Posts Tagged ‘Canada’
Investor presses Ottawa to take up case of whistleblower who died in Russian jail
Russian tax lawyer Sergei Magnitsky was working for Bill Browder’s investment company when he uncovered the largest tax fraud in Russian history and exposed the misdeeds of senior functionaries in six ministries.
Mr. Magnitsky was also working for Mr. Browder, the American-born co-founder of Hermitage Capital Management, when he was thrown into a Moscow prison in November, 2008, by those same officials after testifying against them in the tax case.
So when the 37-year-old lawyer was refused treatment in prison for a pancreatic condition, subjected to repeated torture, and, according to his supporters, beaten to death by guards in the fall of 2009, Mr. Browder decided to devote much of his time to publicizing the case and securing justice for the man who had worked doggedly to bring the Russian corruption to light.
His efforts are starting to pay off. Last week, the U.S. Senate passed the Sergei Magnitsky Rule of Law Accountability Act, which denies visas and freezes the assets of Russians accused of human-rights violations. Now Mr. Browder is asking for a similar response from Canadian authorities.
“The case of Sergei Magnitsky really lays bare the criminality at the top of the Russian government,” he told reporters in Ottawa on Tuesday. “The Russian government has refused to prosecute anybody involved. And so I have spent the last three years looking for other means of justice.”
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Why This Russian Criminal Case Matters to Canada
On Tuesday, the Canadian Parliament will hear testimony concerning the torture and tragic death in detention of Russian lawyer Sergei Magnitsky, who uncovered the largest corporate tax fraud in Russian history, identified the senior Russian perpetrators, and paid for it with his life. His story is one of great moral courage and heroism, and his saga shines a spotlight on the pervasive culture of repression, 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 — who will be the main witness at Parliamentary hearings today — Magnitsky blew the whistle on widespread Russian government corruption, involving officials from six senior Russian ministries.
The officials he testified against then arranged for his arrest and detention — and for the subsequent cover-up of their criminality — 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.
Despite the intense physical and psychological pain Sergei Magnitsky endured at the hands of his captors, he refused to perjure himself, even as his health deteriorated. Denied medical care for the last six months of his detention, he died in excruciating circumstances at the age of 37, having developed a severe pancreatic condition while being held in the Butyrka prison, a notorious Czarist-era jail that also that also held Alexander Solzhenitsyn and Raoul Wallenberg.
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‘I made a vow to his memory’: Bill Browder wins fight to ban corrupt Russian business in memory of dead friend
Sergei Magnitsky was a lawyer in Russia exposing large-scale corruption by government officials when he was beaten to death by guards in a Moscow prison in 2009; Alexander Perepilichnyy, a Russian businessman, had fled to Britain and was a whistleblower over the same fraud when he mysteriously collapsed and died last month.
These two dramatic deaths bookend the remarkable crusade of Bill Browder, the American-born investor for whom Mr. Magnitsky worked and to whom Mr. Perepilichnyy was spilling his secrets.
On Thursday, Mr. Browder saw the U.S. Senate pass the Sergei Magnitsky Rule of Law Accountability Act by a wide margin, a law blacklisting Russian human rights abusers.
It was a triumphant moment for Mr. Browder, who has relentlessly lobbied for such sanctions, but it hardly ends his quest for justice over Mr. Magnitsky’s gruesome demise.
His next stop is Canada.
On Monday, Mr. Browder arrives here with his remarkable story of international intrigue — state corruption, massive theft, organized crime — in a bid to see Canada pass a similar law against corrupt Russian officials.
Parliamentarians and government ministers will be hard pressed to hear a more compelling story, both his own and the one swirling around him.
Mr. Browder’s grandfather was the well-known leader of the U.S. Communist Party from the 1920s to 1940s, twice running under the red banner for president. Communism was a Browder family value.
“There is all this family history and connection to Communism, so when I was going through my teenage rebellion I became a capitalist. I figured there was nothing I could do to irritate my family more than that,” Mr. Browder, 48, told the National Post.
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Bill Browder wins fight to ban corrupt Russian business in the U.S. in memory of dead friend
National Post
Sergei Magnitsky was a lawyer in Russia exposing large-scale corruption by government officials when he was beaten to death by guards in a Moscow prison in 2009; Alexander Perepilichnyy, a Russian businessman, had fled to Britain and was a whistleblower over the same fraud when he mysteriously collapsed and died last month.
These two dramatic deaths bookend the remarkable crusade of Bill Browder, the American-born investor for whom Mr. Magnitsky worked and to whom Mr. Perepilichnyy was spilling his secrets.
On Thursday, Mr. Browder saw the U.S. Senate pass the Sergei Magnitsky Rule of Law Accountability Act by a wide margin, a law blacklisting Russian human rights abusers.
Related
Russian scandal takes chilling twist as whistleblower dies in ‘unexplained circumstances’ in Britain
It was a triumphant moment for Mr. Browder, who has relentlessly lobbied for such sanctions, but it hardly ends his quest for justice over Mr. Magnitsky’s gruesome demise.
His next stop is Canada.
On Monday, Mr. Browder arrives here with his remarkable story of international intrigue – state corruption, massive theft, organized crime – in a bid to see Canada pass a similar law against corrupt Russian officials.
Parliamentarians and government ministers will be hard pressed to hear a more compelling story, both his own and the one swirling around him.
Mr. Browder’s grandfather was the well-known leader of the U.S. Communist Party from the 1920s to 1940s, twice running under the red banner for president. Communism was a Browder family value.
“There is all this family history and connection to Communism, so when I was going through my teenage rebellion I became a capitalist. I figured there was nothing I could do to irritate my family more than that,” Mr. Browder, 48, told the National Post.
There is all this family history and connection to Communism, so when I was going through my teenage rebellion I became a capitalist. I figured there was nothing I could do to irritate my family more than that
He graduated from Stanford business school the year the Berlin Wall fell and the two events prompted an epiphany: “If my grandfather was the biggest Communist in America, it seems perfectly appropriate that I become the biggest capitalist in Eastern Europe,” he said.
After the dissolution of the Soviet Union, he moved to Moscow and started investing, first as an employee of Salomon Brothers, then with his own firm, Hermitage Capital Management, in 1996.
He was a success. From US$25-million in capital his fund grew to US$4.5-billion, becoming the largest foreign portfolio investor in Russia.
But the value of the huge Russian companies, some of the nation’s largest, was diminished by corruption.
“Billions and billions of dollars were being stolen through all sorts of different corrupt schemes,” said Mr. Browder. Hermitage took on an activist strategy, researching and exposing corporate corruption of firms it was investing in.
He saw Vladimir Putin, who was becoming the dominant politician in Russia, as an early ally in his fight against corruption, advocating for the former KGB officer to the suspicious West.
-Sergei Magnitsky
But Mr. Browder’s éxposés were not admired by all.
“It was a very effective way of stopping bad things from happening in Russia, but it was also a very effective way of creating a lot of high-placed and high-powered enemies who didn’t wish me well.”
After almost 10 years in Russia, he was stopped at the border in 2005 and deported as a threat to national security.
He feared he might lose everything.
“We quickly liquidated all our holdings in Russia in 2006 and evacuated my staff out of Russia so they couldn’t steal our money and arrest our people,” Mr. Browder said.
That was far from the end.
More than a year after his deportation, police raided his Moscow office and the offices of his lawyers, seizing corporate documents for his investment holding companies.
In response, he hired seven Russian lawyers to investigate. One was a talented young man named Sergei Magnitsky.
We quickly liquidated all our holdings in Russia in 2006 and evacuated my staff out of Russia so they couldn’t steal our money and arrest our people
Mr. Magnitsky investigated and reported someone had used Mr. Browder’s corporate documents to forge backdated contracts showing the firm owed US$1-billion.
The companies who were the supposed recipients of the debt sued Hermitage in Russia, seeking to claim the US$1-billion.
“We weren’t even aware of these court proceedings, but three lawyers, who we didn’t hire, then showed up to represent our companies and those three lawyers pled guilty to US$1-billion of fake liabilities,” Mr. Browder said.
“Then the police, the same police who raided our offices in the first place, raided all of our banks looking for assets to seize. Thankfully, there were no assets there because we had taken all of the money out.”
When he heard all of this from Mr. Magnitsky, Mr. Browder relaxed. He had moved faster than the schemers. It seemed almost comical.
“Sergei said, ‘I wouldn’t relax if I were you because Russian stories never end this way. There are never happy, clean ending to these stories.’ I asked how does this story end and he said it probably ends badly.”
Mr. Magnitsky probed further. He was right: The schemers were not prepared to quit without a profit.
.Sergei Magnitsky’s funeral
He found the people who sought the court award had gone to the tax authorities. The previous year, Mr. Browder’s company had paid US$230-million in taxes based on its reported gains of US$1-billion.
Using the US$1-billion court judgment as proof, the schemer claimed the firm’s actual profit should be zero since the judgment erased the gains. Therefore, the US$230-million was paid by mistake and should be refunded – to them.
“They applied for a tax refund of US$230-million, which was the largest tax refund in Russian history. They applied for it two days before Christmas – Dec. 23, 2007 – and was awarded and paid out the very next day.”
The schemers finally got their money.
Mr. Browder, meanwhile, assumed it was a rogue operation by a small, corrupt cabal.
“We filed 15 different criminal complaints with regulatory agencies, with law enforcement agencies and with connected politicians, and waited for the SWAT teams and helicopters to fan out and get all the bad guys.
“It quickly became apparent that there were no good guys in the Russian government. Instead of going out and trying to arrest the people who did this, they opened up criminal cases on all seven of our lawyers on various trumped-up charges.”
It quickly became apparent that there were no good guys in the Russian government. Instead of going out and trying to arrest the people who did this, they opened up criminal cases on all seven of our lawyers on various trumped-up charges
Fearing for their safety, he asked them to flee Russia at his expense. Six accepted, but Mr. Magnitsky declined.
A man of principle and idealism, he declared since he had done nothing wrong he had no need to flee. Instead, he started testifying against the officials involved in the tax theft.
In November 2008, subordinates of those officials arrested him. Torture to elicit the retraction of his testimony began immediately, according to Mr. Browder.
After months of abuse, Mr. Magnitsky became seriously ill.
On the night of Nov. 16, 2009, lapsing into critical condition, he was moved to a prison with a hospital, but instead of treating him, “They put him into an isolation cell and eight riot guards with rubber batons beat him for one hour and 18 minutes until he died.”
He was 37 years old.
“Sergei Magnitsky was tortured to death in order to get him to retract his testimony about the corruption that he uncovered,” said Mr. Browder.
And once again, the narrative of Mr. Browder’s life changed dramatically.
“I made a vow to myself and to his memory that I was going to make sure the people who had done this to him would face justice and his death wouldn’t be a meaningless death.”
Justice was not forthcoming in Russia.
“The Russian government completely circled the wagons to cover up the responsibility of everybody,” he said. “Like Watergate, the crime itself is one thing but what makes this case so politically important internationally, is the high-level cover-up that goes right up to the president of Russia.
ANDREY SMIRNOV/AFP/Getty ImagesA picture taken on December 7, 2012, shows snow clad grave of Russian lawyer Sergei Magnitsky with his portrait on the tomb (C) at the Preobrazhenskoye cemetery in Moscow. The US Congress drew today a furious response from the Kremlin by passing legislation that targeted human rights abusers in the prison death of Magnitsky. Moscow immediately called the action “a theater of the absurd” and vowed to retaliate, turning what would have been a boost in trade relations between the two powers into another source of friction. AFP PHOTO / ANDREY SMIRNOV
“We haven’t been able to get justice inside Russia in any way, shape or form. Everybody who was involved in this – and there’s a huge amount of evidence of them being involved in this – have been exonerated, some have been promoted and even received state honours.
“It became clear we would have to seek justice outside Russia.”
The corrupt Russian officials, gangsters and oligarchs profiting from this and other crimes typically hoarded their money abroad. They used foreign banks, bought foreign property, sent their children to foreign private schools and vacationed in foreign countries.
In that Mr. Browder saw a way to get at them.
“They like to behave like cannibals at home and then dine at the finest restaurants with white tablecloths in Europe and North America,” he said.
“It hits the Putin regime in the most profound way, because the entire objective of the current leadership of Russia at this stage is to steal money.”
Since 2010, he has worked with politicians in the U.S., Canada and Europe to enact visa sanctions and asset seizures, not against Russia as a country, but against corrupt individuals within its elites.
Canada’s place in such geopolitics came into focus when one of the emissaries from Moscow sent to Washington to lobby against the act was Vitaly Malkin, a Russian oligarch and member of the Russian senate.
Mr. Malkin, the National Post revealed in 2009, has been blocked from entering Canada by Canadian authorities who accused him of organized crime involvement. In his fight to overturn that decision, it was revealed he owns 111 condominium units in Toronto.
Canada should not be a safe haven for people who do this type of crime. Canada has a very attractive economic immigrant program and it is very popular for Russians so, absolutely, Canada has to be on the list of countries that are doing this
Through court filings, Mr. Malkin, whose name is sometimes spelled Vitali Malkine in English, denied any involvement in organized crime. He won a judicial review of the decision because he was not given an adequate opportunity to address the government’s concerns before it was made. Any new decision has not been made public.
Mr. Browder said the Malkin case suggests why Canada is important.
“Canada should not be a safe haven for people who do this type of crime. Canada has a very attractive economic immigrant program and it is very popular for Russians so, absolutely, Canada has to be on the list of countries that are doing this.”
Mr. Browder’s success last week in Washington brought a rebuke from Moscow, with threats of countermeasures against Americans. The diplomatic spat threatens to further damage strained U.S.-Russia relations.
For Mr. Browder, the triumph in Washington brightened the darkness of his story that had recently grown darker with a mysterious death in England.
Before Mr. Perepilichnyy fled Russia, he was wheeling and dealing with wealthy clients. Among them were people connected to the tax rebate theft.
In 2010, he contacted Mr. Browder with information on where the money went. A detailed dossier traced money to a Swiss bank and Mr. Perepilichnyy became a cooperating witness with Swiss officials.
Last month, the seemingly healthy 44-year-old collapsed and died outside his mansion in a gated community that has been home to Ringo Starr, Kate Winslet and Sir Elton John.
So far, the cause of death is unknown, pending toxicology tests.
In the meantime, the death is another reminder of the high stakes in Mr. Browder’s campaign as he arrives in Toronto before heading to Ottawa for high-level government meetings Tuesday.
National Post
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Justice for Sergei Magnitsky!
Magnitsky was a tax lawyer who uncovered the largest tax fraud in Russian history and paid for it with his life.
This week, Russian President Vladimir Putin made an important state visit to Israel, where, understandably, the issues of Iran and Syria were at the fore. The case and cause of Sergei Magnitsky were not on the agenda.
Admittedly, Sergei Magnitsky is not a household name in Israel, let alone on the Israeli foreign policy radar screen. But his story raises significant questions about the culture of corruption and impunity in Russia, its flawed judiciary and the ruling regime’s abuse of the rule of law.
Magnitsky was a tax lawyer who uncovered the largest tax fraud in Russian history and paid for it with his life. He blew the whistle on widespread government corruption, involving senior officials from six Russian ministries.
The very officials against whom he testified then 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.
Despite the physical and psychological pain Magnitsky endured from his captors, he refused to perjure himself, even as his health deteriorated.
Denied medical care for the last six months of his detention, he died in excruciating pain at the age of 37, having developed a severe pancreatic condition while being held in the Butyrka prison – a notorious Czaristera jail in Moscow that that also held Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn and Raoul Wallenberg.
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Irwin Cotler condemns continued culture of corruption and impunity in Russia
Liberal Justice and Human Rights Critic Irwin Cotler today condemned the culture of corruption and impunity in Russia, epitomized by the fraudulent Parliamentary elections and the unprecedented posthumous prosecution of murdered whistle-blower Sergei Magnitsky. Said Cotler, “The Putin Presidency will be tested by its commitment to the rule of law, human rights, and the integrity of the democratic process”.
In particular, Cotler noted that Russian renewal will be tested by the following indicators:
Halting the harassment and intimidation of NGOs, activists, human rights organizations, and the like.
Ensuring and enhancing freedoms of assembly and association for human rights defenders, dissidents, and their lawyers
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Officials may try lawyer posthumously for taxes
Russia may posthumously try for tax evasion Sergei Magnitsky, a lawyer who died in prison in 2009 after exposing police corruption, investigators said Tuesday. His former employer, investment firm Hermitage Capital, decried the continued “repression” of the lawyer and accused authorities of “running roughshod over all legal precedent, practice and morality.”
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Nemtsov backs Canadian call for Russia visa blacklist
Russian opposition leader Boris Nemtsov during a visit to Canada’s parliament on Wednesday backed calls for a Canadian blacklist of 60 Russian officials linked to the death of a young lawyer.
Sergei Magnitsky died of untreated heart condition and pancreatitis in an isolation cell in November 2009.
The 37-year-old lawyer’s death after 11 months in a Moscow jail sparked global outrage and came to symbolize problems in the Russian judicial system.
In September, his mother Natalia Magnitskaya alleged that the death of her son was not caused by negligence but was a premeditated murder brought on by months of torture to keep him silent.
The blacklist proposed by Canadian Liberal MP Irwin Cotler “won’t be against Russia, but against the corrupt system in Russia,” declared Nemtsov. “I believe Canada is friendly with Russia as a country.”
Cotler — Canada’s former justice minister — introduced legislation in October calling for those individuals believed to be responsible for Magnitsky’s death to be barred from Canada.
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Death in a Russian prison cell: Britain’s shameful silence
One minute Sergei Magnitsky was investigating tax fraud. The next he was dead. A coincidence? No, the businessman campaigning for the truth tells Jerome Taylor
Two years ago today the body of a father of two from Moscow was found face down in a prison isolation cell where he had languished in squalid conditions for more than 11 months. Every year hundreds of people die inside Russian prisons and most go unreported.
But the death of Sergei Magnitsky, a corporate lawyer hired by a British firm to investigate a multimillion-dollar tax scam, lit a fire that has rallied those seeking to end the culture of corruption and impunity among Russian government officials and has caused diplomatic rifts that have reverberated around the world.
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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