Posts Tagged ‘butyrka’

16
September 2011

Magnitsky death: Falling ill in a Russian jail

BBC

The ongoing dispute over the death in custody of Russian corporate lawyer Sergei Magnitsky has drawn attention to the Moscow remand prison where he was being held.

The gates of Butyrka, one of Russia’s oldest prisons, could well be in a museum. Made of oak and hand-wrought steel, they were installed when the prison was built 240 years ago.

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23
December 2010

Fatal odyssey of a Russian prisoner tells a dark tale; Above the law

International Herald Tribune

More than a year ago the members of an obscure oversight panel filed into Butyrskaya Prison to look into the death of a prisoner. They were hardly an intimidating bunch: mostly retired women, scribbling their observations in notebooks, regarded by the prison staff as a minor irritant, like fleas.

In a country whose law enforcement wields enormous power, it is easy enough to ignore civilian watchdog groups. But this day was different. When the doctors were led in and told to take a seat, the panel’s leader, a veteran human rights activist named Valery V. Borshchev, felt something unfamiliar in the air.

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23
November 2010

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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14
November 2010

Silence over Russian ‘martyr’; Lawyer’s family hope film will help win justice for man who died a year ago after fighting corruption

The Sunday Telegraph

14 November 2010 – In the eyes of his supporters, he was a martyr in the fight against corruption, who paid the ultimate price for exposing Russia’s biggest-ever tax scandal. In the eyes of the authorities, though, Sergei Magnitsky was a criminal suspect himself, whose death while awaiting trial in a “dungeon-like” prison merited no further investigation.

Now, exactly a year after he was found dead in a squalid jail cell, Mr Magnitsky’s mother and colleagues are to mount a challenge to the Kremlin’s silence with a documentary to be shown to British parliamentarians on Tuesday.

“So far nobody has explained what happened,” said Natalya Magnitskaya, his mother, who has accused the Russian judiciary of “destroying” her son. “I do not understand why this has happened to him. He always respected the law.”

Mr Magnitsky is believed to have uncovered one of the biggest tax frauds in Russian history, perpetrated by a gang of police officers who allegedly plundered the state’s coffers to the tune of £144million.

Those same policemen then turned on their accuser and jailed him, in what friends claim was an attempt to pressure him into denouncing one of his clients, an investor in Russia who had fallen out with the Kremlin.

In the event, Mr Magnitsky did not crack but his health did. He developed a severe pancreatic condition while being held in Butyrka prison, in Moscow, a notoriously spartan Tsarist-era jail that once held the writer Alexander Solzhenitsyn. Three hours after being transferred to another facility, he died aged just 37.

“They put him in dungeon-like conditions,” added Jamison Firestone, the boss at the law firm where Mr Magnitsky worked. “Cells without windows, humidity, they turned off his hot water, and the sewage.”

Since he died, Mr Magnitsky’s story has become a diplomatic flashpoint between Russia and its foreign partners. President Dmitry Medvedev has been forced to change the law to ensure that people charged with white-collar crimes are not jailed before they have even been tried.

Yet the official investigation into his death, which is still open, has gone nowhere. Nobody has been arrested or charged.

Instead, the police officers whom Mr Magnitsky believed defrauded the state, and then tried to cover it up by jailing him, were handed top government awards last week.

The awards were unrelated to the Magnitsky case and came after two of the officers involved in the case were promoted.

Mr Magnitsky’s former client William Browder, a London-based businessman who is chief executive of Hermitage Capital Management, said that the plaudits beggared belief. “They are circling the wagons and protecting their own,” he told The Sunday Telegraph.

“Every step the interior ministry takes to cover up their crimes is more cynical than the last. It never ceases to amaze me just how evil these people can be.”

Last Friday, Transparency International, an anti-graft organisation, posthumously awarded Mr Magnitsky its Integrity Award.

“He battled as a lone individual against the power of an entire state,” said Sion Assidon, chairman of the awards committee. “He believed in the rule of law and integrity, and died for his belief.”

Meanwhile Benjamin Cardin, an American senator, has drawn up a list of 60 individuals he believes were complicit in the lawyer’s death and is pushing for them to face visa bans and asset freezes in Western countries.

At least two of the accused police have hit back, arguing that they are innocent and have been targeted in a smear campaign to deflect attention from Mr Browder.

Mr Browder, 46, who was born in the US but has since become a British citizen, is a controversial figure in Russia. The grandson of Earl Browder, the former leader of the American Communist party, he made his fortune during the 1990s by investing money in privatisations during the post-Soviet era.

However, the firm has made a point of exposing corporate corruption in companies it buys into, in the hope of improving managerial behaviour and share prices.

Once a supporter of Vladimir Putin, the Russian prime minister, Mr Browder fell out of official favour after he started complaining about corporate governance in Russian energy giant Gazprom. He was denied a visa in 2005 and has been blacklisted as a threat to Rus-sia’s national security ever since.

In 2007, Russian police raided three of his offices carting off numerous documents. Baffled by the raids, he hired Mr Magnitsky to make inquiries.

The young lawyer quickly concluded that the policemen had used the company seals of two of the companies they had raided to steal the firms, and had then fraudulently demanded a tax refund to the tune of $230million (£143million). Mr Browder said he told all his lawyers, including Mr Magnitsky, to tread carefully.

“They started opening criminal cases against all our lawyers,” he says in the documentary about the affair. “I said: ‘Whatever is going on here, whatever you are doing, it is best to get out of harm’s way’.”

Mr Magnitsky was apparently unfazed and even testified against the police officers he believed had perpetrated the fraud.

It was a courageous act his family was later to regret. His mother said medicine she sent him for a stomach complaint was often held up, and that he was isolated.

He was repeatedly asked to denounce Mr Browder, who denies Russian accusations of tax evasion. Mr Magnitsky said he was only interested in denouncing the police officers he believed were corrupt.

His mother only learned of his death when she turned up at the prison gates to give him a parcel. “At first I didn’t believe it and thought they must be joking,” she recalled “My son was 37. He was full of energy and he was healthy.” “They put him in dungeon-like conditions. Cells without windows, they turned off his hot water займы на карту срочно микрозаймы онлайн https://zp-pdl.com/emergency-payday-loans.php https://www.zp-pdl.com hairy woman

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04
November 2010

Security services, tax fraud and death of a lawyer

Financial Times

3 Nov 2010: The case of Sergei Magnitsky – a lawyer who died in prison after testifying against police for allegedly participating in Russia’s largest tax fraud using companies belonging his to clients that they had in effect confiscated – focuses on the interior ministry. But according to one retired policeman with knowledge of the case, the police “were simply the arms and hands” of a much more shadowy organisation: the federal security service (FSB), successor to the Soviet KGB.

Based in the Lubyanka, the imposing Moscow building that once housed its predecessors, the FSB’s Directorate K has the task of ferreting out economic and financial crime. But it has also been at the centre of several scandals that appear to show it has a direct role in some of the worst frauds in modern Russian history.

Hermitage Capital Management, an investment fund run by the US-born Bill Browder, has obtained only one document that shows direct FSB involvement in the Magnitsky case. In May 2007, Viktor Voronin, head of Directorate K, issued a finding that companies belonging to Hermitage had underpaid taxes. Based on this document, police raided the fund’s offices, and that of the law firm it was using, where Magnitsky worked. It confiscated seals and stamps of three companies that had recently paid $230m in capital gains taxes, according to Hermitage. These items were then used to obtain a fraudulent tax rebate; the companies were re-registered under new owners, which then applied for the a refund of the $230m, which was granted almost immediately through friendly courts.

The new owner of the companies was eventually convicted of the tax fraud, but Hermitage chief executive Bill Browder says he was a “fall guy” and the real perpetrators got away.

In autumn 2008, Magnitsky testified to the police that the fraud had taken place using items seized in the police raid, and alleging police involvement in the crime. The man who had led the raid a year earlier, Lt Col Artyom Kuznetsov, was part of a team that arrested him on tax evasion charges, according to a police order obtained by Hermitage.

During pre-trial detention, Magnitsky testified that he was under pressure from investigators working with Lt Col Kuznetsov to retract his testimony. “The same operative Kuznetsov also provided his operative investigative support on the case . . . on the subject of the theft of the said companies [which were used in the tax fraud]. Kuznetsov also performed operative support on the criminal case under which I was involved as an accused person, and I believe that the criminal persecution against me is the revenge by the said person to punish me for my acts.” Magnitsky gave this testimony on October 13 2009, a month before his death. Mr Kuznetsov did not respond to requests for comment from the FT.

Magnitsky lasted 11 months in prison. He was in good health before his arrest but developed a stomach complaint in detention, for which he was denied medical treatment. The Moscow public oversight commission, created last year by President Dmitry Medvedev to oversee human rights in jails, claimed in a report in December that the denial of medical care was intended to coerce Magnitsky to change his testimony against interior ministry officials.

The most harrowing episodes of the commission report cover the last hours of Magnitsky’s life, when he was transferred to the Sailor’s Rest prison from the notorious Butyrka jail, supposedly for urgent medical treatment. After telling staff that someone was trying to murder him, provoking a decision that he was suffering from a “psychotic episode”, he was given an injection, placed in a straitjacket and put in an isolation ward, where he died just over an hour later. онлайн займы payday loan zp-pdl.com https://zp-pdl.com/apply-for-payday-loan-online.php займ на карту

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