24
April 2011

Russia’s Crime of the Century

Foreign Policy

If there remains any pretense that justice and rule of law exist in Moscow today, that notion should now be counted as pure fantasy. The case of Sergei Magnitsky — a senior partner at my law firm who was imprisoned, tortured, and murdered after his efforts to shed light on a massive governmental fraud by Interior Ministry officials stealing subsidiaries of my client’s company, the Hermitage Fund, and the $230 million of taxes they had paid — has illuminated the cruelty and criminality of Russian legal enforcement. And new evidence released last week on YouTube as part of the broad campaign seeking justice for Sergei, goes even further — exposing the blatant theft, impunity, and ill-gotten gains of senior Russian tax officials who were complicit in the fraud and subsequent murder of my colleague.

The very bureaucrats — government tax officials on modest salaries in Moscow Tax Office 28 — exposed by Sergei three years ago of perpetrating the massive fraud stashed millions of dollars in overseas bank accounts, created offshore companies, and purchased luxury villas in Dubai, Montenegro, and Moscow. Worse still, the Kremlin and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, in particular, have refused — out of embarrassment, inability, culpability, or incompetence — to review and prosecute what is now overwhelming evidence of this clear crime.

Read More →

21
April 2011

Moscow tax official’s $39 million fortune revealed

Associated Press

A Moscow tax official who approved a fraudulent $230 million tax return in 2007 has bought luxury real estate in Moscow, Dubai and Montenegro and wired money through her husband’s bank accounts worth $39 million, a U.S. investor said Monday.

All that was done with an average annual household income equivalent to $38,000, according to documents released by William Browder, an American-born investor barred from Russia.

Browder has been campaigning against Russian corruption since 2009 when his lawyer died a year after being sent to prison. Authorities have not explained why Browder was himself expelled as a security risk in 2005 in the first place.

Read More →

21
April 2011

Tax official blasted over the Magnitsky affair

The Moscow News

A sudden boom in the finances of a former tax official has come under the spotlight as part of a campaign to keep up the pressure on those allegedly involved in the incarceration and subsequent death of Sergey Magnitsky.

Olga Stepanova, a former tax official, and her family members became unwilling stars in a new video, part of the “Stop Untouchable!” campaign. Activists want to get justice for Magnitsky, a lawyer who died in pre-trial detention custody in 2009.

Jamison Firestone, Magnitsky’s former colleague at Firestone Duncan, has filed a claim to the Investigative Committee, calling for a criminal case to be opened against Stepanova, the then head of Moscow’s tax inspectorate no. 28.

Read More →

21
April 2011

Russian Officials Said to Reap Wealth in Tax Case

New York Times

After accusing government officials here of involvement in large-scale tax fraud three years ago, Sergei L. Magnitsky, a lawyer for a major international investment fund, was arrested and jailed for nearly a year until he died mysteriously in detention.

Mr. Magnitsky’s claims have never been fully investigated, and on Monday, a year and a half after his death, his former colleagues unveiled information that they said showed that the officials he implicated had become astonishingly wealthy.

The findings are the latest in a series of independent investigations into Russian officials by Mr. Magnitsky’s supporters, including William F. Browder, the owner of Hermitage Capital Management, the fund that Mr. Magnitsky represented. A $12 million country house outside Moscow and seaside villas in Dubai and Montenegro are some of the purchases made by the officials since Mr. Magnitsky made his accusations against them, according to the investigation.

Read More →

21
April 2011

Swiss Prosecutor to Investigate Money-Laundering in Hermitage Case

Wall Street Journal

Switzerland’s prosecutor Thursday said it is investigating money-laundering allegations linked to Credit Suisse Group after a complaint by Hermitage Capital, following the 2009 death of the U.S. investment firm’s attorney while in Russian custody.

The November 2009 death in Butyrka prison of Hermitage attorney Sergei Magnitsky, who claimed to have unraveled a complicated scheme through which Russian interior ministry officers took control of three subsidiary companies formed by Hermitage, gained broad international attention and refocused Western concerns about corruption and the lack of judicial independence in Russia.

Read More →

21
April 2011

Hermitage claims against Russian official prompt Swiss probe

RIA Novosti

Switzerland has opened a money-laundering probe against a former Russian tax official at the request of British investment company Hermitage Capital Management Ltd., the Barron’s weekly said on Thursday.

Prosecutors are investigating suspicious transactions in a number of Credit Suisse accounts opened on behalf of the husband of former tax official Olga Stepanova. Stepanova approved the refund in 2007 of $230 million to scammers impersonating Hermitage Capital.

The Russian Interior Ministry has blamed the theft on Hermitage lawyer Sergei Magnitsky, who first reported the theft. Magnitsky died in a Moscow pre-trial detention facility in 2009 after being refused medical treatment for pancreatitis.

Read More →

21
April 2011

Browder’s Russia Money-Laundering Allegations Spark Swiss Investigation

Bloomberg

Switzerland has opened a money- laundering probe at the request of Hermitage Capital Management Ltd., the first criminal investigation outside Russia linked to the death of lawyer Sergei Magnitsky in a Moscow prison.

The allegations involving a former Russian tax official are the most recent lodged by Hermitage founder William Browder as he asks authorities around the world to sanction officials he blames for Magnitsky’s death. The lawyer, who alleged Interior Ministry officials fraudulently collected a $230 million tax refund using documents seized from Hermitage, died in 2009 after a year in pre-trial detention.

“It’s been impossible to get any kind of real criminal investigation in Russia,” Browder said yesterday by phone. “It’s highly significant that a Western law enforcement agency is taking this seriously and is launching an investigation.”

Read More →

21
April 2011

Russia reopens tax case linked to lawyer’s death

Agence France Presse

A Moscow court on Tuesday reopened a hearing into the alleged theft of hundreds of millions of dollars from a US investor by Russian police in a case that led to the death of his jailed lawyer.

The November 2009 death in Butyrka prison of ailing 37-year-old attorney Sergei Magnitsky sparked Western outrage and refocused investor concerns about corruption and the lack of judicial independence in Russia.

Magnitsky claimed to have unravelled a clandestine scheme through which Russian interior ministry officers won control of three subsidiary companies formed by the US investment firm Hermitage Capital.

Executives at Hermitage — formed in 1996 and once ranked as the world’s best-performing fund in emerging markets — discovered the theft after learning that their own companies had inexplicably moved to different cities.

Read More →

21
April 2011

Officials in Russian tax fraud case stashed millions offshore

Washington Post

The American investor who once employed Sergei Magnitsky, a whistle-blowing lawyer who died unattended in a Moscow jail cell in 2009, said Monday that tax officials involved in the fraudulent $230 million refund scheme that Magnitsky was trying to expose have bought millions of dollars’ worth of real estate in Russia, Montenegro and Dubai, and stashed millions more in offshore bank accounts.

The accusation, which came in the form of a YouTube video and an application to the investigating committee of the Russian prosecutor’s office, includes banking and property records that appear to back up its allegations.

“This information is so damning that if Russia continues to deny that anything happened, it becomes impossible for Western leaders to look [President Dmitry] Medvedev in the eye and see him as a legitimate head of state,” said William Browder, the investor who runs Hermitage Capital and who has spent the past year and a half trying to expose the circumstances of Magnitsky’s incarceration and death.

“This is a pivotal moment for Russia,” he said.

The choice facing Russian leaders, he said, is whether to “hang these people [the tax officials] out to dry,” thus jeopardizing the loyalty of the legions of other corrupt officials who make up the system today, or continue to deny that Magnitsky was the victim of a conspiracy and deal with a loss of trust internationally and probable sanctions.

A spokesman for the Russian tax agency said Monday it would have no comment.

The case has attracted considerable international attention. The United States, Europe and Canada have moved to place sanctions on the movements and overseas holdings of 60 Russian officials who were involved in it.

It began in 2007, when police raided two subsidiaries of Hermitage Capital here, and seized corporate records and stamps. A year later Magnitsky discovered that control of the companies had been transferred— Browder says they were stolen — and that they were applying for a $230 million tax refund. That refund was granted within the space of a day, and the money was deposited in a Russian bank that has since gone out of business.

Hermitage’s accusation says the money was sent to an account at Credit Suisse in Switzerland. That account was then used to buy properties at a development in Dubai for several officials at the tax office that handled the refunds, according to records supplied with the accusation. The head of the office, Olga Stepanova, also bought a seaside home in Montenegro and built a design-award-winning house in Moscow’s most prestigious suburb, the complaint says.

In all, Browder said, Hermitage believes that it has traced up to $43 million of the tax refund. The company argues that the tax officials were aided by the police officers who raided the Hermitage affiliates, the same ones who later arrested Magnitsky. They have since been decorated and promoted. Browder said the company has about 100 sources within Russia who have provided information about the case.

Magnitsky was taken into custody in November 2008 after he alerted authorities to the scheme, and he was charged with planning it himself. Denied medical care, he died in apparent agony after spending a year in jail. In Browder’s view, he was murdered.

A Russian court ruled in 2009 that the tax refund was a fraud. But prosecutors said that the tax officials were duped into approving it. Apparently none of the money has been recovered.

Stepanova, who with her husband reported an income of less than $40,000 a year, left the agency after the Hermitage deal; Alexei Navalny, the crusading anti-corruption blogger, says she now works for the state-owned company that handles delivery of Russia’s weapons sales. A representative of that company said Monday she would not confirm that Stepanova works there.
buy over the counter medicines займ на карту https://www.zp-pdl.com https://zp-pdl.com/online-payday-loans-in-america.php payday loan

екапуста займ онлайн на карту credit-n.ru займ на киви кошелек мгновенно
онлайн займ на карту маэстро credit-n.ru займ онлайн на киви кошелек срочно
быстрые кредиты с плохой кредитной историей credit-n.ru займ на карту сбербанка мгновенно
вивус займы credit-n.ru займ на карту без отказа без проверки