as a positive step forward, hot on the heels of the Russian Human Rights Council’s report on the affair, published ten days ago, which concluded that Magnitsky may have been beaten to death. The report’s apparent acknowledgement of official wrongdoing in the matter has been hailed by Hermitage Capital as an admission of guilt.

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08
July 2011

Report Blames Prison Officials In Magnitsky Death, Russian President Cites ‘Criminal Actions’

FIN Alternatives

Nearly two years after Sergei Magnitsky died in a Moscow prison, Russian President Dmitri Medvedev called his treatment “criminal” in the wake of a damning report blaming prison officials for the hedge fund lawyer’s death.

A report issued yesterday by Medvedev’s investigative council concluded that Magnitsky, who represented Hermitage Capital Management, “was completely deprived of medical care. Additionally, there are grounds to suspect that Magnitsky’s death was the result of a beating,” and not merely the pancreatitis he contracted during the year he spent behind bars on suspicion of tax evasion.

One member of the investigative committee went even further, telling The Telegraph, “we have concluded he died of a beating. It was real torture to beat an ailing man with truncheons.”

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07
July 2011

Russia’s Medvedev sides with human rights activists on Sergei Magnitsky killing

Christian Science Monitor

Russian President Dimitry Medvedev surprised many when he backed a report blaming the 2009 fatality of anticorruption lawyer Sergei Magnitsky on prison brutality.

But Russian President Dmitry Medvedev appeared to do that Tuesday after being handed a scathing report, prepared by the Kremlin’s own human rights commission, that described the 2009 prison death of anticorruption lawyer Sergei Magnitsky as the work of prison guards who savagely beat him and doctors who refused to treat him. The report also blamed top officials for covering up the whole affair.

“The case of Magnitsky is a very sad case, for this man is dead, and in all likelihood, there were certain criminal actions that led to this result,” Mr. Medvedev said after meeting with the commission, an advisory body that includes some of Russia’s top human rights campaigners.

While the Kremlin commission’s advice is often ignored, experts say things might be different this time. The report given to Medvedev, which clashes sharply with the findings of an official investigation, not only describes the appalling conditions Mr. Magnitsky was subjected to but also names several prison officials and medical authorities who allegedly colluded in the abuse.

“Our report is no abstract document,” says Valery Borshchev, a former Duma deputy and coauthor of the report. “We name the people actually responsible for what happened to Magnitsky and cite the evidence that permits us to accuse them of corruption and other legal violations. We name the doctors who withheld medical assistance from him. We don’t name any top officials because their involvement has yet to be proven.”

Unlawful arrest, brutal detention

Magnitsky, a lawyer with the British-based Hermitage Capital, had filed a 2008 lawsuit alleging a $230 million tax fraud by a number of top Russian law enforcement officials. Within weeks, he was arrested by some of those same officials, charged with fraud, and taken to Matrosskaya Tishina, a notorious Moscow pretrial detention center.

A year later, Magnitsky died of heart failure in prison after apparently being denied medical treatment. The case, which seemed to exemplify the worst of Russia’s corruption-ridden justice system and violence-plagued prisons, attracted widespread attention. At the time, Medvedev promised a full investigation.

But the official inquiry presented Monday found no fault with prison officials and merely blamed unnamed doctors for not acting efficiently in his case.

“The experts identified deficiencies in the medical care given to Magnitsky during his detention, which may have prevented a timely diagnosis of his chronic illness,” a spokesman for the official Investigative Committee, Vladimir Markin, told journalists. “In this regard, he was not provided with timely and appropriate treatment.”

But the report given to Medvedev the next day by the Kremlin human rights panel provided evidence that Magnitsky’s original arrest was unlawful, that his detention was marked by beatings and possibly torture aimed at extracting a confession of guilt, and that prison officials instructed doctors not to treat him.

“It is clear that Magnitsky, who was in a critical state of health, was beaten in prison,” says Mr. Borshchev.

On the night he died “he was delivered to Matrosskaya Tishina in serious condition. But the doctor on duty, instead of treating him, allowed eight guards to take him into a small cell in handcuffs. The doctor also called an ambulance, but it was not allowed to enter the prison gates for over an hour. When [medical personnel] were able to enter, Magnitsky was already dead. It is a recorded fact that he had been beaten by truncheons,” he says.

“We insist that several members of the [official] Investigation Committee be made to answer for their conduct, as well as certain judges who abetted his illegal arrest, prolonged his detention and denied his relatives permission to visit him in prison …

“It is clear that the system swept down on Magnitsky and destroyed him,” he adds. “The lesson here is that a person is defenseless against the system.”
Signs of reform

Some members of the commission say that the fact that Medvedev has defied the official investigation and admitted that “criminal actions” played a role in Magnitsky’s death means that the system can be reformed.

“I think Magnitsky’s case is proof that our society, supported by the president, can force the system to be accountable,” says Kiril Kabanov, head of the official National Anti-Corruption Committee. “Right now we have a lot of other cases similar to Magnitsky’s, which means that what happened to him is not that unusual.”

He says there is a lot of institutional resistance to revealing and punishing abuses, and dealing with it will require a big push from the Kremlin.

“Officials tend to cover up and protect their workers [who commit abuse], and seem ready to accuse anybody else – even international conspiracies – for the allegations against them, rather than own up to the real state of affairs,” he says.

Another commission member, former judge Mara Polyakova, says reform will not be easy.

“This case spotlights all the defects of our law enforcement organs and courts which we’ve long known about,” she says. “The fact that the Magnitsky case has attracted such resonance is good, but don’t imagine all the vice we’re dealing with can be eliminated at a single stroke. The system itself is vile, and change will be a long, hard struggle.”

International pressure

Last month Russia’s top prosecutor, Yury Chaika, slammed the US Senate for introducing a bill, the Sergei Magnitsky Rule of Law Accountability Act of 2011, which would deny US visas and freeze the US-based assets of Russian officials accused of committing illegal reprisals against human rights activists. This week, the Dutch parliament unanimously passed a similar resolution.

“Investigative bodies and the Russian justice system are coming under pressure. I believe that this is unacceptable,” Mr. Chaika said.

But Masha Lipman, editor of the Moscow Carnegie Center’s Pro et Contra journal, says international pressure like that was probably a big factor in forcing Medvedev to make his public admission.

“What makes this case truly unique is the very diverse effort to compel the Russian government to investigate thoroughly, and not to let the perpetrators get away with it. The president was forced to say something he never would have said in public otherwise,” she says.

“Medvedev’s words suggest an effort by nervous Russian officials to try to soften their position, reconcile with the US, Holland, and other foreign countries. It’s a struggle, but the threat of sanctions against Russian officials, who like to stash their assets abroad and travel to foreign countries, is something that appears to be working,” she says.

“Now we must wait to see what happens next. Is this as far as Medvedev is prepared to go? People are waiting for more than words, they want to see something definitive, proceedings opened, charges laid against the perpetrators. That would be something,” she adds. онлайн займы unshaven girl female wrestling https://zp-pdl.com/online-payday-loans-cash-advances.php https://www.zp-pdl.com hairy woman

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07
July 2011

Crusading Russian lawyer Sergei Magnitsky ‘beaten to death’

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06
July 2011

Police ‘illegally arrested’ lawyer who died in prison

The Times
A group of Russian detectives illegally arrested a lawyer who died in prison after accusing them of a $230 million (£143 million) tax fraud, an inquiry ordered by President Medvedev concluded yesterday.

In an apparent breakthrough in the scandal over the alleged torture and killing of Sergei Magnitsky, the President’s human rights council pointed the finger for the first time at police whom he had accused of corruption.

Mr Magnitsky, 37, died in agony in Matrosskaya Tishina prison, Moscow, in November 2009 after being held for a year in pre-trial detention and being denied medical treatment for serious illnesses. He repeatedly complained that he was tortured in jail to try to force him to withdraw testimony against a group of Interior Ministry police whom he had accused of stealing $230 million.

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06
July 2011

A death in a Russian prison; Rights panel calls for inquiry on treatment of jailed lawyer

Los Angeles Times

He was chained to a cot, a lone prisoner in a small cell facing eight guards who beat him while a summoned ambulance crew was kept waiting outside. When the doctors were finally admitted to the prison, they found Moscow lawyer Sergei Magnitsky dead, his body bruised, most of his knuckles smashed, one of his arms dark blue from a grip of the handcuffs lying nearby.

The attorney’s death in Moscow’s infamous Sailor’s Silence prison was described Tuesday in a report delivered to Russian President Dmitry Medvedev by his advisory human rights council. The panel called for an investigation of possible corruption on the part of officials involved in the nearly yearlong imprisonment of Magnitsky on tax evasion charges.

Medvedev, who had ordered the official investigation shortly after the Nov. 16, 2009, death of Magnitsky, met with members of the council in the southern city of Nalchik.

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06
July 2011

Russian Lawyer Was Beaten by 8 Jail Guards Before He Died, Report Says

ABA Journal

A jailed Russian lawyer who had accused government officials of corruption was chained to a cot and beaten by eight guards immediately before he died in 2009, according to a report to the country’s president by an advisory human rights council.

When an ambulance crew that had been called in advance and then kept waiting for an hour was finally admitted to the cell, they allegedly found Sergei Magnitsky, 37, dead and with most of his knuckles smashed,the Los Angeles Times reports.

Officials said the Firestone Duncan partner had died of heart failure in the prison’s intensive care ward.

“It is clear to us,” Valery Borshchov of the Moscow Helsinki Group tells the Times, “that they wanted to apply pressure on Magnitsky, to teach him a tough lesson. But they went too far and their actions together with lack of urgent medical help caused his death.”

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06
July 2011

Medvedev Admits Lawyer Died From ‘Criminal Actions’

Radio Free Europe

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has admitted the death in prison of a Russian lawyer who accused officials of corruption was the result of “criminal actions.”

Medvedev said the case of Sergei Magnitsky, who died in November 2009 after nearly a year in Russian prisons, was a “sad one.”

“Magnitsky’s case is a very sad one,” Medvedev said. “Ailing people shouldn’t die in prison. If they fall ill, they must be taken out for treatment before a court decides their fate.”

Medvedev made his remarks at a meeting with top Russian human rights officials in the southern city of Nalchik, the hometown of Magnitsky, who worked for Russia’s top equity fund, Hermitage Capital.

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