Posts Tagged ‘browder’

15
July 2013

Magnitsky verdict makes a mockery of human rights and of the Russian justice system

ALDE

ALDE Party President Sir Graham Watson MEP says the guilty verdict in the tax evasion case against the late Russian lawyer Sergei Magnitsky makes a mockery not only of the internationally agreed conventions on human rights but also of the Russian justice system itself.

Sir Graham said: ‘’The respect for human rights is a core value for European Liberals and so I speak for many across our continent when I say I am appalled by the way this case has been handled. I agree with those who have described it as ‘farcical’ and ‘deeply sinister’. Mr Magnitsky complained repeatedly about the conditions in which he was held, including solitary confinement in freezing temperatures with overflowing toilets, physical and mental intimidation and the denial of medical treatment which is thought to have contributed to his death. All of this was inflicted on someone who was simply trying to expose wrongdoing on a massive scale, at the expense of the Russian tax payer.”

“No trial can be described as legitimate when the defendant is not able to respond to the accusations against him because he is in fact dead. This is a show trial worthy of the Stalin era. The implication in terms of respect for the internationally-agreed norms of human rights, particularly regarding a fair trial, is frightening and ominous.’’

Note to editors

In 2008, Mr Magnitsky claimed to have uncovered evidence of widespread tax fraud by senior officials totalling an estimated 144 million euros. However, he was arrested himself shortly afterwards and accused of involvement. The 37-year-old died of pancreatitis in custody in 2009 but his supporters claim he had been repeatedly beaten and denied medical treatment.

It is thought to be the first time a case has been tried posthumously in Russian or Soviet history.

Mr Magnitsky’s former client, Briton William Browder, has been convicted in absentia and sentenced to nine years in custody.

A US visa ban and asset freeze for any Russian officials linked the lawyer’s ordeal was agreed under recent legislation known as the Magnitsky law. Europol is said to be investigating whether EU banks have received funds issuing from the case. unshaven girls микрозайм онлайн zp-pdl.com https://zp-pdl.com/apply-for-payday-loan-online.php займ на карту онлайн

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15
July 2013

Dead Lawyer, a Kremlin Critic, Is Found Guilty of Tax Evasion

New York Times

The steel cage reserved for the defendants was empty Thursday, which was not surprising since one of them is dead and the other lives in London. As the judge, his voice nearly inaudible, read out his verdict, one of the main defense lawyers paid no attention, tapping nonchalantly on his tablet computer instead.

If the posthumous prosecution of Sergei L. Magnitsky, the lawyer who was jailed as he tried to expose a huge government tax fraud and died four years ago in a Russian prison after being denied proper medical care, seemed surreal from the moment the authorities announced it, the verdict and sentencing on Thursday did not disappoint.

By all accounts, it was Russia’s first trial of a dead man, and in the tiny third-floor courtroom of the Tverskoi District Court, it took the judge, Igor B. Alisov, more than an hour and a half to read his decision pronouncing Mr. Magnitsky guilty of tax evasion.

Mr. Magnitsky was convicted along with a former client, William F. Browder, a financier who lives in Britain and was tried in absentia on the same charges. Mr. Browder, once Russia’s largest foreign portfolio investor, was sentenced to nine years in prison — a sentence that he will almost certainly never serve. Interpol in late May refused a request by the Russian government to track Mr. Browder’s whereabouts, a relatively rare instance of a law enforcement inquiry’s being set aside as politically motivated.

Mr. Browder, who has been barred from Russia since 2005, said in a telephone interview from London on Thursday that he believed that the Kremlin was acting out of desperation.

“Russia is a criminal regime,” Mr. Browder said. “The Russian state is a criminal state. And in order to operate in Russia, you have two options as a businessman: you can become part of the criminality, in which case you become a criminal, or you can oppose it, in which case you become a victim, and there’s no way you can avoid it.”

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15
July 2013

Russia convicts lawyer Magnitsky in posthumous trial

Reuters

Sergei Magnitsky, a Russian lawyer who died in prison in suspicious circumstances, was found guilty of tax evasion on Thursday in a posthumous trial that has further damaged President Vladimir Putin’s reputation in the West.

The Moscow court also convicted Magnitsky’s former client William Browder, a British investment fund boss who has led an international campaign to expose corruption and punish Russian officials he blames for Magnitsky’s death in 2009.

Browder, tried in absentia, was sentenced to nine years’ jail in the case, which deepened U.S. and European Union concerns over human rights and the rule of law in Putin’s Russia.

“Today’s verdict will go down in history as one of the most shameful moments for Russia since the days of Josef Stalin,” Browder, who is unlikely to be extradited from Britain to Russia, said in an emailed statement.

Amnesty International called Magnitsky’s prosecution – Russia’s first posthumous trial – “deeply sinister”, saying it “set a dangerous precedent that could open a whole new chapter in Russia’s worsening human rights record.”

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15
July 2013

Magnitsky found guilty of tax evasion

Moscow News

Moscow’s Tverskoy District Court has found Sergei Magnitsky, an auditor for Hermitage Capital who died in a Russian prison in 2009, guilty of tax evasion, RAPSI reported from the courtroom.

This is the first time that a Russian court has tried a dead person.

The ruling came Thursday afternoon and also found Hermitage Capital head William Browder, a portfolio investor who came to Russia in the late 1990s, guilty of tax evasion in absentia.

Browder, who lives in London, was sentenced in absentia to nine years in a penal colony after being convicted of tax evasion. The court has also closed the case against Magnitsky in connection to his death.

Browder called the verdict “shameful” and vowed “to fight for justice for Sergei Magnitsky and his family until the job is done,” according to an emailed note.

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15
July 2013

The height of absurdity’: Moscow court finds whistle-blowing Russian lawyer Sergei Magnitsky guilty of fraud – three years after his death

The Independent

One of the more grotesque trials of recent Russian history came to an end as a Moscow court posthumously convicted the whistle-blowing lawyer Sergei Magnitsky of tax evasion.

Mr Magnitsky died in prison in 2009 after being ill-treated and not receiving treatment for pancreatitis. He had uncovered what he described as a massive fraud scheme that he alleged involved a number of Russian officials, but was then locked up by some of the same officials he was investigating.

Moscow’s Tverskoy Court was packed with journalists, but the defendant’s cage stood empty, as Judge Igor Alisov handed down the bizarre verdict. He convicted Mr Magnitsky of tax evasion, though for obvious reasons was unable to hand down a sentence.

“Magnitsky masterminded a massive tax evasion scheme in a … conspiracy with a group of people,” said Mr Alisov in barely audible tones as he took 90 minutes to read out the verdict. The court claimed that Mr Magnitsky was aided by William Browder, the British head of Hermitage Capital, the investment fund that had hired Mr Magnitsky to look into corruption. Mr Browder was sentenced in absentia to nine years in prison.

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15
July 2013

President thinks that Magnitsky case reflects scope of violations in Russia

Lithuania Tribune

A ruling issued on Thursday in the late Russian lawyer Sergey Magnitsky’s case raises concern and reflects the scope of violations in Russia, Lithuanian President Dalia Grybauskaitė said.

“It’s a symbolic act reflecting the scope of human rights violations and a worsening situation of ensuring human rights in Russia and the government’s attitude to human rights. It’s symbolic and should be valued negatively,” Grybauskaitė said in response to a question by BNS at a joint press conference with visiting German President Joachim Gauck.

According to the Lithuanian president, the EU does not have a common position as yet on whether to introduce sanctions against Russian officials related to Magnitsky’s death in detention, similar to those introduced by the United States.

“The EU does not have a common position as yet on the introduction of potential sanctions. And in response to the very fact of conviction, so it, obviously, concerns us,” Grybauskaitė said.

On Thursday, a Moscow court found late Magnitsky and his former employer William Browder, head of investment fund Hermitage Capital, guilty of tax evasion.

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15
July 2013

Russia convicts Magnitsky of tax evasion in posthumous trial

Financial Times

A Russian court has found deceased lawyer Sergei Magnitsky guilty of tax evasion, in a posthumous trial that has elicited widespread criticism in the west.

Magnitsky was convicted of tax evasion alongside his former client William Browder, the US-born chief executive of Hermitage Capital, who Russian authorities allege evaded about $17m in taxes.

Mr Browder, who lives in the UK and was tried in absentia, received a nine-year sentence. He has denied all charges against him. The judge closed the criminal case against Magnitsky but refused to rehabilitate him.

Sabine Leutheusser-Schnarrenberger, the German justice minister, condemned the verdict, saying on Twitter: “The conviction of the dead Magnitsky is further evidence of the Sovietisation of Russia.”
A spokesperson for Lady Ashton, the EU’s foreign policy chief, said the verdict “does not provide any answer to the real questions regarding the death of Mr Magnitsky”, adding that the EU would continue to raise the “disturbing” matter with the Russian government.

Magnitsky’s conviction comes almost four years after he died amid murky circumstances in a pre-trial detention centre after he had accused Russian police of complicity in a $230m tax fraud.

Mr Browder has used the subsequent years to launch an anti-corruption campaign in Magnitsky’s memory, and has been successful in his efforts to ban the officials he says were involved in Magnitsky’s death from travelling to the US or holding bank accounts there.

On Thursday Mr Browder condemned the verdict against his former lawyer. He told the Financial Times that with “the malicious pain” the trial had inflicted on Magnitsky’s family, President Vladimir Putin had “brought shame on Russia and firmly found himself a place in history for being the first western leader in a thousand years to prosecute a dead man”.

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15
July 2013

Dead Russian lawyer Sergei Magnitsky convicted of tax evasion

The Guardian

Russian who died in prison while awaiting trial is found guilty along with British client William Browder. A Moscow court has convicted the late investment fund lawyer Sergei Magnitsky of tax evasion after Russia’s first posthumous trial.

The court also convicted Magnitsky’s former client William Browder, a Briton who has spearheaded an international campaign to expose corruption and punish Russian officials he blames for the lawyer’s death in a Moscow jail while awaiting trial in 2009.

Browder was sentenced in absentia to nine years in prison for tax evasion. He lives in Britain and Russia’s options for jailing him are limited. Interpol has refused to include him on its international search list after deciding that Russia’s case against him was political.

Magnitsky died after a year in jail during which he said he was mistreated and denied medical care in an effort to get him to confess to tax evasion and give evidence against Browder, who is head of the investment fund Hermitage Capital Management.

The Kremlin’s human rights council said there was evidence the suggested Magnitsky was beaten to death, but the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, dismissed allegations of torture or foul play, saying last year that the lawyer died of heart failure.

Russian authorities closed the case against Magnitsky after his death but reopened it in 2011, a move that former colleagues say was illegal because they did not have the consent of his relatives.

“This show trial confirms that Vladimir Putin is ready to sacrifice his international credibility to protect corrupt officials who murdered an innocent lawyer and stole $230m (£150m) from the Russian state,” Hermitage Capital said in a statement. займы без отказа онлайн займы https://zp-pdl.com/emergency-payday-loans.php https://zp-pdl.com/online-payday-loans-in-america.php займ на карту

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15
July 2013

Magnitsky Found Guilty In Posthumous Trial; Ex-Boss Also Convicted

Radio Free Europe

A Moscow court has found late whistle-blowing lawyer Sergei Magnitsky and his former boss guilty of tax evasion.

Magnitsky, who represented the Hermitage Capital investment fund, died in pretrial detention at age 37 after being allegedly beaten and denied medical treatment.

It is the first time Russia has put a dead man on trial, deepening concerns over human rights and the rule of law in the country.

Magnitsky was accused of tax evasion in 2008 after exposing a $230 million tax scam implicating Russian police and government officials. The case against him was organized by some of the same officials he exposed.

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