Posts Tagged ‘browder’
‘A COUNTRY RUN BY GANGSTERS’
The Daily Express
Along with the crushing disappointment that followed the announcement that Russia and not England will host the 2018 World Cup, it was impossible to silence another sentiment: the Russians bought it. World Cup host Russia has, it’s alleged, a Mafia that controls politics and police, and hitmen ensure there’s a rule of fear.
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Crime and unjust punishment in Russia
The Lancet
Tom Parfitt
A year after the controversial death in a Moscow detention centre of Sergei Magnitsky—a 37-year-old lawyer who was denied vital medical treatment—Russia is promising an overhaul of its antiquated prison system. But will the reforms bring real change to health-care provision?
It was 1830 h on November 16, 2009, when Sergei Magnitsky was transferred to the Matrosskaya Tishina detention centre in Moscow. The 37-year-old lawyer had been healthy when he was arrested a year earlier on fraud charges that colleagues said were trumped-up in revenge for his work for Hermitage, an international investment fund that passed evidence about corrupt officials to Russian media. Yet within 4 hours of arriving at Matrosskaya Tishina (Sailors’ Rest), Magnitsky was dead.
In the past year the Magnitsky Affair, as it is known in Russia, has become emblematic of the country’s woeful human rights record and its—sometimes wilful—neglect of the sick in prison. 6 weeks after Magnitsky was found lifeless in his cell, the public oversight commission (ONK) for Moscow’s pretrial detention centres published a scathing report describing the events that led up to his death.
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Documentary Commemorates Death of Sergei Magnitsky
By Marina Grushin, 24 Nov. 2010
In an unprecedented show of solidarity, lawmakers and human rights activists gathered in capital cities around the world Tuesday to condemn the rampant lawlessness and corruption in Russia.
Legislators in Washington, Ottawa, and cities across Europe hosted the events to commemorate Russian lawyer Sergei Magnitsky, who died in a Moscow prison last year. On the one-year anniversary of Magnitsky’s death, his supporters premiered “Justice for Sergei,” a documentary chronicling the lawyer’s struggle against corrupt officials in Russia.
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Bill Browder: The Russians are out to kill me…
Evening Standard
London, A year ago last week, millionaire hedge fund boss Bill Browder received a chilling call at his north-west London home that would change his life for ever. The call was from Russia and it was to say that Browder’s lawyer, Sergei Magnitsky, who had been held on trumped-up charges and tortured in a Moscow prison, was dead.
“It was the worst moment of my life,” recalls Browder. “I walked round my bedroom in a daze, full of dread. I’m the head of a $1 billion hedge fund, I always know what to do, but for the first time in my life I felt lost. Sergei was 37. He had a wife and two sons and everything to live for. Yet he had been tortured and died —all because of his refusal to falsely testify against me.
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Justice for Sergei
National Post
November 16, 2010 marked the first anniversary of the tragic death in detention of Russian lawyer Sergei Magnitsky, who uncovered the largest tax fraud in Russian history and paid for it with his life. While his story is one of great moral courage and heroism, his saga shines a spotlight on the pervasive culture of corruption and impunity implicating senior government officials in Russia today.
Working as a tax attorney for Hermitage Capital Management in Moscow, an international investment fund founded by CEO William Browder, Magnitksy blew the whistle on widespread Russian government corruption, involving officials from six senior Russian ministries. The officials he testified against arrested and detained him, beginning a nightmare in which he was thrown into a prison cell without bail or trial, and systematically tortured for one year in an attempt to force him to retract his testimony.
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Sergei Magnitsky one year on
16 November 2010 – One year ago today, three Economist journalists sat in a Moscow restaurant discussing the prospects for the Russian economy with a smart Western banker, who argued that our coverage of Russia was far too harsh, and that business was thriving. The smart new restaurant, full of customers, seemed to support his words.
A few hours earlier, Sergei Magnitsky, a corporate lawyer representing Hermitage Capital Management, once Russia’s largest portfolio investor, died mysteriously in pre-trial detention after being repeatedly denied medical care and in effect subjected to what in most civilised countries would be considered torture. At the time, few people outside the small world of Russian investors and a few human-rights activists had heard of Mr Magnitsky. A year later, his death has become a symbol of the mind-boggling corruption and injustice perpetrated by the Russian system, and the inability (or unwillingness) of the Kremlin to change it.
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Sergei Magnitsky – a Tragic Metaphor for Russia’s Judicial, Law Enforcement and Governance Systems
Henry Jackson Society
16 November 2010 – One year ago this very day, Sergei Magnitsky passed away in what was a tragic and unjust death. And yet, the past three-hundred sixty five days have seen little in the way of justice or accountability. In fact, a vast array of questions remains unanswered – questions which are posed in the direction of the Russian state. Many believed that Russia had caught up with the 21st century; that Russia had become at least some semblance of a democracy, providing governance and security for its citizens and adhering to the rule of law. The truth, however, is that Sergei Magnitsky’s death is a tragic metaphor for Russia’s judicial, law enforcement and governance systems, systems in which justice is slowly and painfully killed by the state’s defiance of the rule of law.
The story of Sergei’s death is well documented. Sergei Magnitsky was a man who believed in the virtues of his motherland’s legal system; a lawyer who sought to uncover the largest tax fraud in Russian history committed by officials within the Russian Interior Ministry (MVD) to the tune of $230 million; and a man who was acting out of the interest of both his client and the Russian state. A month after his efforts to bring justice to light, Sergei Magnitsky was arrested by the officials he stood against and was placed in detention for over 11 months where he was forced to endure appalling conditions with no access to medical treatment. On 16 November 2009, as a result of the denial of medical care in prison, he tragically passed away.
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Magnitsky and Russia’s Opportunity Cost
16 November 2010 – November 16th marks the one-year anniversary of the murder of Russian lawyer Sergei Magnitsky, who was imprisoned last year in Moscow under pre-trial detention and intentionally denied medical care which led to his death. The responsibility lies with the Russian government, and specifically with individual officials who sought to cover up a $230 million tax fraud they had orchestrated using stolen documentation from Magnitsky’s client, Hermitage Capital Management.
No one has ever been held accountable for Magnitsky’s death: no charges, no arrests, no trials, and no justice, despite the mountains of evidence and even the names of the “untouchables” made public. Instead, with a familiar Russian twist, the killers were rewarded with promotions and decorations, while the victim has been blamed for the crime. Those who make a fuss over the Magnitsky incident are investigated, persecuted, and sometimes chased into exile.
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A year on, Magnitsky probe stalls
The Moscow News
15 November 2010 – On 16th November, it will be a year since Sergei Magnitsky, a lawyer for Hermitage Capital, died in jail after repeated refusals by investigators to get him treated for gall bladder disease. Despite the ordering of a criminal investigation and a series of high-profile sackings by President Dmitry Medvedev, who tacked prison reform onto his ambitious overhaul of law enforcement, no one has been brought to justice.
“They’re doing something, but to this day, we have neither suspects nor accusations,” Magnitsky’s lawyer Yelena Oreshnikova told The Moscow News. “The time for a hot pursuit has been wasted. It’s difficult to recreate what happened a year ago. But I’d like to believe that the guilty will be punished.”
Three investigators connected to Magnitsky’s case – people who refused to get him medical treatment – have been promoted and given awards.
Another, Artyom Kuznetsov, is suing Hermitage Capital over videos implicating him in helping embezzle $230 million and blaming Magnitsky for tax evasion. In a Kafkaesque saga, despite an international outcry and calls from the Kremlin to pursue the investigation, the probe’s deadline has now been put back for a third time, until next February. NGOs conducting their own, unofficial investigation into Magnitsky’s case believe that high-placed officials – possibly within the Federal Security Service or other law enforcement structures – are the reason that the negligence case launched with Medvedev’s backing isn’t going anywhere.
The Interior Ministry’s investigative committee has repeatedly refused to launch a criminal probe against Oleg Silchenko, one of the three decorated with the Best Investigator Badge last week. But Valery Borshchev, a member of the Moscow Helsinki Group who is heading an independent investigation into Magnitsky’s death, says he submitted its findings to the Investigative Committee of the Prosecutor’s Office in December 2009. Last month, he met top prosecutors who promised a reply – but none came.
“It was Silchenko who refused to give his approval for a medical examination when lawyers asked him,” Borshchev told The Moscow News. “When we talked to doctors at the Butyrka jail, they said that they tried to get him examined, but they met with resistance” from the investigators. “We had believed that our materials would be of interest to the investigation, but apparently the [Investigative Committee of the Prosecutor’s Office] didn’t find it useful, since no one approached us for additional information or clarifications. It was a dead-end wall.”
Borshchev found it “strange” that after Hermitage’s accusations against Artyom Kuznetsov and Pavel Karpov, another investigator involved in Magnitsky’s case, that no action was taken against them, and that Karpov received a professional decoration. “I think that high-placed officials are involved. And a political decision cannot be made about what measures to take against them. That is my opinion.”
Browder’s visa
The reasons for the stalled investigation – and, indeed, for Magnitsky’s death – go back to a dispute between Hermitage Capital, once Russia’s largest hedge fund, and a group of Interior Ministry officials.
It began in 2005, when William Browder, head of the fund, was denied an entry visa. An investigation by the firm led them to implicate investigator Artyom Kuznetsov in a $230 million tax fraud scheme, according to Firestone Duncan, the law firm. In 2007, Hermitage’s offices were raided as part of an investigation Kuznetsov helped launch. Magnitsky was arrested on Nov. 14, 2008, on charges of helping Hermitage Capital to evade $3.25 million in taxes, while an extradition request is still out for Browder.
“The Hermitage story is what’s keeping Magnitsky’s case from being investigated,” Kirill Kabanov, a former FSB officer who now heads the National Anti-Corruption Committee, told The Moscow News.
As a member of the Presidential Council for Civil Society Development, he has been piecing the case together for over a year now, and is due to submit his findings to Medvedev in the next few days. “If the investigators are probed, they will testify about those in whose interests they acted,” Kabanov told The Moscow News. “And among them are officials of the Federal Security Service. It’s not a group of one or two people.”
Kabanov says he has evidence of contacts between the investigators and security officials – evidence that he plans to submit to the president and the Investigative Committee of the Prosecutor General’s Office. Asked if he could identify the security officials involved, he said he knew their names, but could not reveal them in the interests of the investigation. The problem, he said, is systemic, possibly suggesting rivalries within law enforcement structures.
“I don’t understand how a year goes by after the president issues a command, and it turns out that the Investigative Committee [of the Interior Ministry] has not carried out an internal probe.” Nor is the Investigative Committee of the Prosecutor General’s Office questioning anyone from the Interior Ministry, Kabanov said.
A spokesman for the Investigative Committee could not immediately comment on the status of the case.
International outcry
Meanwhile, Magnitsky’s cause has been taken up abroad. Hermitage Capital has called on the European Parliament and legislators in Britain, U.S., Canada and Poland, to impose a visa ban on 60 officials the fund’s officials claim are connected to Magnitsky’s death. In September, US Senator Benjamin Cardin and Congressman James McGovern introduced a bill in Washington that would freeze assets and ban visas of the officials.
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To learn more about what happened to Sergei Magnitsky please read below
- Sergei Magnitsky
- Why was Sergei Magnitsky arrested?
- Sergei Magnitsky’s torture and death in prison
- President’s investigation sabotaged and going nowhere
- The corrupt officers attempt to arrest 8 lawyers
- Past crimes committed by the same corrupt officers
- Petitions requesting a real investigation into Magnitsky's death
- Worldwide reaction, calls to punish those responsible for corruption and murder
- Complaints against Lt.Col. Kuznetsov
- Complaints against Major Karpov
- Cover up
- Press about Magnitsky
- Bloggers about Magnitsky
- Corrupt officers:
- Sign petition
- Citizen investigator
- Join Justice for Magnitsky group on Facebook
- Contact us
- Sergei Magnitsky