Posts Tagged ‘Manhattan’

11
September 2013

Russians Laundered $23.7 Million In Corrupt Cash Through NYC Real Estate, Says U.S. Attorney

BuzzFeed

American officials are seeking to seize $23.7 million in high-end Manhattan real estate they say were purchased with money from a huge fraud exposed by a lawyer who later died in prison.

U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara filed a civil forfeiture complaint Monday against properties held by nine offshore companies and the assets of two other companies they say laundered part of the proceeds of a huge Russian tax fraud that caused a rift in U.S.-Russian relations.

“Today’s forfeiture action is a significant step towards uncovering and unwinding a complex money laundering scheme arising from a notorious foreign fraud,” Bharara said in a statement. “A Russian criminal enterprise sought to launder some of its billions in ill-gotten rubles through the purchase of pricey Manhattan real estate. While New York is a world financial capital, it is not a safe haven for criminals seeking to hide their loot, no matter how and where their fraud took place.”

The complaint says that the real estate was purchased with money traced to a $230 million Russian tax fraud known as the “Magnitsky case” for the whistle-blowing lawyer who uncovered it. Sergei Magnitsky alleged in 2008 that corrupt officials and criminals conspired to steal subsidiaries of his client, Hermitage Capital Management, and claim a $230 million tax refund. He was jailed by the same officials he accused and died in prison a year later, aged 37. A report by Russia’s presidential human rights council in 2011 found that he had been systematically tortured, but President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly denied there was any criminality in Magnitsky’s death.

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11
September 2013

US seeks to seize Russian criminal group’s real estate

Financial Times

US prosecutors are looking to seize New York property used by a Russian criminal organisation to launder funds derived from an elaborate $230m tax fraud, according to a complaint filed in a Manhattan court.
The civil action also seeks to impose money-laundering penalties on the companies set up by the organisation, whose members allegedly included corrupt Russian government officials, US Attorney Preet Bharara said.

“Today’s forfeiture action is a significant step towards uncovering and unwinding a complex money laundering scheme arising from a notorious foreign fraud,” Mr Bharara said on Tuesday in a statement.
“As alleged, a Russian criminal enterprise sought to launder some of its billions in ill-gotten roubles through the purchase of pricey Manhattan real estate. While New York is a world financial capital, it is not a safe haven for criminals seeking to hide their loot, no matter how and where their fraud took place.”

The $230m fraud was first uncovered by the late Sergei Magnitsky, a respected Russian lawyer who died in pre-trial detention in Moscow in 2009 shortly after making his whistleblowing allegations.

Prosecutors claim that members of the organisation stole the corporate identities of portfolio companies of the Hermitage Fund, a foreign investment fund operating in Russia, which were then used to make fraudulent claims for tax refunds through sham lawsuits. Officials at two Russian tax offices who were members of the organisation approved the disbursements.

Through a complex series of transfers through shell companies, $230m was laundered into numerous bank accounts in Russia and elsewhere, according to the civil complaint. A portion of the funds stolen from the Russian Treasury passed through a Cyprus-based property company Prevezon Holdings, which laundered the proceeds into Manhattan property including four luxury apartments and two high end commercial spaces, it is alleged.

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11
September 2013

U.S. Seeks Forfeiture of Manhattan Real Estate Tied to Fraud

New York Times

Federal authorities announced on Tuesday that they were seeking forfeiture of expensive Manhattan real estate tied to a fraud that they say was uncovered by a whistle-blowing Russian lawyer before he died behind bars.

A civil forfeiture complaint filed against the assets of a Cyprus-based real estate corporation and other holding companies contends that some of the proceeds from a $230 million tax fraud in Russia were laundered through the purchase of four luxury condominiums in a Wall Street doorman building, where apartments can sell for more than $3 million, and two commercial spaces in prime locations in Midtown and Chelsea.

“Today’s forfeiture action is a significant step toward uncovering and unwinding a complex money-laundering scheme arising from a notorious foreign fraud,” Preet Bharara, the United States attorney in Manhattan, said in a statement. “While New York is a world financial capital, it is not a safe haven for criminals seeking to hide their loot, no matter how and where their fraud took place.”

The whistle-blower, Sergei Magnitsky, was a lawyer for the British investor William Browder, who was born in the United States. Mr. Magnitsky said in 2008 that organized criminals colluded with corrupt Russian Interior Ministry officials to fraudulently claim a $230 million tax rebate after illegally seizing subsidiaries of Mr. Browder’s Hermitage Capital investment company.

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