Posts Tagged ‘Hermitage’
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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Die Qualen des unbequemen Anwalts
Spiegel Online
16 November 2010 – Sergej Magnitzki starb vor einem Jahr unter unerträglichen Schmerzen in einer Zelle: Die Behörden ließen ihn leiden, verweigerten ihm einen Arzt. Präsident Medwedew entließ zwar einige Beamte, doch verurteilt wurde niemand. Ein Film erinnert nun an das Schicksal des Anwalts.
Moskau/Hamburg – Sie hatten Sergej Magnitzki gesagt, er dürfe sich von einem Arzt behandeln lassen – aber erst, wenn er aus der Haft entlassen werde. Elf Monate war er da bereits im russischen Untersuchungsgefängnis “Matrosenstille”. Als er unter quälenden Schmerzen litt, riefen seine Wärter keinen Doktor. Sie bestellten den psychiatrischen Dienst, der ihn an sein Bett band. So starb Sergej Magnitzki vor genau einem Jahr, am 16. November 2009, an einer Entzündung von Gallenblase und Bauchspeicheldrüse.
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Alleged Russian corruption detailed
CBC News
16 November 2010 – A Dutch documentary about a Russian lawyer who exposed alleged fraud by government officials is set to be shown in the legislatures of Canada, Britain and the U.S. on Tuesday.
That is exactly a year after Sergei Magnitsky, a 37-year-old father of two, died in a Russian jail — tortured to death, according to his supporters.
Russia is expected to be asked to join a European missile-defence system at a meeting next weekend with the NATO countries. However, “it can’t be business as usual with Russia so long as there is this pervasive culture of corruption but, more important, this culture of impunity,” said Liberal MP Irwin Cotler, who is leading the effort in Canada,
Magnitsky was working for Hermitage Capital Management, an international investment fund that at one time was the largest portfolio investor in Russia, CEO William Browder told a parliamentary subcommittee in video testimony on Nov. 2.
Hermitage’s Russian companies were reregistered under another name after police raided its office and took away documents, he said. Magnitsky was among the lawyers hired to deal with the situation, and he found that the documents had been used to create $1 billion worth of fake liabilities for the companies.
Fake documents, lawyers, liabilities
“Those documents were then presented in a Russian court. Fake defence lawyers whom we had never hired showed up in court and pleaded guilty to $1 billion of fake liabilities. Those fake liabilities were then used by the police to go around to all of our banks to try to find all the assets that we had in Russia,” Browder said.
Hermitage had already removed its assets from Russia, but then Magnitsky found out that the fake liabilities had been used to apply for a $230-million tax refund. “On Christmas Eve of 2007, the largest refund in Russian tax history was granted with no questions asked,” Browder said.
Magnitsky testified against the police officers who raided the Hermitage office. Within a month, he was arrested and pressured to withdraw his testimony.
“After six months of sleep deprivation, freezing temperatures, unsanitary conditions, and bacteria-ridden water, Sergei became sick. He lost 48 pounds and started having severe abdominal pains,” Browder told the committee.
An operation was recommended, but denied. He died in jail.
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev called an investigation, but the Interior Ministry on Monday accused Magnitsky of participating in a Hermitage plan to embezzle $175 million from the government, the Moscow Times reported.
The documentary Justice for Sergei was made by Hans Hermans and Martin Maat, who founded the Dutch company ICU Documentaries. They made the film because they were “touched by the horrific ordeal of Mr. Magnitsky,” the company website said. онлайн займы payday loan https://www.zp-pdl.com https://zp-pdl.com/get-quick-online-payday-loan-now.php buy over the counter medicines
Kremlin Says New Evidence Ties Lawyer Who Died in Jail to Theft of $230 Million
The New York Times
16 November 2010 – Senior Russian police officials, stung by accusations that they had framed a lawyer and then allowed him to die of an untreated illness in jail, sought on Monday to defend themselves by disclosing what they said was new evidence of his guilt.
The police officials contended that the lawyer, Sergei L. Magnitsky, had helped to mastermind a complex tax scheme to steal $230 million from the government. Their announcement, scheduled for the eve of the anniversary of his death last year, represented an effort to turn the tables on Mr. Magnitsky’s supporters, who have organized a concerted campaign in Russia and abroad to show that high-ranking police officials themselves embezzled the money.
The Interior Ministry called a news conference to offer what it called the new information about Mr. Magnitsky. Col. Irina V. Dudukina, a spokeswoman, said the ministry had arrested a person she called an accomplice of Mr. Magnitsky’s who was ready to testify against him.
”Magnitsky was an accountant and participated, in particular, in tax evasion schemes,” Colonel Dudukina said. ”It is not possible to say that he simply fulfilled the will of this employer without being informed of the final goal of his actions.”
In response, Mr. Magnitsky’s colleagues assailed the ministry, saying it was smearing a dead man.
Mr. Magnitsky had been caught in a feud between an international investment fund, Hermitage Capital Management, and law enforcement authorities.
Hermitage has contended that senior Interior Ministry officers raided its offices in Moscow in 2007, took documents related to three of its subsidiaries and used those documents to illegally assume ownership of the subsidiaries. The officers then filed fake tax returns for the subsidiaries and received an illegal $230 million tax refund, Hermitage said.
William Browder, the founder of Hermitage, who was expelled from Russia in 2005 and now lives in London, called the Interior Ministry’s announcement abhorrent.
”Sergei Magnitsky reported a crime committed by police officers,” Mr. Browder said. ”They then arrested him, tortured him and killed him. Now, one year later, they are accusing him of the crime that they committed. There is a special place in hell for people like this.”
Mr. Browder has circulated documents showing that two investigators assigned to the Hermitage case spent a combined amount of more than $4 million on real estate and vehicles during the period that followed the tax fraud.
Colonel Dudukina said the Interior Ministry had looked into these charges as part of a slander case initiated by ministry officials. She said the properties in question were all bought before the tax fraud occurred.
Colonel Dudukina was scathing about a measure put forward by Senator Benjamin L. Cardin, Democrat of Maryland, that would impose financial penalties and visa bans on officials implicated in Mr. Magnitsky’s case. She said the list was ”aimed at preventing investigators from taking part in investigative actions on the territories” of countries that have such measures. She said only 7 or 8 of the 60 names on the list were of people involved in the investigation.
”We don’t know why the other people are on that list,” she said.
Mr. Magnitsky documented repeated requests for medical care in prison, and numerous Russian officials have acknowledged that official misconduct contributed to his death. President Dmitri A. Medvedev ordered an official inquiry and dismissed about 20 prison officials. But a year later, the investigation has not led to any arrests, a fact that human rights advocates planned to protest on Tuesday. buy viagra online займы онлайн на карту срочно https://zp-pdl.com/get-quick-online-payday-loan-now.php www.zp-pdl.com займ срочно без отказов и проверок
Police in Russian fraud case implicate dead lawyer
The Washington Post
16 November 2010 – A year ago, lawyer Sergei Magnitsky died in prison here months after testifying about police involvement in the theft of millions of dollars in tax receipts. On Monday, the police accused the dead man of that very theft.
William F. Browder, a U.S.-born investor who was Magnitsky’s client, calls the accusation evil.
“It’s beyond absurd, beyond cynical – it is pure evil,” Browder, the head of Hermitage Capital Management, said Monday. “They are trying to blacken the name of Sergei on the anniversary of his death at their hands, accusing him of the very crime they committed.”
Magnitsky died Nov. 16, 2009, at age 37, after more than a year in pretrial detention. He had not been given medical treatment, although he was suffering from pancreatitis, and a public oversight committee called the conditions of his detention “torturous.”
Well before that, Browder, whose Hermitage Capital had been the largest foreign investment fund in Russia, had become a business dissident, an activist stockholder who was denied entry to the country in late 2005. Magnitsky provided legal work for Hermitage, and Browder has been tireless in his efforts to pressure Russia into pursuing those involved in Magnitsky’s arrest and death.
Last year, President Dmitry A. Medvedev ordered an investigation into Magnitsky’s death, and about 20 prison officials were fired, but no charges have been filed. On Monday, the Interior Ministry – the police department – informed reporters that it had thoroughly investigated during the past year and pronounced Magnitsky guilty.
The case dates to October 2007, when Magnitsky alleged that three Hermitage companies had been stolen and registered in other names, using documents police had seized in a raid on Hermitage that June. Hermitage filed three criminal complaints in early December, describing a complicated scheme involving police and fake tax deductions that would result in a tax refund of $230 million to the stolen, shell companies.
Those complaints failed to prevent the fraud, Browder said. On Dec. 24, 2007, the swindle was carried out with a $230 million tax refund – the largest ever paid in a single day.
In June 2008, Magnitsky testified that police were involved in the scheme. In November, some of the same people he accused were appointed to investigate the missing $230 million, and later that month Magnitsky was arrested. One year later, he died.
“They spent the last year trying to figure out how to make this go away,” said Jamison Firestone, managing partner of Firestone Duncan, the law firm where Magnitsky worked. “Now they want to pin it on Magnitsky.”
Firestone, who left Russia while Magnitsky was in prison, said Magnitsky died refusing to falsely implicate Browder and Hermitage in the scheme.
On Monday, at a Moscow news conference, Irina Dudukina, spokeswoman for the Ministry of Interior Investigative Committee, accused Magnitsky of the crime.
“Magnitsky had a degree in economics and worked as an accountant and auditor. He was not a lawyer,” she said. “And as an accountant, he was developing a tax-evasion scheme.”
She said results of the investigation would be sent to prosecutors for action. And she offered Browder a deal: If he repaid the missing money, she said, criminal charges against him in another tax-evasion case would be dropped.
Casting a wide web of blame, Dudukina accused Congress of interfering with the investigation. In September, after hearing passionate testimony from Browder, Sen. Benjamin L. Cardin (D-Md.) and Rep. James P. McGovern (D-Mass.) introduced bills that would bar visas for about 60 Russian officials connected to the case.
“We believe this . . . is aimed at preventing investigators from taking part in investigative actions on the territories of these countries,” Dudukina said.
Last week, at a conference in Bangkok, Transparency International, a worldwide anti-corruption organization, gave Magnitsky its Integrity Award for courage in pursuing corruption.
Before that, the Interior Ministry made annual awards for Russian Police Day. Five officials whom Firestone connects to the Magnitsky case were honored for their service, including spokeswoman Dudukina.
The Interior Ministry says it will pursue the case. So does Browder, who is promoting a documentary scheduled to be shown Tuesday in the Capitol Visitors Center and at parliaments in five other countries. It’s called “Justice for Sergei.” займ на карту hairy woman https://zp-pdl.com/online-payday-loans-cash-advances.php https://zp-pdl.com/online-payday-loans-in-america.php займы на карту срочно
Hero lawyer’s hellish reward; Sergei Magnitsky linked Russian officials to a $230m fraud and died in a Moscow prison
The Sunday Times
14 November 2010 – When Sergei Magnitsky was 10 years old he read a book by Dante and told his aunt Tatyana it was “very interesting on all corners of heaven and hell”. The bookish, earnest little boy grew up to discover his own corner of hell, Moscow’s notorious Butyrka prison. He died in custody a year ago this week, and his case has become an international cause célèbre.
Magnitsky, a respected lawyer working for a UK-based investment firm, stood up against the Russian state after uncovering a huge tax fraud perpetrated by a group of senior police officers and government officials. His reward was to be arrested on trumped-up charges of tax evasion, held in horrifying conditions, and denied medical care and contact with friends and family.
The last time his mother, Natalia, and aunt saw him was at a court hearing, where he heard that his period of pre-trial imprisonment was to be extended. “Normally Sergei would smile and say something,” says Tatyana. “At this hearing we could no longer smile and when he left he waved to us with a gesture of despair.”
With all requests to visit 37-year-old Magnitsky in prison refused, these court hearings were the only opportunity the two women had to set eyes on him. Four days later, Magnitsky was dead.
Last week, he was given a posthumous Transparency International award for integrity. The chairman of the awards committee, which honours those who fight corruption, said Magnitsky had “believed in the rule of law and died for his belief”.
At the same time, several of the officials implicated in the crime that Magnitsky uncovered — embezzling $230m (¤168m) from the Russian state — and in hounding him to his death received distinguished awards for service to their country.
Magnitsky’s friends and supporters have given up hope of justice in Russia, where attempts to investigate his death have been frustrated by cover-ups. Instead, they are trying to ensure those responsible are contained in Russia and are unable to travel or invest their ill-gotten gains abroad.
This week at Westminster, the European parliament, the US Congress and the parliaments in Canada, Germany, Estonia and Poland, a film about Magnitsky’s life and death will be shown to politicians to try to persuade them to introduce a visa ban on a list of named individuals involved in his case. “We would also like their assets frozen,” says Bill Browder, chief executive of Hermitage Capital Management, Magnitsky’s former employer. “The idea is to inflict as much suffering as we can.”
Magnitsky’s story gives a frightening insight into the reality of modern Russia. It begins in the early 1990s, as Russia was moving from communism to capitalism and the Klondike-like rush to grab a piece of the action as the state’s assets were given away to the private sector. A chosen few, such as Roman Abramovich, became billionaires practically overnight.
Browder, a financier from Chicago with a Russian grandmother, saw an opportunity in the emerging market and set up shop in Moscow: over the next 10 years, at the helm of Hermitage Capital, he was to become the biggest foreign investor in the country, with $4.5 billion tied up in Russian industries. But doing business there was never straightforward. “A couple of years in I realised they’d forgotten to create any rules. There were no property rights, nothing to stop people being ripped off. So I decided to fight corruption,” he says.
Browder’s clients made a lot of money, some up to 30 times their original stake. But his forensic team of accountants and lawyers repeatedly picked up anomalies in the companies in which they invested.
Browder believes he was able to get away with making repeated allegations of corruption against leading businessmen at the time because it suited Vladimir Putin, then Russia’s president, who, seeing oligarchs as rivals, wanted to curb their power. But at the end of 2003, Putin himself took action by arresting Mikhail Khodorkovsky, the country’s richest man. With the rich on side — the sight of Russia’s wealthiest man appearing in court in a cage had a salutary effect on anyone who felt like challenging the president — Browder was a nuisance.
In November 2005, flying back after a weekend in London, he arrived in Moscow to be told that his visa had been annulled. He was flown out the next day and has not seen his home of 10 years since then.
“People said, ‘Bill, it’s been great but we’d like our money back, please’,” he recalls. So he moved most of his staff to London, withdrew his investments in Russia, and left three firms ticking along there with no assets, hoping he could revive them if the atmosphere in Moscow changed.
In June 2007, Hermitage’s office in Moscow was suddenly raided by the police, as was Firestone Duncan, the law firm it retained. Police seized the stamps, seals and certificates of the three companies Hermitage had kept going. In October 2007, Browder’s secretary got a call from a bailiff attached to a court telling her that one of the firms had a judgment against it for an unpaid debt. This was the first Browder had heard of any court hearing.
He got Magnitsky, one of Firestone Duncan’s staff, on the case: “Sergei was the ‘go to’ guy in Moscow on courts, taxes, fines, anything to do with civil law.”
What Magnitsky’s meticulous investigation uncovered over the next few months was at heart a simple scam. In 2006, Hermitage’s firms had made $1 billion profit and paid $230m in taxes. Stolen documents had been used to forge contracts claiming it owed $1 billion to shell companies and those claims had been ratified in a series of court hearings of which Hermitage had no knowledge. The firm had pleaded guilty, represented by lawyers it had never hired.
Magnitsky then discovered Browder no longer owned his companies, which had been re-registered to an organisation called Pluton, based in Tatarstan. The new owner turned out to be Viktor Markelov, who had been jailed for murder in 2001, then released two years later.
By June 2008 Magnitsky had turned up another odd thing: one of the companies had opened an account with a small, obscure, provincial bank. Why, since the company had no assets? The answer crystallised when he examined funds deposited at the bank, which suddenly shot up by $230m at the turn of the year. The fake debt had been used by the fraudsters to claim that Hermitage’s declared profit of $1 billion had been wrongly filed and that the company was therefore owed a tax rebate of $230m.
“The biggest rebate in Russian history was granted and paid out in one day — on Christmas Eve,” Browder says. “No questions asked, even though we had reported our companies stolen at the beginning of December. This was not our money, it was the Russian government’s money, so the authorities should have been motivated to do something. Instead, they opened a criminal case against our lawyers.”
Browder decided it was time to get everyone out. He would support them and their families if they fled to London. All but one took him up on his offer. “Sergei was a little different to the other guys,” he says. “He was an idealist. He knew the law and he believed it would protect him.”
Publicity about the case prompted an investigation by the State Investigative Committee, Russia’s equivalent of America’s FBI. “Sergei did the bravest thing any man can do in Russia: he testified against the police involved,” Browder says.
Magnitsky named two senior police officers. A month later, at the end of November, three of their subordinates arrested him, in front of his wife and two children. “He was refused even a telephone call to his family from prison,” Browder says. “From that day to the day he died, he never heard his children’s voices again.”
The lawyer was accused of conspiring with Browder to evade taxes. He was put in a cell with eight inmates and four beds, with the lights on 24 hours a day. He was told if he testified against Browder and withdrew his claims against the police he would be freed. “If he had taken them up on it, we would have understood,” says Browder. “We wanted him out any way we could. But to Sergei telling a lie would be more painful than physical suffering.”
Magnitsky was transferred to a cell with no heating and broken windows. He developed a respiratory tract infection. “Over the next few months he was held in a cell with no toilet, just a hole in the floor with sewage spilling everywhere,” Browder says. “They took away his means of boiling water, so he had no clean water to drink.
“In a prison like Butyrka the hardest thing is moving cells and getting new cellmates, as you have to work out who’s going to attack you. Sergei was moved 13 times.”
In 358 days in prison, Magnitsky complained in writing about his treatment more than 450 times. He developed pancreatitis and gallstones, which caused excruciating pain. Court hearings, despite being the only time he caught a glimpse of his family, were also an ordeal. He described being held for hours in a cell so crowded that he could stand only on one leg.
He wrote: “Justice… turns into a process of grinding human flesh to mincemeat for prisons and camps, a process in which people can neither effectively defend themselves nor even realise what’s happening. One can only think about when it will end, when one can get rid of this physical and emotional torture.”
His last hours were pieced together by his friends and investigators in Moscow. A cellmate banged on the doors and pleaded for help for five hours as Magnitsky lay doubled in pain. He was eventually transferred to Matrosskaya Tishina, a prison with medical facilities, but on arrival was put into a straitjacket and left in an isolation cell. One hour and 18 minutes later he died.
No one told his family. His mother discovered he was dead when she arrived with a food parcel at Butyrka the next day and was redirected to Matrosskaya Tishina.
Before his funeral, Magnitsky’s body lay in an open casket. There was severe bruising to both his hands. An official autopsy mentioned a mysterious hole in his tongue. The family was refused permission to commission its own post-mortem report.
Extracts from his letters of complaint were published by a Russian newspaper and caused outrage. “His story touched so many people,” says Browder.
A year on, righting the wrong done to his friend has become Browder’s mission, taking over his life. “But this took over Sergei’s life, forever,” he says. “I owe him.” hairy woman buy viagra online female wrestling https://zp-pdl.com/online-payday-loans-cash-advances.php https://zp-pdl.com онлайн займ
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
Russia: Bribery on the beat
Financial Times
3 Nov 2010: Until Ekaterina Mikheeva saw her husband Fedor led away in chains to an Arctic prison camp, she did not think the Russian criminal justice system could sink so low.
Mr Mikheev had taken a risk that few others dared take, and it cost him 11 years of freedom: he had pressed charges against a group of high-ranking policemen, claiming they had kidnapped him in 2006.
The case is one of several that illustrate the fearsome reach of Russia’s security services. Once feared for their efficient repression of ideological dissidents, their reputation now inspires just as much dread as before, for what Russians call reiderstvo, or raiding. Corrupt police nowadays often work hand in glove with organised crime gangs, targeting vulnerable businessmen with investigations and arrests as a way to shake them down for money or take over their assets.
Events in Moscow this week dramatically demonstrated the extent to which law enforcement has been politicised. Mikhail Khodorkovsky, the former billionaire and arch-enemy of the Kremlin who was jailed in 2003, gave a final plea before being sentenced in a second trial, decrying “police lawlessness” and “raiders in epaulettes”. He added: “When people collide with the system they have no rights at all.”
Police also raided the bank belonging to Alexander Lebedev, owner of London-based newspapers The Independent and the Evening Standard, who is a noted critic of the government. The reasons for the raid were not immediately clear.
“The police are nothing more than a big gang, a separate corporation,” says Ms Mikheeva, a Moscow travel agent and mother of two who struggles to make ends meet with her husband in prison. “They used to enforce an ideology, now they are just out to make money – and no one can get in their way.”
Russians seem to agree they are increasingly hostage to their law enforcement agencies, whose powers have grown exponentially in the last decade under the rule of Vladimir Putin, former president and now prime minister, who himself was a KGB spy. A June poll by the Levada Center, a research organisation, asked: “Do you feel protected against arbitrary actions by the police, tax inspectors, courts, and other government structures?” In response, 43 per cent said “not really” and 29 per cent said “definitely not”.
But while President Dmitry Medvedev fired 15 police generals this year and announced a wholesale reform of the police by 2012, the limits of the Kremlin’s ability, or desire, to rein in the security services have nonetheless been graphically demonstrated. Authorities have failed to tackle dramatic miscarriages of justice similar to Mr Mikheev’s, in spite of numerous legal appeals.
In 2008 Sergei Magnitsky, a lawyer, testified against police for allegedly participating in a tax fraud worth $230m, the largest ever recorded in Russia, using companies belonging to clients of his that they had in effect confiscated. Soon after this testimony he was accused of tax evasion, imprisoned without trial for 11 months and died in custody a year ago as a result of medical complications. The Moscow Helsinki Commission, the influential Russian human rights group, said the death was tantamount to torture and murder by the police.
An investigation ordered by Mr Medvedev 11 months ago into the death of Magnitsky has gone nowhere; no arrests have been made. Oleg Silchenko, the interior ministry officer who signed the orders detaining Magnitsky without trial for nearly a year until his death, was even promoted in July to lieutenant colonel.
Some of the circumstances surrounding the $230m tax fraud make Magnitsky’s allegations of police corruption striking. Stamps and documents used in the tax fraud had been confiscated during a raid in June 2007 on the offices of his law firm and on those of a client, Hermitage Capital Management, an investment fund run by the US-born Bill Browder, who is now London-based. The items were in the possession of the police at the time the fraud was committed that December, using those documents.
The Moscow City Bar Association said in July that Magnitsky’s death represented the systematic persecution of lawyers in Russia, adding that “the perpetrators of the theft of budget funds have remained unpunished, while the lawyers who have attempted to report them have been subjected to criminal prosecution”.
But the officials involved seem to be beyond the power of the justice system. One of the officers involved in securing Magnitsky’s arrest in 2008, Lt Col Artyom Kuznetsov, was also accused by Mr Mikheev of kidnapping him and arresting him on false charges in 2006. Col Kuznetsov declined numerous requests for comment from the Financial Times.
Both cases focus attention on a group of interior ministry operatives who seemingly have wide powers of arrest. Both also ended in a similar way – with the policemen free and the men who accused them of abusing their office behind bars.
The odyssey of Mr Mikheev, formerly deputy general director of a midsized fertiliser company, began in August 2006, when he was met at his workplace by Col Kuznetsov, who brought him to police headquarters for questioning.
The company, called UkrAgroKhimPromHolding, had taken out a $100m loan from the state-controlled VTB, Russia’s second largest bank. VTB initiated a complaint with police in July, alleging that the loan had been used fraudulently, though Mr Mikheev and Alexander Bessonov, his boss and head of the company, insist they can prove the funds were used for their stated purpose of buying equipment.
Mr Mikheev testified to police later that the case against them was an attempt by VTB employees to extort a cut of the loan for themselves. Mr Bessonov claimed to investigators that he had been threatened by VTB’s chief of security with “destruction” if he did not pay a bribe of at least $10m to VTB employees in return for the loan. The security chief denied under police interrogation in June 2007 that he had made any such threat.
Mr Mikheev was kept in police custody for two days and was not charged with any crime. But the strange part of the story comes after his release – he claims he was escorted out of police headquarters and forced into a car where two men drove him to a country house where he was held for 11 days. He says his captors were described by his interrogator, Capt Anton Golyshev, as “non-staff” police agents, though in fact they were two convicted criminals, Viktor Markelov and Sergei Orlov.
According to a transcript seen by the FT of a cross-examination by internal affairs investigators following Mr Mikheev’s complaint, Capt Golyshev denied Mr Mikheev had been kidnapped, asserting rather that he had requested “temporary accommodation” for his own safety. In captivity Mr Mikheev claimed his life was threatened if he did not disclose Mr Bessonov’s whereabouts, according to his own later testimony to police. “I believe that the purpose of my kidnapping was to understand how rich was my boss and where he kept money,” he told investigators in September 2006. He also testified that while in captivity Mr Orlov informed him that he had been kidnapped on the orders of VTB employees in order to extort $20m from Mr Bessonov.
VTB rejected requests to contact its security chief, who apparently still works for the company, saying: “VTB has never been a participant in any legal process dealing with the kidnapping of Mr Mikheev. Thus we cannot comment on such questions.” Sergei Sokolov, editor of the opposition-oriented Novaya Gazeta, says he does not believe VTB as an organisation was involved in the conflict with Mr Mikheev, but “it was probably just some mid-level employees from the security department”.
Mr Mikheev was eventually freed by a police Swat team after his wife Ekaterina, despite threats to her life, finally informed police. He decided to press charges against the policemen, including Capt Golyshev and Col Kuznetsov, whom he alleged had organised his kidnapping. But he was arrested again a few days later and charged with fraudulent use of the $100m VTB loan.
According to Mrs Mikheeva, the couple were pressed by Col Kuznetsov to withdraw their testimony against him and two other investigators accused of taking part in the kidnapping, in exchange for the charges against Mr Mikheev being dropped. “They said, we will do you a favour if you do us a favour,” she says. Neither Col Kuznetsov nor the interior ministry responded to questions from the FT seeking to clarify his role.
Despite that fact that neither Mr Mikheev nor his wife withdrew their testimony against the group of officers, the case against the latter was dropped in November 2006 and two prosecutors who had signed the order to investigate the Mikheev kidnapping received reprimands. “They just drowned it,” says one former policeman with knowledge of the case. “They created obstacles. No one ever said anything to us directly, but it was clear that if we pressed ahead with this, our careers would suffer.”
Ultimately Mr Orlov, and a partner, Viktor Markelov, were arrested for the kidnapping of Mr Mikheev and spent six months in jail before being freed. But the policemen who detained Mr Mikheev and allegedly forced him into Mr Orlov’s car were freed. Capt Golyshev received a simple reprimand “for violations of the law in the course of the investigation”, according to a letter from the prosecutor’s office in September 2006, though it was not clear from the letter what the actions referred to were. Col Kuznetsov received no punishment.
Mr Mikheev was sentenced to 11 years in a penal colony, where he is to this day.
Ayear later, Col Kuznetsov led the police raid on the offices of Hermitage Capital in which the materials used to create what may be the largest tax fraud in Russia’s history were seized.
After Hermitage filed a complaint over the fraud, the lawyer Magnitsky testified that police officers including Col Kuznetsov were involved. Col Kuznetsov and three subordinates were then included on the team who investigated Magnitsky for tax evasion, according to a police directive from November 2008. Magnitsky was jailed pending trial, where he died.
Col Kuznetsov has asked police to launch a criminal defamation investigation against Hermitage’s Mr Browder and Jamison Firestone, Magnitsky’s former boss, whom he claims have falsely accused him of being involved in Magnitsky’s death.
Mrs Mikheeva acknowledges the risks of going public with the story of her husband, but says she seeks justice: “My husband was a hostage in an extremely dirty game. We’re not just talking about theft – we’re talking about destroyed lives.”
Fund manager at the centre of the saga
Bill Browder (left), head of the Hermitage Capital Management investment fund, is central to the saga of police corruption that has engulfed Russia’s interior ministry. American-born, he has adopted British citizenship and is today based in London following his expulsion from Russia in 2005.
Hermitage, which he created in 1996, used to be the largest portfolio investor in the country and pioneered the trading of Russian shares by western companies. Its legal problems began with Mr Browder’s expulsion and culminated in the arrest of its lawyer, Sergei Magnitsky, in 2008 followed by his death in 2009. It is thought the problems stemmed from offence caused to vested interests by Mr Browder’s criticism of management practices at companies such as Gazprom, the gas monopoly, in which Hermitage had invested heavily. займ на карту займы на карту без отказа https://zp-pdl.com/best-payday-loans.php https://zp-pdl.com/fast-and-easy-payday-loans-online.php займ на карту онлайн
Russian human rights campaigners ask for international assistance with investigation into Magnitsky death
25 October: At a meeting in Moscow on Monday with Philip Gordon, US assistant secretary of state [for European and Eurasian affairs], Russian human rights campaigners asked for international assistance in the investigation into the death in a pre-trial detention centre in Moscow of Sergey Magnitskiy, the lawyer acting for Hermitage Capital [Management investment] fund.
“Regarding the Magnitskiy case, I said that, since our authorities can’t punish those responsible, let the international community respond to this,” Lyudmila Alekseyeva, one of the participants in the meeting and the head of the Moscow Helsinki Group, told Interfax.
According to her, at the meeting they also discussed problems that civil activists in Russia face, particularly when trying to organize public rallies.
Russian rights campaigners complain that, as a rule, it is easier for them to meet representatives of foreign states than the Russian authorities, which rarely invite civil activists to a dialogue.
Earlier Alekseyeva told Interfax that, as regards human rights in the USA, not everything was satisfactory there but the situation in this sphere was better in America than in Russia.
“To become a trend-setter in the sphere of human rights, the USA should at the very least close down Guantanamo. There are no countries where everything is satisfactory in the sphere of human rights. But to compare the human rights situation in the USA to that in Russia, with all its shortcomings, is the same as to compare a decent summer day with a damp and cold autumn. Our human rights situation is incomparably worse. There are things we can learn from America,” Alekseyeva said in September.
Thirty-seven-year-old Sergey Magnitskiy, the lawyer of Hermitage Capital investment fund, died in the Matrosskaya Tishina remand centre on 16 November 2009. He was charged under Article 199 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation (tax evasion). His death had big public repercussions.
According to two forensic reports, a heart failure was the cause of the lawyer’s death. Forensic experts confirmed that Magnitskiy had suffered from the diseases he had been diagnosed with before but, according to them, they were not at an acute phase [at the time of his death].
Despite dismissals in the Federal Penal Service, according to human rights campaigners, no proper investigation into Magnitskiy’s death has been carried out.
On 29 September, Hermitage Capital announced that the chairman of the US state Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe, Senator Benjamin Cardin, introduced a bill to the US Congress that would block entry to the USA to Russian officials “responsible for the persecution and death of Sergey Magnitskiy”.
The prosecution of Hermitage Capital representatives in Russia started in June 2007. Magnitskiy maintained that his prosecution was revenge for the evidence he had given about the possible involvement of representatives of the law-enforcement authorities in stealing budget money. онлайн займы займ онлайн https://zp-pdl.com/fast-and-easy-payday-loans-online.php https://zp-pdl.com/how-to-get-fast-payday-loan-online.php онлайн займ
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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